View allAll Photos Tagged Thyme
Images shot for my Negotiated Portfolio. I am shooting raw foods. These might not be the final images, I've not had much inspiration for this project.
We would argue that there is nothing common about this Thyme – the scent is amazing.
Thymus vulgaris
Thyme Patch Park is a tiny jewel nestled in a west Ballard neighborhood that combines the best elements of a neighborhood park and community garden. The park includes a P-Patch, Master Gardener demonstration gardens, benches, lawn area and walkways. The entrance features a hand-crafted steel handrail by artist Chuck Nafziger.
Laurel Mercury Photographer
"Thyme" to Experiment
I call this a work in progress as I think I should be able (would like) to get a sharper image. There was no cropping done on this image and I have no idea what power of magnification is involved, the little flower is about 3mm across. Focusing was done by moving the subject back and forth. Shot at f/16 - 1/200 sec and ISO-100.
Reverse mounted lens - in this case it is my wife's old Nikon Nikkor-S Auto 1:1.2 f=55mm. It is a standard Nikon lens from the good old film days. What I like about this lens is the ability to open it up to focus and then being able to stop it down to capture the light. Using a Macro reverse ring camera mount for Canon EOS camera (NIKO LMC-1 52mm adaptor).
For my light source I used the camera's pop up flash with my "Pringles Can Macro Diffuser" - still trying to get a way to mount it on my camera in a "professional manner".
so fragrant and so pretty. the server brought this out for us to see and smell after asking what the ice cream flavor was. super nice.
My thyme plants are in bloom. Pun inspired by Bob's Burgers
Canon T2i Rokinon 85mm reverse lens macro.
We have just 12 different varieties of Thyme in our innocent herb garden, this one shown here is known as Carraway Thyme.
I'd like to add so many more varieties but space is running out. It is an incredible herb, so delicate looking yet it has such powerfully aromatic properties.
Belgium, Brussels.
't Moeraske, nature reserve.
From the entrance, in the Rue de la Perche (french) or Wipstraat (dutch) , it are the clumps of thyme and the wagtail that welcome you. Then, all along the path, between the embankment and the railway, willows, alders and locust trees fight every inch of the banks of the Kerkebeek. The stream is swarming with sticklebacks, great pond snails and dragonflies. On the borders, in the fallow, the viviparous lizard slaloms between the grass snake, the centaury and the yellow reseda. Further on, alongside the railway, the marsh is composed of a vegetation of helophyts and kingfishers. From the top of the embankment, accessible by stairs, we can see the marsh and at the far end, a rose garden. The Moeraske is located in Evere between the training station of Schaerbeek, the park of the Bon Pasteur and the Sint-Vincent church.
www.opt.be/informations/tourist_attractions_evere__nature...
Echium vulgare (Viper's Bugloss or Blueweed[1]) is a species of Echium native to most of Europe, and western and central Asia.[2][3] It is also common in North America.[1] It is a biennial or monocarpic perennial plant growing to 30–80 cm (12–31 in) tall, with rough, hairy, lanceolate leaves. The flowers start pink and turn vivid blue and are 15–20 mm (0.59–0.79 in) in a branched spike, with all the stamens protruding. The pollen is blue [4] but the filaments of the stamens remain red, contrasting against the blue flowers. It flowers between May and September. It is found in dry, bare and waste places.[5]
It has been introduced to North America and is naturalised in parts of the continent, being listed as an invasive species in Washington.[3]
Echium is grown as an oilseed crop because of the fatty acid composition of the seed oil. Like borage and evening primrose oil, it contains significant amounts of gamma linolenic acid (GLA), but it also contains the rarer stearidonic acid (SdA).