View allAll Photos Tagged TreeTrunk
With [flickr.com/oape] did a lightpainting exercise on a white covered trunk i found a while ago. Led light (or fluid fire as it seems) and different torches are what are used here. No flash. And LONG exposuretimes :)
Thank Oape!
The Lebanon Cedar is an evergreen coniferous tree growing up to 40 m (130 ft) tall, with a trunk up to 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) in diameter.
Help needed to ID the insect that made these markings...unlike the scribbly gum moth larvae (it feeds on photosynthetic tissue just below the epidermal cells in the tree trunk) whatever made these markings appears to have 'fed' on the outer surface of this plunkett mallee.
Update 7th November 2014: I stumbled upon the 'Radula track' Group and found similar markings. Further Googling resulted in my believing these marks may be from the Red Triangle Slug or something similar.
Photo taken in or near Amani Nature Reserve
East Usambara Mountains, Tanzania
By N.J. Cordeiro
Post-Production by J. Quicho
An inspiring message: The person who falls and rises again is so much stronger than the one who never has fallen.
File name: 08_06_025453
Title: 4 men moving a tree trunk
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1934 - 1956 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 negative : film, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.
Genre: Film negatives; Portrait photographs
Subject: Woodcutters; Tree trunks
Notes: Title from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.; Date supplied by cataloger.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright Leslie Jones.
Preferred credit: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
One of the challenges in our new neighborhood is making images without buildings, sidewalks, streets, cars. Although two houses are visible in this late evening photograph of the crepe myrtles bordering the back yard, I am pleased with line and diminishing focus.
When at my parents' house for Christmas, I found the one and only lunchbox I had when I was a kid, now uncool and rusting. Never really needed it (I successfully avoided eating school food in other ways), but I did use it every day at camp one summer.