View allAll Photos Tagged blazor
I uploaded this shot when I first started using flickr a while back along with about 30 others. I would really love some feedback on my fire work so I thought I would bring it to the front. I joined the volunteer fire department so I could get a pager and get to fires fast. Really a challenging and fun type of photography.
I also wanted let everyone know to check out Jason D. Moore photography.com. Jason runs a blog with a ton useful PS tips, great photography, and best of all, photo contests with AWESOME prizes. I recently won his October photo contest, and his BIG photo contest a while back. In the two contests I've won AMAZING onOne software, a 30x40in metal print, $250 in M-pix prints, an author signed layers book, a CS5 training DVD and more. He usually uses flickr as an upload platform so it's super easy to enter. I highly recommend you check it out and enter in upcoming contests. jasondmoore.com/blog/
Thanks for stopping in!!!
For workshop info, or to view my portfolio in a much better space please visit my website found on my profile page.
A blaze of light over the woodlands surrounding the ancient village of Malana in Himachal Pradesh.
That is the sunset (yes I can't seem to keep it out of my images :) as a backdrop to this flash image. See the B&W above and tell me which you prefer.
NikonD90/ Carl Zeiss Planar T* 1,4/50 ZF
I noticed this burning red when I was leaving my office.
This is from the roof of my office.
Shinjuku, Tokyo.
オフィスの屋上から。
秩父方面の燃える夕暮れ。
新宿、東京。
Texture from Solstock solstock.deviantart.com/art/Garden-85432028
Another moved from a photostream I am deleting.
This is a Lake Michigan sunset at its finest. We are blessed with lake effect cloud formations, which make for an endless variety of spectacular sunsets. I also happen to find sunsets much easier to schedule than sunrises ;-}
[43.52]
Model: My dear Clara Nebeling (taken in an abandoned house during the Mountain Street Meetup)
If you're interested, you can find some thoughts on my personal 2013 here. :)
Lens flares are not always a welcome sight to a photographer but in this instance it really helps to emphasise the blinding nature of the dawn sun. I love the fact that it hit the crashing waves. The golden light was all too fleeting but stunning all the same.
As we reach the end of this year I hope we leave it better than we found it! May we each go out of 2007and into 2008 in a blaze of glory!
Explore
A person, who values the beauty of nature and ambient the world, far richer and happier than those, who did not notices this.
I hope that everyone has a wonderful and enjoyable day!
Looks better in the large format. (Click L)
Taken with my Sony SLT a65V with my Tamron SP AF60mm f/2 DI II LD (IF) 1:1 macro lens
Along the Klondike Swamp tail, I marked a large tree with an X blaze noting the abandoned trail. This is just down from this location.
Bring out your blaze to the outside and be someone new. |
Saca tu resplandor al exterior y sé alguien nuevo.
..::Mystic Blaze::..
♪♪♪Ghost - Cirice♪♪♪
===Credits===
>Head: Genus Babyface W002
>Hair: Stealthic - Rebellion
>Hairbase: Dura Hairbase
>Eyes: {Demicorn} - Succubus Eyes
>Horns: Sinful Needs - Pandemonium Horns Darkfell
>Head Spikes: Quirky x Demon Spit - Ayakashi
>Eye Bruises: Izzie's - Bruised Eyes
>Lips: Izzie's - Bloody Lips
>Teeth: Clover - Piercer Jaw
>Body: Meshmerized - Tweenster
>Cloak: Feyline Fashions - Kess Hood and Cape
>Suit: 2cute - Formal Tuxedo
>Book: Ghost Bullet - Spell Book
>Wings: {aii} - Devil Wings
>Tail: {aii} - Daemonium Tail
>Backdrop: TROPIX - Vintage School
Some of you may recognize this lab - it's Erin's precious Holly (who I affectionately refer to as Flop)! This is the farthest away Blaze was from Holly the entire time. He is totally in love with her, and Holly, well, tolerates Blaze. You know how it is with younger men.
Halloween Pennant perched near the lake.
Your views of life have been wonderful and I hope my posts have brought you joy. May your focus be on the beauty of life and may we all work together to make life beautiful for everyone. Sending you love and hugs.
Have long planned to visit this spot, but can be a little tricky as it is a bit of a distance from the beach, plus generally large swells
I was very glad to have finally made it out to this spot, as the sky was amazing, the tides were ideal and the morning was incredible and I'm sure everyone who went out in Sydney this morning had a good sunrise.
The Eurasian eagle-owl (Bubo bubo) is a species of eagle-owl that resides in much of Eurasia. It is sometimes called the European eagle-owl and is, in Europe, where it is the only member of its genus besides the snowy owl (B. scandiacus), occasionally abbreviated to just eagle-owl. It is one of the largest species of owl, and females can grow to a total length of 75 cm (30 in), with a wingspan of 188 cm (6 ft 2 in), males being slightly smaller. This bird has distinctive ear tufts, with upper parts that are mottled with darker blackish colouring and tawny and the wings and tail are barred. The underparts are a variably hued buff, streaked with darker colour. The facial disc is poorly developed and the orange eyes are distinctive.
Besides being one of the largest living species of owl, it is also one of the most widely distributed. The Eurasian eagle-owl is found in a number of habitats but is mostly a bird of mountain regions, coniferous forests, steppes and other relatively remote places. It is a mostly nocturnal predator, hunting for a range of different prey species, predominately small mammals but also birds of varying sizes, reptiles, amphibians, fish, large insects and other assorted invertebrates. It typically breeds on cliff ledges, in gullies, among rocks or in some other concealed locations. The nest is a scrape in which averages of two eggs are laid at intervals and which hatch at different times. The female incubates the eggs and broods the young, and the male provides food for her and when they hatch, for the nestlings as well. Continuing parental care for the young is provided by both adults for about five months. There are at least a dozen subspecies of Eurasian eagle-owl.
With a total range in Europe and Asia of about 32 million square kilometres (12 million square miles) and a total population estimated to be between 250 thousand and 2.5 million individuals, the IUCN lists the bird's conservation status as being of "least concern".
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurasian_eagle-owl