View allAll Photos Tagged bottle
SSC - Bottles
Just 3 bottles with their reflections, taken with natural light from the window with all the curtains drawn to restrict the reflections on the bottles using a very high ISO and then reducing the noise in PP.
Longwood Gardens Pa.
Many thanks to all who take the time to view, comment and fave my images. Enjoy the day.
Old medicine bottles from another time in a window display at the Turquoise Mining Museum and Trading Post in Cerrillos, NM
In memory of Dan Thomson, the only man I knew who still loved to play in the dirt. Thank you for unearthing relics from our past, whether they were bottles, insulators, or arrowheads. As the years pass by and this old bottle takes on a deeper hue, I will always think of you.
The bottlebrush plant, Callistemon citrinus, bears dramatic crimson-red flower spikes, in contrast with dark green, aromatic foliage, in spring and summer. New foliage has a pink-red flush, but darkens with age. Native to Australia, Callistemon citrinus thrives in warm, sheltered conditions, and is susceptible to frost damage.
Macro of a bottle top - on a glorious sunny day, what an excuse to fetch out a bottle of beer - now that the picture has been taken, it needs to be drunk - 🍻
Added to my bottle collection with two little ones!
Taken with the Lensbaby Velvet 85 and edited with textures from Collections 1 & 2 available at www.texture-shop.co.uk
Found this rusted and battered bottle cap on the beach this afternoon.
Our beaches here in Bexhill are really quite clean … maybe because others like me, remove any litter we find.
Tredente // Bottled Juice
Where: Tredente Mainstore & Marketplace
When: Available for purchase now
Available at a discounted rate of 99L this weekend only!
- Comes with left and right hand holdable versions of the bottle(s).
- Decor version included
- MyStory compatible (25 uses)
- 3 Flavours to choose from
Hope you enjoy it guys!
For 'MacroMondays' theme of 'GoesTogetherLike'
Not the right sort of 'Bottle'.
Not the right sort of 'Jug'!
How times have changed!
As a small boy I saw 'Bottle & Jug' written on a sign at the side of a door. I saw it as etching on the glass of a door, but had no idea of its meaning or significance. Why should I have done?
Even well before my time 'real Ale' was often brewed at home or in a small community for local consumption. The water supply that most of us take for granted was unfit for drinking and 'Ale' was the usual liquid refreshment. You collected it in a 'jug' or supplied your neighbour who brought round their 'jug'.
But times changed, licensing laws changed, glass became more common and bottles began to be mass produced. As this happened Britain became more industrialied and the population more drawn to town locations. The result was the home 'Ale' production decreased, beer made from hops became much more common and distribution more centralised.
Licensing Laws were a 'mess'. A license was available for drinking 'on' premise' and a different licence was available to supply 'off' premise where a customer could buy in a bottle or bring their own jug. However the two areas had to be separate and hence the notice by the door for 'Bottle & Jug' customers.
I got some nice coloured reflection from a Begonia bloom fallen from a hanging basket we have at our front door.
.......................................... .............................................. less than 3 inches
Ma petite bouteille servant de récipient pour des branches de fleurs sauvages a été plongé dans un bol rempli d'eau où se trouve un escargot qui n'a pas pu entrer dans la bouteille car le goulot était bien trop étroit.
Original abstract collage painting
11X15 on 140 lb watercolor paper
I used newspaper as the under painting for this still life of a tablescape. Acrylics, ink, and crayon were used in creating this painting. To see more of my work:
John 7:38 “The one believing in me, just as Scripture says, ‘from his being will flow rivers of living water.’” WMV
”Bottled Up?” -2017
We have a cheapo table/storage unit in our living room that has a
built-in wine rack near the bottom. It stands against a big picture
window that looks out to the east. We've filled the wine rack, not
with full wine bottles but with spent ones that we've filled back up
with water and food coloring in different colors. Here's one of the
green bottles.