View allAll Photos Tagged Small
The exterior of It's a Small World in Tokyo Disneyland is a masterpeice of color.
Even though I think the simple white exterior of IASW in Disneyland better showcases the line and form of the architectural design, seeing it in color, as Mary Blair originally intended is kind of nice too.
This was taken about 1 hour before park closing and the main thing any Disneyland Photographer will notice is the virtual abscence of those damn strollers. It is a very welcome relief in Tokyo Disney parks that there are very few strollers. Most parents with small children either carry them or make them walk, unlike the lazy parents in the US that think the need a SUV sized stroller for a 3 month old baby and cram every thing they possibly can into it before deciding it is a battering ram to force their way through crowded walkways.
Marvin Pontiac - Small Car (1999)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=zV7sYxxjwjs&list=RDzV7sYxxjwj...
Note : Manual focus point is the Fiat logotype.
Lensbaby Spark 1.0
And now for something completely different...
This was made together with Markus.Winkler5. I used his handpainted background.
Thank you for visiting. xx
Decided to skip the black friday shopping lines and went for a hike instead. Photographed at the Murphy-Hanrehan Park Reserve in Savage, Minnesota. www.DanielGodinPhotography.com
This sapling just seemed to shine out amongst the darker background as we walked around the University of Nottingham campus.
Fujifilm X-S10
Fujifilm Fujinon XC50-230mmF4.5-6.7 OIS II
Capture One for adjustments with Velvia simulation
Affinity Photo to add border
© All Rights Reserved.
#smalltowninertia Carlos in his apartment reading his Bible July 2017
The interior of Carlo’s apartment is sparse, a small television and stereo, a fish tank, a few old photographs of his estranged family, a table, chairs, a single bed, his Bible and his medication.
Immediately upon my arrival, Carlos showed me copious correspondence regarding health assessments to determine if he is eligible for continued support and benefits to, essentially, given the nature of his illness, keep him alive.
Left in a state of terror and confusion, ‘Is my Doctor talking with the assessors?’ , ‘Why are benefits changing?’, ‘Why am I being called to be assessed?’ , the past few months have been a nightmare, every moment abducted by fear with the resulting stress having a detrimental impact on his condition and his mental well being.
Carlos works hard at mastering the language but people rush words, have such little patience, correspondence is in English and vague at best and he has no transport, no phone and it’s painful and very difficult to move, to walk.
The stress, the constant downpour of stress, the anxiety, the isolation, little to no money, all make life and living, harder and harder.
In spite of his health challenges, Carlos wanted and wants to work. He had an interview and secured a job at a local factory, packing boxes but as soon as they learned of his illness, he was dismissed.
It all became too much, where to turn and how to breathe beneath the weight of such fears, problems?.
When Carlos attempted suicide, he had nowhere and no one to turn to. “Jesus Christ appeared to me and said ‘NO!, Carlos, now it is not your time.”
Keeping the noose on the shelf of a small table, often picking it up, holding it, folding it into the palm of his hands, letting it slip through his fingers, a dark black snake, an anti rosary, remembering.
Yesterday, after much talking, we decided it best to take it and throw it into the trash.
Afterwards, Carlos read from his bible and prayed.
Small Tree Frog
© Harshith JV
Place: Bisle Ghat, Hassan, Karnataka
Common names: Small Tree Frog, Boulenger's Tree Frog, Small Gliding Frog, Winged Gliding Frog
Species ID/Genera: Rhacophorus lateralis
Status: Endangered (IUCN)
Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhacophorus_lateralis , www.iucnredlist.org/details/59000/0 , www.arkive.org/tree-frog/rhacophorus-lateralis/
File name: IMG_9829.cropped_enhanched.upload.JPG
File date: July 26, 2015 at 12:55 IST
Also at: www.flickr.com/photos/harshithjv/20342449730/ , 500px.com/photo/118082301/ , www.facebook.com/HJV.Photography/photos/952085054814153/ , plus.google.com/u/0/+HarshithJV/posts/WJEZcQQp3CG
#photography #macro #frog #treefrog #Amphibia #Amphibian #Anura #Rhacophoridae #Chordata #Rhacophorus #lateralis #90mm #tamron #canon #600d #canon600d #bisle #ghat #hassan
#smalltowninertia *Previews of coming story.
Wonderful to catch up with David, today.
Almost completed a coming story update, just one other day of shooting required next week and I’ll begin transcribing and piecing everything together.
I don’t know anyone that inspires me more, than David.
It’s such an honour to listen to him, though harrowing at times, his observations on life, the human condition and society are illuminating.
Previous stories of David and his life with 100% Nil Light Perception blindness can be found here.
#357 - Explore, August 18, 2011. This is my 136th photo to reach Explore!
Have noticed a few of these in the garden in the past few years ... it is called the Small White or Small Cabbage White ... for more info - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_White
NO INVITES with BIG SPARKLY GRAPHICS. PLEASE, TRY TO RESPECT MY WISHES.
I prefer simple honest comments, rather then a copy & paste of an award code.
Many thanks!
All rights reserved. Please do not use or reproduce this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my permission.
Cretan Small Heath (Coenonympha thyrsis) is an endemic buterfly of Cretan fauna. Occurs on almost all Crete (between an altitude of 0-1,800 m). This is a European endemic species. This species is listed as Least Concern, since it has not been declining by more than 25% in the last ten years and its population size is probably larger than 10,000 adult individuals. Although this is a European endemic with a restricted range, this species is not believed to face major threats at the European level.
The Cretan Small Heath occurs on grassy vegetation and in open scrub. The butterflies fly quickly and close to the ground. When resting, they always keep their wings closed. It is uncertain how many generations this species has a year, either one generation with a long flight period, or two or more generations, each with a short flight-period. Habitats: sclerophyllous scrub (50%), dry calcareous grasslands and steppes (50%).
INSTAGRAM TAKEOVER : JIM MORTRAM @smalltowninertia Simon at home May 1 2016 #community #availablelight #portrait #ilfordhp5plus #push800 #longformdocumentary
Today was overcast when I woke but by mid morning the sun was out and having checked on the internet for the weather where I wanted to go I decided to make my annual visit to this location.
It was sunny all the time I was there. Small blues were abundant but not settling for long as a rule. There were a fair number of common blues and a few small heaths too as well as the occasional other species.
Few of the butterflies settled with wings open so I am very pleased with this shot.
One fleet that we don't often feature is that of Ramsbottom Urban District Council - it was tiny, with just eleven buses when it was absorbed into SELNEC as the new Passenger Transport Executive's small constituent.
But its crimson and cream buses were kept smart, and the UDC bought about one bus per year on average to keep the fleet up to date. But when we say 'up to date' we mean 'made recently' because Ramsbottom was very conservative (although in the early 1950s it had bought one of the very first underfloor-engined buses in the area). Its small size meant that it wasn't geared up for the most modern rear-engined buses, with all the complications of fluid flywheels and complicated electrics, so Ramsbottom carried on buying what it knew worked - solid, trusty Leyland 'Titan' buses like number 2 here.
In fact Ramsbottom carried on doing these Leyland PD-series buses so long that the last one it ordered, arriving a few days after SELNEC took over, was made up of spare parts in the Leyland factory and was the last, the very very last, traditional front-engined traditional double decker bus to enter service in the UK. That bus, number 11, is today restored and on display at the the Museum of Transport Greater Manchester alongside number 17, a 1947 Leyland PS1 single decker.
That means that the Museum has Ramsbottom buses representing about a sixth of the Council's final fleet when taken over: to achieve the same proportion of Manchester buses would require us to keep a collection of over 200 Manchester Corporation buses...
If you'd like to know more about the Museum of Transport Greater Manchester and its collection of vintage buses, go to www.motgm.uk.
© Greater Manchester Transport Society. All rights reserved. Unauthorised reproduction is strictly prohibited and may result in action being taken to protect the intellectual property interests of the Society.
As part of my partner and I's recent epic adventures, we decided to do some walking in the Lake District, UK, and we managed to find some hidden gems like this one. More from our trip to come.. watch this space