View allAll Photos Tagged fluff
This cute little ghostly Halloween fluff is hoping to find a new place to haunt.
This fluff is the "runt size" so he's a bit smaller than the regular fluffs.
He is about 2.5 inches tall and 2.5 inches wide.
He's made of a white faux fur.
His face was hand painted by me using artist quality acrylics and sealed with a matte varnish.
Pocket Fluffs are able to stand on their own. :)
The Pocket Fluff Monsters are made from my original design.
Outside my study window this morning. There's a real cold snap here right now. (Original image below, this one has been brightened and cropped. Not sure which I prefer. My study windows face west and are tinted to cut down on heat during the summer.)
Photo by Rosalee Zammuto. Annual What the Fluff Festival presented by Union Square Main Streets in Somerville, Massachusetts.
Fluffed up against the early morning chill, this Kookaburra was surveying the garden for a feed and to catch some sun when it peeped over the hedge.
What the Fluff? A Tribute to Union Square Invention is an annual festival in Union Square, Somerville where we honor Archibald Query, the creator of Marshmallow Fluff. All photos this collection by Linda Gritz.
Dandelion fluff with 100mm macro lens on bellows at F16 with on-camera flash. Distance 14.75". I let the camera AE drive the flash, so I have no idea what the actual exposure was on this one. My bracket and tripod head won't let me rotate it vertical -- gotta fix that!
Anyway, on a sunny Winter day with no weather effects and no birds/squirrels in sight, what're you gonna do? LOL
You can also make a second photo of an object like this, after shifting the camera a few centimeters to left or right, and then combine them in one frame to make a 3D image, like this one:
You've heard of the March Hare. This is the March hair. Fluff wishes you a happy third month of the year!
Fluffed up cotton waiting for processing at the Bostwick, GA cotton gin (Morgan County). Copyright 2005 D. Nelson
Photo by Rosalee Zammuto. Annual What the Fluff Festival presented by Union Square Main Streets in Somerville, Massachusetts.
Not all that original but this dandelion was so fluffy I couldn't resist a quick snap while working in the backyard today. Large.
Photo by Rosalee Zammuto. Annual What the Fluff Festival presented by Union Square Main Streets in Somerville, Massachusetts.
Photo by Leonardo March. Held September 28, 2013 in Union Square, Somerville. Produced by Union Square Main Streets as part of the Somerville Arts Council's ArtsUnion initiative.
I can't tell you what flower produced these, but I love their wild beauty. They were in the memorial garden across the pond.
Fluffer's Brush and Tilley Paraffin Pressure Lamp and photo of Fluffers at work (1955)
For many decades, the tracks and tunnels were cleaned entirely by hand. Track cleaners known as 'fluffers' used a lamp to see and special brushes to remove dust and fluff from around the rails. A build-up of dirt on the track could affect the trackside equipment, cause fires and disrupt the daily operation of the Underground system. Today, 'fluffers' continue to work overnight once the electricity to the tracks has been switched off, but also use more modern equipment.
[London Transport Museum]
Taken during Hidden London: the Exhibition
(October 2019 - January 2021)
Hidden London: the Exhibition takes you on an immersive journey of some of London’s most secret spaces in the oldest subterranean railway in the world. These ‘forgotten’ parts of the Tube network have incredible stories to tell about Britain’s wartime past - such as the Plessey aircraft underground factory which had 2,000 members of staff, mostly women, working in the two 2.5 mile-long tunnels on the eastern section of the Central line during the Second World War.
[London Transport Museum]
From Museum Lates at London Transport Museum
fluff - how many become trees? how long do the trees live? but how long is the chain of life?
Below - building, several hundred years old, still falling down after a fire in 1947
Betting on where the chicken will poop at the World Famous Chicken Drop, at the Spindrift Resort Hotel.
Photos by Voravut Ratanakommon of the annual Fluff Festival in Union Square, Somerville, Massachusetts
Une fluffitude de rousseur au sein d'une confortable jungle de verts.
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