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Seattle woke up last Thursday morning shrouded in a particularly dense fog. This cluster of trees is in E.C. Hughes playground in West Seattle.
Live trees are white, and dead trees are black as seen through a black and white, infrared-converted camera. Photo taken at Five Mile Landing in Topock, Arizona, U.S.A. (April 11, 2021)
Photo © 2021 Marcie Heacox, all rights reserved. For use by permission only. Contact mheacox87 [at] hotmail.com .
One of the trails we rode our bikes on was called the Lupine Trail. There were lots of Aspen Trees and Lupine flowers. I don't have photos of the flowers because I was too busy trying not to fall off my bike. This part of the trail was reasonably flat.
Leica M6 TTL 0.85 | Summicron-M 50mm f/2 | Kodak Ektar 100
Film #13
Frame#22
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
This could be a Christmas tree decorated with white Christmas lights, but as it was taken in mid March, it's just a tree decorated with white lights. Nothing to do with Christmas. I took this the last night we spent in Liverpool when we took our group of students for a night walk around the Albert Dock.
You can check out more of my Liverpool photos in this Flickr Album.
Late afternoon sun in December provides some very harsh light that makes interesting shadows on these pine trees.
Life and death in the trees. This is from an area that had a burn a couple of years ago. I liked the contrast between the dead tops and the lush green tops. Hope everyone has a great weekend of photography.
Tree Nymph (Idea leuconoe), a.k.a. as Paper Kite, Rice Paper and Large Tree Nymph. Found in SE Asia. Taken at the Butterfly Rainforest of the Florida Museum of Natural History, Gainesville.
Img P5424c.
Happy Tree Tuesday!
Camera: Fuji Instax Mini 50s
Location: Beacon Rock State Park - Columbia River Gorge, Washington
Series: Tree Tuesday
Instant film is a blast to shoot with. I really need to make it a point to do shoot it more often. Took a friend's Instax Mini 50s on a recent trip to the Columbia River Gorge. Similar to developing black and white film at home, the magic of watching an instant exposure develop before your eyes never gets old.