View allAll Photos Tagged Surfaces
“Look beneath the surface; let not the several quality of a thing nor its worth escape thee.”
Quote ― Marcus Aurelius, Meditations
pins, orange
Only one balloon popped. It helps when you dull the pin prior to using. Also, the power of macro photography.
Taken the same day as my recent post, Stairway to Heaven, at the same place. Here I was about to walk down the steps, and someone was coming up with their dog on a leash. I clicked the shutter as the dog was just appearing.
_
Pentax K-5
Takumar 200mm F3.5
_
© 2021 stefanorugolo | All rights reserved.
_
Thank you for your visit, most appreciated!
Salar de Talar is a large salt flat located in the high puna of northern Chilean Andes, at an altitude of 3,950 m. It is part of a series of salt lakes and salt flats located at the foothills of a chain of volcanoes stretching along the eastern side of the much greater Salar de Atacama. The salty flat is bordered on the west by Caichinque and on the east by Cerro Medano, is a mountain with striking shades of grey and brown, which contrast nicely with the sparkling white of the salt flat's surface. On top of that, colourful ponds fringe its shores. Salar de Talar is a part of the Central Andean dry puna ecoregion, which in this zone is characterized by tussock grass vegetation.
person standing in water staring in the distance - abstract photograph
www.dirkwuestenhagenimagery.de/gallery-image/blur-scapes/...
One of my attempts at the "Looking close... on Friday!" theme "A single Leaf".
Shot with a "Tomioka-Copal 82 mm F 4" (enlarging) lens on a Canon EOS R5.
A large family of Water Smartweed (Polygonum amphibium) basks in a calm shoreline, sending its pink spires skyward. As the scientific name suggests, it is one of few plants which has adapted to both land and water environments.
.236
Sponsored by: Loki I Yomi I Palet0 & Val’More
Thank you bb Filippo, for your time and patience, it was so cute having u on my picture *huggies* ❤
Check out his store Val'More
More info here D E A D's blog ❤
These rocks are normally caressed and covered by the current of a backcountry desert river. During low flows, they breach the surface of pools filled with silt and debris carried from higher elevations as well as minerals, microorganisms, and massive rock falls carried from flash floods into the river's bed.
A slick blanket of incandescent colors, created by the decomposition of all that settling miasma, nestle up to their exposed faces to give audience to winter's dimming light.
“Every hurt buried deep
in the mind
has an uncanny ability
to surface and make
its presence felt
when I am feeling low,
hugging me
like a long lost friend”
― Vijaya Gowrisankar
This little red squirrel kept disappearing from view, virtually tunnelling through the leaves, and then would surface, knee deep, every so often. It was quite comical :-)
A set of translucent dice back lit so the colours come through on to a watery surface, using a low key technique to make them stand out.
Guy's Hospital Boilerhouse's woven steel panels with The Shard tower in the background. London Bridge, London
by Reneesme Portland-Swot
Head Simone by LeLutka
Skin Lena by Glam Affair - NEW @Kustom9
Hairbase Lelutka HB 07 by Tableau Vivant - NEW @Kustom9
Hair Ice Queen by Tableau Vivant
Diamond Dress by Cynful - NEW @mainstore
Nam Tso གནམ་མཚོ།
salt lake The lake lies at an elevation of 4,718 m, and has a surface area of 1,870 square kilometres. It is the highest salt lake in the world, and largest salt lake in the Tibet Autonomous Region. However, it is not the largest salt lake in the Tibetan Plateau. That title belongs to KokoNor མཚོ་སྔོན་ མཚོ་ཁྲི ་ཤོར་རྒྱལ་མོ་ (almost twice the size of Namtso). Namtso has five uninhabited islands of reasonable size, in addition to one or two rocky outcrops. The islands have been used for spiritual retreat by pilgrims who walk over the lake's frozen surface at the end of winter, carrying their food with them. They spend the summer there, unable to return to shore again until the water freezes the following winter. This practice is no longer permitted under the Communist Chinese regime in Tibet. www.footprinttravelguides.com/c/2848/tibet/&Action=pr...