View allAll Photos Tagged dollar

Down on the beach as the waves tumble in and break. Not classic surf, more the normal angriness of Atlantic waves after a gale. Again using 3 stop ND to get a slow shutter speed.

Pop pop, it's show time (show time)

Show time (show time)

Guess who's back again?

Oh they don't know? (Go on tell 'em)

Oh they don't know? (Go on tell 'em)

I bet they know soon as we walk in (showin' up)

Wearing Cuban links (ya)

Designer minks (ya)

Inglewood's finest shoes (whoop, whoop)

Don't look too hard might hurt ya'self

Known to give the color red the blues

Oh shit, I'm a dangerous man with some money in my pocket (keep up)....

The US treasury issued the first banknote of one dollar in 1862.

Ashmolean Museum

Oxford

Macro Mondays: Curves. Explored 6-18-19 (24).

A splendid view can be found from Struie Hill, aptly named 'The Million Dollar View'. It looks over the Kyle of Sutherland and Dornoch Firth. Just a short detour off the NC500.

Remains from the intertidal zone of burrowing sea urchins - the Sea of Cortez. Sand dollars are echinoids that live on the ocean floor.

- San Felipe, Baja (Mexico)

Info: Living sand dollars are more purple in color and covered in tiny flexible bristles. When they die, their skeletons get bleached by the sun, turning them white, and the small spines fade away. > www.mnn.com/earth-matters/animals/stories/things-you-dont...

 

The reverse of an 1888 Morgan Dollar. Truly a work of art and part of our rich numismatic heritage.

The Lil Blue Bronco hauled dau and sil up the Million Dollar Highway to Silverton today. Taking a break here at Molas Pass Summit. They have installed guardrails on the scariest dropoffs since I was last here. Takes a little bit of the thrill out of what was one of the scariest drives on pavement. Tomorrow we go up the other side of the Great Divide to the little mining town of Creede. Will hit a little dirt up there.

Apparently it was sand dollar breeding season when we were in Puerto Rico. There were tens of thousands of sand dollars in the water

Former ACME, BiLo & Dollar General

 

Troy, PA. May 2020.

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Roadside view from Last Dollar Road just outside Ridgway, Colorado.

Rolleiflex 3.5F, Ilford Delta 100. yellow filter, Rodinal 1+50

I like both color casts. I couldn't decide which one to post, so I posted both.

Bottlenose Dolphin Breach.

Sand Dollar in Chesterman Beach in Tofino

This is Last Dollar Road that travels from the Telluride airport to Dallas Divide. This is a wide spot on this road. It is very narrow in spots, but nothing dangerous. It has great vistas and lots of aspens.

 

Most high clearance vehicles will be fine, but I don't recommend it for cars. If they have gotten several days of hard rain in the area, it will be very muddy, and you would have to cross areas with water a foot or so deep.

Jangyre-ryn or Dollar Cove in near Gunwalloe in Cornwall. There is a section of undulating sandstone rock on the beach that never seems to dry properly between the tides. As a consequence it has a stripy appearance. I used focus stacking to get sharpness across the frame.

A few details on a 100 dollar. The intricacies can be noted and quite interesting.

  

Schauen Sie auch mal auf den Fotografie YouTube-Kanal von einem Kumpel von mir und mir mit Videos zum Thema Fotografie und außerdem teilen wir Erlebnisse in Form von V-Logs.

 

Also klickt euch rein:

 

www.youtube.com/channel/UCnEJWkZUfiVArkWvwvSlBeQ/videos

 

The view is worth million dollars. Can't be just last dollar.

3645 E 1st St, Los Angeles, CA 90063

(Everyday is the same, but different)

 

Went out for a walk on this special day.

Meet Dollar & his extraordinary solar eclipse.

 

If you stare at it, it will begin to hurt the eyes, zoomed in tho. (maybe cause I'm in a dark room)

 

Finally got to cross driving the Million Dollar Highway off of my Colorado bucket list

 

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A collection of sand dollars; most were found on Popham Beach.

 

The bodies of adult sand dollars, like those of other echinoids, display radial symmetry. The petal-like pattern in sand dollars consists of five paired rows of pores. The pores are perforations in the endoskeleton through which podia for gas exchange project from the body. [Wikipedia]

Monterey Bay Aquarium, Monterey, CA

Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988)

Fourth in the series. Still working on a few more.

 

Print available at doug-pedersen.com/Dollar_Store_Lion.html

 

tumblr / site / twitter

Abandoned dollar store

Pho-Tak Foldex 20, flipped lens, "practice" film at ISO 0.1

The Kennedy half dollar, first minted in 1964, was intended as a memorial to the assassinated President John F. Kennedy. It was authorized by Congress just over a month after his death.

 

The silver coins were hoarded upon their release in March 1964 by collectors and those interested in a memento of the late president. Although the Mint greatly increased production, the denomination was seldom seen in circulation.

 

In 1971, when silver was eliminated entirely from the coins and production increased, the series began to see improved, but still limited circulation.

 

Even though ample supplies of circulating half dollars are readily available from most banks, their circulation is still limited. Since 2002, Kennedy half dollars have only been struck to satisfy the demand from collectors, and are available at a premium through the Mint.

Dollarbird, Eurystoma orientalis cyanocollis, 30 cm. / 11.8 in. Widespread, but UNCOMMON at the edges of forest up to 1200 meters elevation. This bird was at some distance in a bare tree.

 

Yunnan Province, China.

 

©bryanjsmith.

... c'était un Banksy.

Sachant qu'un acheteur intéressé a proposé 700.000 dollars pour un rat du célèbre graffeur peint sur 6 m2 de planches d'une façade d'immeuble de San Francisco, ce petit bout de sol de hangar de Toulouse vau(drai)t cher.

Pour la petite histoire, le rat original de Banksy a été récupéré en 2010 par un amateur d'art après de longues négociations avec le propriétaire de l'immeuble. Son but : offrir - oui, oui offrir - cette oeuvre à un musée d"art moderne plutôt que le voir détruit comme le prévoyait la loi de San Francisco (les graffs sont interdits et doivent être effacés par l'artiste ou à défaut par le propriétaire du support).

Résultat : aucun musée n'en veut (pas signé, pas authentifié, gna gna gna ...) ! Mais pas question de le vendre pour son 'sauveur'.

D'autres propriétaires de galeries ont beaucoup moins de scrupules. Un coup de marteau piqueur et ils vous livrent dans votre salon un bout de mur d'une tonne avec un Banksy dessus, pour un tarif sans concession ...

 

Si vous le trouvez (sur Netflix notamment), je vous invite à regarder un film qui s'appelle "Saving Banksy". Intéressant sur le sujet du street art et la question de savoir s'il doit rester dans la rue ou pas.

Je l'aurais bien posé sur Flickr mais 1,8 Go c'est un peu trop :-))

 

Designed by me, folded from a rectangle of paper with dollar bill proportions (momigami, 24cm x 10,2cm).

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