View allAll Photos Tagged backside
Mt. Pleasant, MI - All that remains of the former Market on Main deli are the roses painted on the utility meters
first roll of film. light leaks...
esimene rull. valgusleketega...
Киев 88
Юпитер-36в 3.5/250
Ilford XP2 super
hand-me-down outfit that has become my new favorite...I end up washing it and putting her right back in it.
Avdalaz Kalesi (castle) ancient phrygian settlement (castle)....thousands of years of erosion have exposed the inside
In the heart of Turkey’s Afyon lies the Phrygian valley, a huge area with a series of mystical caves steeped in ancient history.
Afyon is a central region of Turkey well known for it’s thermal springs, but travel past the spas and you’ll discover the beautiful Phrygian Valley, a huge expanse of hollow caves that have been inhabited for over 7000 years. Still populated to this day, the Phrygian Valley is a wonderful contrast of the ancient with the present, with a thriving farming community working the land around the gorgeous ochre coloured caves and natural rock formations that are scattered across the whole valley. Wandering along the dusty road that goes through the centre of the valley feels like something out of an Indiana Jones film, with huge ancient caves looming on all sides, each containing their own secrets from centuries gone by. Exploring these carved out caverns is utterly fascinating, as each has its own history that tells the story of ancient civilisations that have made the valley their home. One cave holds the carved out graves of a Roman family, with protective engraved stone lions over the door, which have stood the test of time and several different inhabitants. A church from the second century, the era in which the Christians settled in Afyon, has a cathedral-esque interior, stone eaves and worship rooms chiselled deep into the rocks face. Explore the caves some more and you find another tiny space that appears unassuming, but look at the walls through a camera lense and you’ll see the Jesus and the 12 disciples painted onto the stones surface. This phenomenon continues to baffle scientists and is definitely worth the trek up the step hill upon which it sits. The Phrygian Valley also plays host to the fabled King Midas’ castle, a huge rock formation that stands out in the plains that has natural rooms that apparently housed the famous donkey-eared king. If you’ve got strong shoes its well worth climbing up to the top of the rock for unbeatable views of the sweeping valley and its famous‘fairy chimneys’, the colloquial term for rock formations that look uncannily like mushrooms.
Our Daily Challenge 27 December - 2 January : Beginnings and Endings.
Glad to see the back of 2017 and looking forward to the Spring !
The fibreglass buttocks of one of my mannequins postworked in Topaz Studio.
The backside of my hand taken with a Canon 35mm f/2 lens. Type L for a better view.
Our Daily Challenge - The Backside - 6/22/11
Linear Strip photo of my friend Jazz backside nose grinding a bench in front of a very colorful mural.
Here the backside of this impressive roman gate in Trier (Germany).
HDR of three exposures:
Canon PowerShot G3
Aufnahmedatum/-zeit: 02.06.2007 21:43
Aufnahmemodus: Av (Zeitautomatik)
Tv (Verschlusszeit): 0.8 1/6 1
Av (Blendenzahl): 2.5
Filmempfindlichkeit (ISO): 100
Objektiv: 7.2 - 28.8mm
Brennweite: 7.2mm
Miles and I out for our Sunday hike on Cougar. Stac drove us to the top of the mountain and we walkd over and across Wilderness Peak and down the backside to the Wilderness Creek trailhead where the car was and we drove home. This is taken on a small forgotton trail to the Wilderness Cliff trail.
A wonderful afternoon at the Seattle Waterfront. This is the back of some of the shops.
Read about the Seattle Waterfront:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Waterfront,_Seattle
Read about the Alaskan Way Viaduct:
Simple stockinette stitch, with the first stitch of each row slipped. The backside isn't as "pretty", so I'll likely apply glue to the toothpicks on this side (to keep the stitches from sliding off).
For this set, I used "Japanese toothpicks", which only have a point at one end. According to The Toothpick: Technology and Culture by Henry Petroski, the single point is to help keep your fingers clean. If you used the second end of a toothpick, you'd have to touch whatever gunk was on the first end. (Maybe they prefer not to hold them in the middle? Better reach to the back teeth, I guess.) You can also break off the non-pointy end and rest the pointy end on it, like a chopsticks rest.
In the future, I'd like to add little beads to the non-pointy end of the toothpick. I don't have access to the right-sized bead at the moment, and it would be only for decoration - not mandatory.
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I've been talking with Adi adirotynd recently about tiny knitting sets for dolls. Finally got around to making one, and the resulting set looks reasonable with 1:4 scale and 1:6 scale figures. It's the start of a scarf with a "center-pull" ball of yarn; non-functional, in this case, so it stays together. I plan to glue the stitches onto the needles later (from the back), so that also stays together.
- Tiny knitting set uses Sirdar's 4-ply snuggly yarn
- Shawl uses yarn from local alpacas at Black Woods Farm, in Cherryfield, Maine
- Magpie is a Tonner Deja Vu "Rose Red Ball" Judy
- Outfit is the "Cape Cod" fashion from Madame Alexander's "Alex Fairchild" doll line
Picture of Ollie doing two backside flip over the corner of the pyramid in plattfield skatepark, manchester. The picture was taken with a lomo fisheye camera, with a double exposure.
...of a fully bloomed Dahlia....and one on it's way!
BTW....a lot of you that visited my stream and wanted to leave a comment on this particular photo but were unable to because the comment box was missing. I was rather late opening my mailbox this morning...and much to my surprise, all my Flickr mail was regarding that problem. This is the first time this happened to me and I have no idea why. But in any case, I really, really appreciate those of you that wrote to inform me about this. You guys are so wonderful! Anyway, I hope I can fix it soon.
It is now 2:15 pm, LA time.....I was out for a couple of hours and when I checked back my stream it was working fine! I haven't the slightest clue of what might have happened! I'm just glad it's back to normal again!