View allAll Photos Tagged Trellises
Still life of an house window with a planter trellis made of wood and metal for both security and decorum.
SONY DSC
Can't resist to take photos of peoples courtyards. These cottages have no front garden they are right beside the road in Nairn. I love them.
I will be photographing this small jewel of a garden over the next year or so. Photographing a small and soon to be familiar garden, demands a different kind of photographic eye and attention to detail. I look forward to this project and the calm contemplation that will accompany this photographic project.
I used up some scraps of 'embellisher' fabric made on the needlepunch machine to practice some more trellis stitch, then I added more hand embroidery, beads and sequins, padded the centres, backed with craft weight stabiliser and felt and machine stitched together to make these little brooches.
www.1001gardens.org/2014/02/mattress-springs-trellis/
This ia an attractive and creative way to recycle an old mattress springs as a trellis for your garden !
More information: Backyardnote's website !
I spotted this pavilion across the Denver Botonic pond a few shots back and boy, I am ready for a break about now after relentless shooting and my two recent rounds of editing my finds. This looks like a shady and quiet place to sit and rest in the madhouse of activity. That vine will really darken the pavilion when it fully covers the trellis.
There's not a breath of wind here either, even at at 1/25 second. This could be a hanging vine from the Hanging Gardens of Babylon although they were in Nineveh and never in Babylon. What other old Mesopotamian stories did the Bible completely butcher? All of them? Nineveh was largely destroyed by IS and of course, Boy George Bush. Ahh, what's another war or two? It's only paid by the poor and remaining middle class in America and dodged by the well-heeled. Great religions spark greatest of wars, sometimes cults in only one religion will do just fine to spark great wars. Ahh, the environment is rendering little room for wars over fossil fuels.
This is yet another view at the Denver Botanic Gardens I liked. I end up with all the off-shoots. Plantings are everywhere at the Denver Bionic Gardens. I may yet have some images of flowers I shot at the gardens.
After following some of the paths that are scattered about the Denver Botanic Gardens, I found a cool spot with a load of water, a good thing on the Colorado plains. It's clear that the pool furnished is good for water gardens. They especially like water plantings at the Denver Botanical Gardens. It looks like I am getting closer to botanical, and fish, shots like this as I work. Egad, I have a real load of garden shots to edit with over 200 snaps in the directory, let alone for everything else in my massive stash.
This snap is yet another from a recent eDDie trek, this time down to the Denver Botanic Gardens. I have passed untold times but never invested my time or ponied up the entrance fee. This path shouts that upkeep here is far from free, but eDDie bought a season pass so I did another round of sponge bobbing at the right price. Boy, this place is loaded with distractions that were made for me! ...and, did I get distracted. Art in the park indeed. Look everywhere to find art; he was missing earlier.
Since the Denver Botonic Gardens trek, I have made more treks and another with eDDie to the Rockies. At least I was able to snag a load of shots on that mellow day. I filled my film card for the first time ever. OK, I was tapped by the time it was filled anyway.
Mamiya 645 1000S : Mamiya 645 Sekor Zoom C 55-110 mm
f /4.5 N : Kodak T Max 400 : PMK Pyro
Trialing Kodak T Max 400 developed in PMK Pyro
The lattice structure of the bridge gives the sky an argyle pattern. Moving at about 70km/h through the windscreen. Composition 90% luck 10% vision. (digging through the archives & I found a load of RAW shots from a near forgotten road trip to Germany)
Trellis system supporting raspberry plants. Note the irrigation pipes. Picture was taken after harvest.
Platinum-palladium print on Fabriano Artistico paper made from a Quadtone RIP digineg.
Original shot made with an iPhone4s.
From thedailylumenbox.comShot with 1931 Voigtlander Brilliant and Rollei Retro 80s shot at ISO 50 and overdeveloped aged Cinestill monobath. Post processed with Exposure 7 "damaged wet plate" plugin.