View allAll Photos Tagged greening
Male Green woodpecker, Picus viridis _ männliche Grünspecht
This woodpecker was making an awful lot of noise yesterday morning. He was sat on the ridge of a house opposite and although he was about 30 meters away, even with a 500mm lens, it was too far. This is a crop. Taken freehand.
A Grasshopper in serach of food. It is very hard to spot them in naked eye as they mingle with the surrounding green so well.
follow me on instagram: @yuliya.bahr
interview for flickr blog:
blog.flickr.net/en/2017/03/09/what-is-a-womans-job/
I can take a picture of you and your family FOR FREE in your country. Contact me to learn more!
I would really LOVE to be your destination wedding & family photographer this year! (or next:)) All countries!
All the World!
Book me for your wedding & engagement shooting!
Wedding Photography by Yuliya Bahr.
Europe and worldwide!
Familien- und Hochzeitsfotografin Yuliya Bahr.
Seen at Chenango Valley State Park.
South Shore train #118 just got the green light at 11th and Franklin in Michigan City and proceeds west.
Green woodpecker in fly-past - Lee Valley. A real grab shot as this bird flew past me as I sat waiting for heron action.
Is there anything in the universe more beautiful and protective than the simple complexity of a spider's web?
- E. B. White
details on the frontage of the city of mabgate pub in leeds, closed in 2007 and awaiting new purpose....leeds flickr group photocamp weekend
1969 Plymouth Road Runner 383 / 4-Speed
Location: Liechtenstein
www.dejanmarinkovic.de | Instagram | Facebook
www.AmericanMuscle.de | Facebook
If you are interested in Prints or licensing photos, please contact me at info@dejanmarinkovic.de
2013-04-15. Healthy, fresh cocktail.
Not the best day to celebrate though: www.flickr.com/photos/mbietenhader/8654277394/
© Maïlis Bietenhader
April 2013 - Fern/Moss/Pine Green
All Rights Reserved Worldwide. All photographs are owned and copyright by Michael Cummings. Do not use, edit or in anyway alter without written permission. Please contact me if you have an interest in using any image in my collection.
I think I know where JW Turner got his inspiration from for his style of Impressionism; looking at the back of gravestones.
Jay and I have a fondness for what we call, with our weird sense of black humour, stalking the dead, i.e., visiting graveyards and cemeteries. We find them fascinating and strangely soothing places to be in…and a target rich environment for photography. It's possible to spend hours in them, finding all manner of subject matter to capture.
The above gravestone is located at a small village chapel tucked away on the slopes of Bickerton Hills. Fortunately, for the lichens that adorn the gravestones, and for we as photographers, there's a large mature stand of pine trees that shields the backs of the gravestones from direct sunlight thereby giving the lichens a perfect environment to grow in. Most important of all, though, unlike a lot of gravestones which are made from granite/marble, those at this graveyard are made from the local sandstone, which means they have a rough, porous surface which holds moisture and gives the lichens the best surface to grow on.
It was while I quietly walked amongst the graves searching for subjects that I saw this gravestone from behind. It stopped me in my tracks. I was stunned by the colours, textures and sheer variety of lichens on display but it was the Impressionistic quality that made me catch my breath. I immediately sat down, put my camera to one side and just stared in astonishment. It was like looking at a Turner painting, done at his most wildly Impressionistic! My imagination went into overdrive, to my eyes I saw woodland ablaze with green flame and smoke…
Slowly coming to my senses I picked my camera up and took this shot. I then spent the next 30 minutes checking the backs of all the other gravestones and shooting what I could before the light died. My face hurt from the stupid grin that was plastered to my face. I resolved there and then to create a series of images of these wonderful, living natural art creations. I'm fortunate that there are many similar chapel graveyards in the area so I should have quite a choice of subject matter to choose from.
This stunning hummingbird is distinctive within its limited range in north-central Colombia. Males have a pointed green strip on the throat bordered by white and a spiky black-and-white crest. On females and immatures, look for the broad white band across the chest that extends up onto the sides of the neck, the very short, straight bill, and white in the outer tail feathers. Most often seen singly foraging at flowering shrubs in the páramo.
This one was photographed in Colombia guided by Neotropic Photo Tours.
© 2016 Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott
A shift in the weather patterns has renewed winter in my part of the world. It is this time of year that we all get really, really sick of winter and desperate for the green of spring. I shot this abstract indoors using available light and the new Tamron SP 90mm f/2.8 Di 1:1 VC Macro lens that just came to market during my review. You can check that review out here: bit.ly/1Mx4y7a or watch it here: bit.ly/1UeliGG
Technical Information: Canon EOS 6D, Tamron SP 90mm f/2.8 Di 1:1 Macro VC, Processed in Adobe Lightroom CC, Photoshop CC, and Alien Skin Exposure X (use code "dustinabbott" to get 10% off)
Want to know more about me or make contact? Take a look at my website and find a lot of ways to connect and view my work.