View allAll Photos Tagged backtoback
2004-09-17
copyright (c) 2004-09-17 sean dreilinger
view rachel and amber get down in the kitchen - dscf9106 on a black background.
GWR Heritage liveried 43185 'Great Western' is captured on display outside the National Railway Museum at York.
reflection
SOLD THROUGH MY WEBSITE
mixed media on wood-acrylic paint, metallic paint, collaged paper, silver cord, nails, carpet tacks, beads, stamps, doll hands
the silver cord is raised 3" above the painting. they are connected by large nails
29" X 13" X 3"
jennifer beinhacker
jenniferbeinhacker.com
art outside the edge
ART SHOW:
artomatic
24 march-6 may 2017
1800 s. bell street
arlington, virginia
Ships Pass In The Night... - Key West Harbor
Happy New Year from Key West, Florida U.S.A.
Best Regards and wishing you Clear Skies in 2018!
~~~~~~~~~~~~ HAPPY NEW YEAR! ~~~~~~~~~~~~
(one more photo 'from this night' in the comments)
[FYI: America 2.0 (left) - Jolly Rover (center) - Appledore (r)]
This reminded me of the game Battleship that I use to play where you have to pinpoint your enemy's battle ships by choosing a coordinate. Taken in St.James's Park
In a period of big pain caused by my bad back, I’d love to show this unpublished shot. This photo is part of a project (made1 year ago) that gave me so many emotions and deeply involved me.
I hope that the beautiful woman portrayed (and deliberately unrecognizable) doesn’t hold it against me.
1984. A view into where people lived and slept, in front of those fireplaces. A "sawn off" row of back to back terraced houses on Bolton Road, Bradford. The whole row has since been demolished. Note the 1969 Mk.1 Ford Escort up on ramps.
Two beautiful common buckeye butterflies, back to back, sipping nectar from white wildflowers in a green Oklahoma country field.
…….A pair of porcelain bookends are the chosen #057 iPhoneaday shot today. Been a tad busy (understatement!) decided to take advantage of the dry bright day and take down a sandstone wall then rebuild it! I’m not a dry stone wall expert but it looks a whole lot better than it did before I started! Did a little bit of tinkering with these two but still taken on my phone in Apple RAW & edited in Lightroom & color Efex pro 4 - time for a rest now I think, Zzzzzzz Alan:-)
For the interested I’m growing my Shutterstock catalogue regularly here, now sold 109 images :- www.shutterstock.com/g/Alan+Foster?rid=223484589&utm_...
©Alan Foster.
©Alan Foster. All rights reserved. Do not use without permission.……
As the milky clouds slowly roll in for the afternoon, Cross Country power cars Nos: 43207 and 43301 accelerate past Aish working 0Z43 08:20 Laira T&RSMD to Laira T&RSMD via Bristol Temple Meads and Westbury. The run was for driver training, with upcoming engineering works and the need for Cross Country services to divert away from the usual route via Bridgwater.
A shot taken from one of my recent campfires...then mirrored to show a back to back flamethrower....cool or what !
If you would like to see the single shot of this Flamethrower, just give a click to my other Flickr site which is my photography site...Enjoy www.flickr.com/photos/29577150@N04/
Flames are from my recent campfire June 2022 !
The Great Egret also known as Common Egret, Large Egret or Great White Heron, is a large, widely distributed egret. Distributed across most of the tropical and warmer temperate regions of the world, in southern Europe it is rather localized. In North America it is more widely distributed, and it is ubiquitous across the Sun Belt of the United States and in the Neotropics. The Old World population is often referred to as the Great White Egret. This species is sometimes confused with the Great White Heron of the Caribbean which is a white morph of the closely related Great Blue Heron.
The Great Egret is a large heron with all-white plumage. Standing up to 3.3 ft tall it is only slightly smaller than the Great Blue or Grey Heron. Apart from size, the Great Egret can be distinguished from other white egrets by its yellow bill and black legs and feet, though the bill may become darker and the lower legs lighter in the breeding season. In breeding plumage, delicate ornamental feathers are borne on the back. Males and females are identical in appearance; juveniles look like non-breeding adults. It has a slow flight, with its neck retracted. This is characteristic of herons and bitterns and distinguishes them from storks, cranes, ibises and spoonbills, which extend their necks in flight.
The Great Egret is generally a very successful species with a large and expanding range. In North America large numbers of Great Egrets were killed around the end of the 19th century so that their plumes could be used to decorate hats. Numbers have since recovered as a result of conservation measures. Its range has expanded as far north as southern Canada. However, in some parts of the southern United States its numbers have declined due to habitat loss. Nevertheless, it adapts well to human habitation and can be readily seen near wetlands and bodies of water in urban and suburban areas. In 1953, the Great Egret in flight was chosen as the symbol of the National Audubon Society which was formed in part to prevent the killing of birds for their feathers.
Great Egret mated pair (in their nest) with
breeding color ~ Saint Augustine, Florida
(click more comments to see 4-shot series)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Egret
Member of the Nature’s Spirit
Good Stewards of Nature
3rd Place Competition Winner ~ June 2016 ~ TMI Group
Theme: Those Amazing Animals - focus on White Birds
www.flickr.com/groups/impressionists/discuss/721576700352...