View allAll Photos Tagged Three)
I was looking at old photos of my wife and I, from the early days of dating and college, etc. It was always just our little family of two, and our dog of course. It's such an amazing feeling knowing that our family has grown just a little bit - such simple math and addition but has made all the difference in our lives. Photos of two have turned into photos of three. I mean, I'm a dad. Holy crap. I have this amazing little girl who calls me dada and will look to me in life when she needs something. To be responsible for another life and the future/growth of that life - it's probably the most honor I've ever felt.
Anyways, I wanted to keep the edit on this one fairly simple. This is actually an outtake from that series I took in the park a couple of weekends ago. To get Ella to smile for photos, I usually act really silly or do something dumb - I think that's what I was in the process of doing when this one fired. I had a couple of others I was editing where we're all looking at the camera, but something about this just makes me smile. I guess it's just a "real" moment.
We're going on vacation tomorrow for a week, so I'll be away from Flickr for a few days. I'm hoping the weather holds up and I'm able to take a ton of photos!! I do want to take a second since I'll be away to say thank you so much to everyone who has ever viewed, commented, favorited, or bothered to care about my work. I've mentioned it before, but I started photography in January and I feel like I've grown so much in such a short amount of time. I'm not good by any means, but I think I'm improving and that's what really matters for me. My improvement can be traced back directly to the support of my Flickr-mates. I know some people feel strongly that Flickr numbers don't matter, comments don't matter, favorites don't matter, and that it's all about the work. That's true, but giving someone confidence and encouragement through comments and views can be the difference between photography being a short lived hobby to something that is part of them within. I know, because I'm one of them. I say all this because I'm feeling so blessed these days with the support I'm receiving here. There's so much amazing work out there that deserves more attention. I love you guys. I really mean that.
Can't wait to see everyone's streams when I get back.
listen ----> www.youtube.com/watch?v=kVtkOUJhpcA
-ben
Three aphids on a flower stem.
What to do with them?
I thought a special effect would do them good 😉.
The Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science (PPFMOS, formerly known as the Miami Science Museum) is a science museum, planetarium, and aquarium located in Miami, Florida, US. Originally located in Coconut Grove, the museum relocated to Museum Park in the downtown area adjacent to the Perez Art Museum Miami in 2017.
In March 2011, Miami native Phillip Frost and his wife, Patricia, donated $35 million to the construction of a new science museum in Downtown Miami. The museum was designed by London-based Grimshaw Architects, and Miami’s Rodriguez & Quiroga Architects Chartered played an executive role.
The new 250,000 sq ft (23,000 m2) Philip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science (PPFMOS) opened on May 8, 2017 in Museum Park in downtown Miami. The new museum includes: the Frost Planetarium, a 250-seat full-dome screen with a diameter of 67 feet (20 m) and a 16-million-color, 8K projection system; a three-story, cone-shaped, 500,000-US-gallon (1,900,000 L) aquarium with a 31-foot (9.4 m) diameter oculus lens at the bottom for viewing the fish and sharks; and the Knight Learning Center with four classrooms.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phillip_and_Patricia_Frost_Museum_o...
After a 3 hour walk through driving rain and gale force winds, we were lucky to find the the three towers of the Paines Massif was still visible through swirling cloud.
Inanimate objects are classified scientifically into three major categories -
those that don't work, those that break down and those that get lost.
Russell Baker
US columnist & journalist
Harlequin, 1992 - Jan Frydrych
Every time I go into these woods along the Cedar River, I see this small herd of deer. Always twelve to fifteen of them. They have the run of the woods, plus fords to several small islands. They are quite cautious, but not panicked, and sometimes I get surprisingly close before the signal is given to depart.
There is some concern here. My city, like many others, has declared an 'urban deer population' problem. For a number of years it has allowed an in-ctiy winter bowhunting season for does. Typically around 400 deer are reported killed each season, but the number has been dropping. DNR experts claim that that is because the population HAS been decreased significantly. The bowhunting advocates claim that the deer have mere moved to areas where they can't be hunted.
It's sad. This last winter's deer killing champion only managed TWENTY-TWO doe kills. As spokesman for the group, he is petitioning the city to allow hunting on this city land...the woods where this photo was taken. Heck, he still has arrows, and there are still deer...you can do the math.
So far the city has resisted. Further, though it IS city-owned, it is controlled by the Department of Natural Resources. I believe that they are opposed to hunting in this habitat.
Should the debate get that far, you can be sure I'll be diving in with both lenses blazing.
Three very different types sat down together for brunch at the popular Columbian Cafe in Astoria, Oregon.
DDC "Three"
When I saw the cue for the Daily Dog Challenge today, I wondered if Shyla could balance three milk bones on her nose. She could, although I must admit that she didn't look thrilled about it - that is, until she was allowed to eat all three milk bones!
This was the third night of my annual monsoon photography workshop and we finally saw some incredible lightning. And it was incredibly close. This was shot with a 50mm lens and you only see the bottom two thirds of the actual strike. Photographed south of Three Points, Arizona
Three wise men in the Parish Church of St John the Baptist with Our Lady and St Laurence, Thaxted, Essex.
i love these ducks... when i took this photo.. one of them look to me and walk fast and the other walk like the first without look to me..
They trust each other. amazing
We're proud to announce the newest of our releases! The Three Eyed Mask. Available at the main store now ! You can also get a special edition of this mask in the lucky boards for a limited time. I hope you all enjoy!
[...] Three things are necessary for the salvation of man: to know what he ought to believe; to know what he ought to desire; and to know what he ought to do [...]
-- Quote by St.Thomas Aquinas
Nikon D200, Samyang 8mm, f/3.5 fisheye, 8mm - f/4.5 - 1/50s
Vatican City (October, 2019)
A little too mild for the log burner so IKEA to the rescue and three candles light up the log burner for the Chriustmas feel.
'Three Businessmen Who Brought Their Own Lunch: Batman, Swanston and Hoddle'
by Alison Weaver and Paul Quinn
Melbourne Street sculptures
400m creekside footpath around Three Mills Studios, just reopened after being sealed off for 14 years!
Three Feral kittens hanging around the house, about two months old, by this time they were used to seeing me, then they posed.
Hello folks! This is mainly a story build. So make sure to read it:
www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=122268
This is the next part of the story of both Osric Isentooth and the Nocturnus Resistance against the Black Spire in Guilds of Historic
A Columbia black-tailed doe typically has one to two fawns per year.
The three fawns with this doe are a mystery. Is one adopted? Is there another doe hiding nearby?
I never found out, so however you answer these questions, your answer is as good as any I could provide.
The doe with fawns was captured in a field of wildflowers at Tom McCall Nature Preserve on an early July morning moving out of woods surrounding a year round pond.
Notice how the fawns' spots rhyme the flower pattern.
[Explore August 4, 2014 #11]
Three bulls worry / about the herbicides sprayed / to make the grass look green / and about the asbestos / spilled from the plates / covering the roof / but falling. // However, these bulls will meet their butcher / before they will notice damage.