View allAll Photos Tagged iphonese
Taken from Waterloo Lane, Kingsley, during a daily exercise last year.
A break from trains, and I like the clean lines offered. I also thought the pylons brought a dose of northern realism, so opted not to clone them out.
iPhoneSE
4th March 2021
Please press L on your keyboard for the best view… Thanks in advance for any faves and comments… Always appreciated…Vlad :-}
Пожалуйста, нажмите L на клавиатуре для лучшего просмотра... Заранее спасибо за любые лайки и комментарии... Всегда ценю... Влад :-}
I want to thank each and everyone who took the time to visit my little space here on Flickr. Have a super day!
When driving past I've always been intrigued by this little "blue" cottage in Wellingtonbridge so I decided to walk up from the village & have a closer look. It's on the main road with the Corock River right behind it & it's surrounded by tall trees which means it's never without shade. The area is prone to flooding particularly on very high tides hence the sandbags at the front door. Best viewed Large to see the detail HWW!
Please press L on your keyboard for the best view… Thanks in advance for any faves and comments… Always appreciated…Vlad :-}
Пожалуйста, нажмите L на клавиатуре для лучшего просмотра... Заранее спасибо за любые лайки и комментарии... Всегда ценю... Влад :-}
Please press L on your keyboard for the best view… Thanks in advance for any faves and comments… Always appreciated…Vlad :-}
Пожалуйста, нажмите L на клавиатуре для лучшего просмотра... Заранее спасибо за любые лайки и комментарии... Всегда ценю... Влад :-}
It’s difficult to know whether the Bluegrass standard “Cripple Creek”
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cripple_Creek_(folk_song)
or The Band’s song “Cripple Creek”
refers to this lovely creek in the mountains of southwest Virginia or to a creek of the same name in Teller County, Colorado.
I have no idea, so I’m going with this one as the subject of the bluegrass standard and the one in Colorado as the inspiration for The Band’s song.
The first of an occasional series of 5-part photoessays on small-town America, particularly in the southeastern part of the country.
Featured this week is the town of Wytheville (“WITH-vul”), Virginia, pop. 7,957, in the Appalachian Mountains southwest of Roanoke. Wytheville is known for its balloon festival (the town’s water tower has been painted to appear as if it were a hot-air balloon), for its All-American Main Street, and for a vibrant arts scene anchored by live old-timey music.
I love the sense of anticipation at the promise of Spring's renewal and brighter days ahead. Today really gave a sense of that and I felt a long-missed ray of hope. Towards the end of my walk, this scene caught my eye. I only had my iPhone but grabbed a shot anyway.
It's a little high-rise and hoity-toity around this area (Coal Harbour) but the harbour view and North Shore mountains are lovely and it was the strong blue and red here, the flat-calm water, the mountains and sky, in the warm, slightly hazy late afternoon light. Well, you can see for yourselves.....
Happy Window Wednesday!
A Hoverfly enjoying the Purple Sprouting Broccoli flowers. We didn't bother netting the plants & hundreds of Cabbage White caterpillars are happily munching their way through the leaves. It bolted early on & went to seed so we've given up now & left the crop to nature HFDF!
Continuing my 100 Flowers 2017 project
Flughafen Bremen, Aussichtsterrasse, Eingang zur historischen Bremenhalle
ENG: Bremen Airport, facility
The Abduction of Europa (painting by Serov)
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%27Enl%C3%A8vement_d%27Europe_(Serov)