View allAll Photos Tagged crispy
Making their final performance for the 2008 Autumn season. With any luck they will return for an encore next year!
Wageningen University. Campus area.
Atlas building. 2007.
Architects: Rafael Viñoly Architects and Van den Oever, Zaaijer & Partners architecten.
Détail: The construction (the concrete elements) has been placed outside the facade.
I just can't stop saying - I LOVE AUTUMN SO MUCH.
Also, What Next. Winter's items are always incredible and I use them all year long, tweaking and playing.
Inspired by a Pinterest found from this blog.
Trompe Loeil - Mia Glass Cottage
What Next - Cutesy Doormat (tweaked and merged with another item)
What Next - Winter Harvest Lantern (small, medium, large + tinted)
What Next - Scattered Leaves Decor
Apple Fall Milk Urn w/ Wild Geraniums
Jian Cat Pumpkins
Apt B Goodbye Autumn Ladder
Hot and crispy on the outside, smooth on the inside.
Check out more on Daph's Food Hunt at Tou Tou Little Kitchen at:
www.daphnescapades.com/budget-food-exploration-in-sri-pet...
Studio Story - Wabi Sabi Dark and Moody
Edit based on Kim's preset 'serendipitous'
All about 'Annabelle' on my blog
Mundy Park, Coquitlam, BC.
I feel like I've finally taken another step forward in my photography. It's been a while since this kind of advancement has taken place, and I'm incredibly excited about where this could go. While I'm almost fully accepting that I'll never have the time I truly want to dedicate to this craft, I can at least see a path that will get me much closer.
Newfoundland winters definitely seem to have changed over the past 8 years. Every year there is less snow it seems. The snow in this photo is now all gone again after some rain and 7 degrees. Now it is cold again with flurries (at best) for the next few days.
With the temperature well below freezing, on a crisp morning 156437 heads south away from Lugton with the 0837 Glasgow Central to Carlisle.
In the far distance are the snow dusted peaks of Arran, visible over 20 miles away across the Firth of Clyde. Immediately behind the train is the disused but still intact branch to RNAD Giffen.
I was attracted by how the ice including zillions of air bubbles looked like white water shot with a short-time exposure
Tulips (Tulipa) form a genus of spring-blooming perennial herbaceous bulbiferous geophytes (having bulbs as storage organs). The flowers are usually large, showy and brightly coloured, generally red, pink, yellow, or white (usually in warm colours). They often have a different coloured blotch at the base of the tepals (petals and sepals, collectively), internally. Because of a degree of variability within the populations, and a long history of cultivation, classification has been complex and controversial. The tulip is a member of the Liliaceae (lily) family, along with 14 other genera, where it is most closely related to Amana, Erythronium and Gagea in the tribe Lilieae. There are about 75 species, and these are divided among four subgenera. The name "tulip" is thought to be derived from a Persian word for turban, which it may have been thought to resemble.
Tulips originally were found in a band stretching from Southern Europe to Central Asia, but since the seventeenth century have become widely naturalised and cultivated (see map). In their natural state they are adapted to steppes and mountainous areas with temperate climates. Flowering in the spring, they become dormant in the summer once the flowers and leaves die back, emerging above ground as a shoot from the underground bulb in early spring.
197/366 - 07/15/2012
The heatwave has been murder on my flowers. Literally!
#160 on Flickr Explore July 16, 2012
Hi, How are you all doing? Hope everyone has had a great Christmas and is looking forward to the New Year. Bit frosty here at the moment. This one was taken earlyish this morning.
Hopefully be around more in the New Year and get to catch up on all your streams. Have a good one.