View allAll Photos Tagged bracketing

artists bracket fungi ( ganoderma applanatum ) growing on the remains of a storm damaged tree.

Mount Arapiles. Victoria.

This is the +3EV image from a +-3 bracketed series used to obtained a fused image.

See www.flickr.com/photos/jasolo/4292924906/

Thought I'd experiment with post-processing tonight. Processed in Lightroom and Silver Efex Pro 2.

Bracket on KeyboardPlease feel free to use this image that I've created on your website or blog. If you do, I'd greatly appreciate a link back to my blog as the source: CreditDebitPro.com

 

Example: Photo by CreditDebitPro

 

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Mike Lawrence

Remade parts, Telstar. Outboard skid supports and new (extended) ama cross brackets.

 

This photo is on my Telstar Trina blog at:

 

www.telstartrina.blogspot.com/

a bracket fungus ( trametes gibbosa ) found on a walk between mill lane and the martholme lane gt harwood.

And this is quite likely Artist's Bracket (Ganoderma applanatum).

Bracket fungus fruiting bodies forming clusters at the base of a dead tree trunk in St Ronan's Wood, Innerleithen in the Scottish Borders.

Bracket fungus and moss both grow in this tree in Myakka River State Park in Florida.

Baccharis hamlifolia in white, plumey fruit, with Phrag in front, autumn olive in back (Elaeagnus umbellata).

Trying my best to master my camera in the manual mode... rumor has it I'm getting a much nicer camera for Christmas - can't wait!

“BRACKETS INCLUDED” by Sylvain Willenz, (BE), for Vlaemsch()

 

The inspiration for Brackets included came from a scene in the movie Barton Fink, in which the temperature in the hotel room rises so high that the wallpaper starts to peel off the walls.

“I wanted to create the same effect by melting a rack and its brackets together, while keeping everything rough and leaving the visible traces of that process. I like that kind of honesty, showing the traces that indicate how something is constructed.”

Bracket Fungi Cornwall 2012

Gloomy day, but still time to go and explore a different local wood. I thought at first there was no fungus to be seen...... but found some eventually!

This bracket is decked in gorgeous autumn colours, just like its surroundings.

Sometimes the traffic signal brackets break and this is the result.

Probably a Ganoderma species but I'll check. Marlow.

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Bracket fungus "fruiting bodies" in great abundance on decaying tree trunks. Near the Braid Burn, Hermitage of Braid, Edinburgh, Scotland.

Ganoderma sp. Paparoa National Park, West Coast, South Island, New Zealand.

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