View allAll Photos Tagged curls
While dancing in the rain yesterday, I noticed Sammy's one curl. It reminds me of when she was a baby and had little curls around her head.
This one curl causes millions of memories to flood my head.... and then dance some more.
Miss Tiffany puts curls into her wig in the Hordern Pavilion dressing rooms before the Desperate Dragwives 7am show at the Mardi Gras Party.
Sydney Showgrounds, Sydney, 2007
Type of pampas grass maybe, but I don't know for sure.
Can be purchased at www.saatchiart.com/lttlehandimages
Rose Petals from Shore Acres, OR The sprinklers came on when the garden first opened, giving us some very drenched roses.
North Curl Curl
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Feel free to visit my website 4G Images
It is a small commercial site offering high quality prints
Handheld single shot with the Canon MP-E 65
Another of the tiny solitary bees that I came across on my stay in France in August.
I think this one may be somewhere between 3 and 4:1 magnification. Really tiny bees.
The darker species here looks vivid against the bright colour of the flower.
I love how these little bees tend to curl their abdomen when latching on to gather pollen and nectar.
Gear: Canon EOS 5D Mark III (F13, 1/200, ISO 100) + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x Macro Photo (@~3x) + a diffused Canon MT-24EX (+1/3 FEC and a 1/8 CTO gel) powered by a Canon CP-E4
North Curl Curl
All rights are reserved. Please contact me if you are interested in using this image. Thanks for looking at my work
Feel free to visit my website 4G Images
It is a small commercial site offering high quality prints
A tree, a branch , like any other plant is in the need of light.
Maybe this green dance is toward the light
f/5.3 1/250s ISO800 18-200@105mm
South Curl-Curl this morning May 15
0.9 reverse GND
Single Exposure
Any advice / constructive criticism welcome (I'm new to the game!), thanks!
This fence, which went for miles and miles through the woods, contained a herd of deer and other wildlife for a hunting preserve ("deer park," I was told). If you look at the part sloping to the left, you can see that the weave is tighter on the lower portion of the fence. For the most part, the portions that still are standing are attached to trees--fence posts have fallen, taking the fence with them.