View allAll Photos Tagged Spring
This is my wife. She love spring very much) That's why she does this on the picture.
Strobist: Raylab Axio 100 1/4 power + white umbrella left on camera and Raylab axio 100 1/2 + silver umbrella right behind model.
Thank you all for your comments and faves!
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It's been a rainy and cold spring on the prairies so far this year. It is nice t have a record of the fact that things can be different ;D
Spring shows what GOD can do with a drab and dirty world.
~Virgil A. Kraft~
Still dreaming of Spring!
Thanks for checking it out my friend!
Who's ready for spring greenery? Well, it doesn't get any greener than the temperate rain forests in Olympic National Park. In fact, the green here is so intense that it almost doesn't seem real! Did you know there are four rainforests in Olympic NP? Mosses, ferns, Douglas fir, red alders, Western hemlocks, and Sitka spruce thrive in these forests that record 12-14 feet of rain per year!
This is one of my favorite workshops as we photograph such a wide range of landscapes. Rugged coastlines, old-growth rainforest, wildflowers, and glaciated peaks...you get it all!
actionphototours.com/workshops/olympic-national-park-phot...
It was like spring ,even almost summer when I took this shot .
But that was then , now it is like autumn with wind and rain !!!
I've never really noticed the colours of plants change so much over the course of the year, especially as winter turns to spring.
I've walked past these plants many times and they've gone from brown to green to this reddy-purple hue.
I love fresh spring rolls, and the first day of spring seemed like an appropriate day to make these. The rolls are made with spring roll wrappers, fried tofu, basil, cilantro, lettuce, carrots, and noodles. The chili-garlic dipping sauce is made with vinegar, sugar, water, salt, garlic, chili paste, and chopped nuts.
These tiny, stunted bluebell-like flowers are all over the clifftops here at the moment. I had to google to find out what they are. They are about 2 inches tall and grow abundantly in the most challenging exposed places.
Beautiful
Found these ones among the photos from a confirmand photo shoot in a garden.
My album of spring flowers here.
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Bruton Parish Church
Duke of Gloucester Street at Palace Green
Colonial Williamsburg
Williamsburg, Virginia
Home to an active Episcopal congregations, Bruton Parish Church has been in continual use for over 300 since its completion in 1715. The east end of the church (not visible in this photo) was expanded in 1752, the brick wall around the churchyard was built in 1754, and the tower and steeple were added at the west end in 1769.
Dr. W. A. R. Goodwin, rector of Bruton Parish, had 19th-century changes to the church's interior removed in the 1903-07 period, restoring the interior's 18th-century appearance, and in the 1920s Dr. Goodwin was instrumental in getting John D. Rockefeller, Jr., to undertake the restoration of the colonial city of Williamsburg. The church was refurbished in 1940; the walls and windows continue to be those original to the church in the 18th century. Although in Williamsburg Historic District, which is both a National Historic Landmark (1960) and on the National Register of Historic Places (1966), Bruton Parish Church -- cited as the first church in the British colonies in America to reflect English Renaissance style -- was separately named a National Historic Landmark in April 1970 and placed on the National Register of Historic Places in May 1970 (70000861). Two other Colonial Williamsburg buildings are similarly separately listed: George Wythe house and Peyton Randolph house; all three are among the 88 original buildings remaining in the 1920s when restoration of Williamsburg began.
Press "L" for larger image, on black.
Every spring when I walk in the back yard I can see this faint blue color among the grasses. It's not very distinct but more like a hint of light blue that would be easy to miss because of their tiny size. For this macro shot, I bent down and put my finger behind the flower to give you an idea of the tiny size.
A view of some of the hills near Moreno Valley during a nice spring rain storm.
Canon 5D mkIII, Canon 17-40 f4@27mm, f14@1/60th sec, ISO 200, Polarizer
Another spring sunset in Osijek, Croatia
Instagram - www.instagram.com/dbauernf/
Facebook - www.facebook.com/osijekfotograf/
500px - 500px.com/cortez_cro
Flickr - www.flickr.com/photos/cortez_cro/