View allAll Photos Tagged jacking

Jack Mancini ©

Is our featured Instagram artist of the day!

Check out and follow the artist @jack__mancini

>>> read our daily blog: medium.com/@eyephotomagazine

 

Use #eyephotomagazine or tag @eyephotomagazine for a chance to be featured too!

 

We promote this photo not just here on Instagram but also on all our social media channels, our daily blog and our website!

 

If you are interested in getting your photos published in our magazine, contact us: office@eyephotomagazine.com

You can read our magazine FREE - visit us

www.eye-photomagazine.com

 

Jack set is for Jake/Gianni/Legacy/Legacy athletic

 

Available 15th december at Kustom9.

Enjoy it :)

 

Taxi to Etiquette Mainstore !

Jack Phillips Memorial

By

MICHAEL J ROFF PHOTOGRAPHY

Jack Snipe at Restharrow Scrape Sandwich Kent

 

The Collins Bird Guide describes the habits of the Jack Snipe as secretive ‘skulking in often inaccessible patches’. On this occasion they came right out in the open for quite a long period of time. It was possible to see the metallic green and purple on the back.

 

They breed in Northern Scandinavia and Russia and winter in Western Europe and North Africa.

(Tamias striatus) Jack Pine Trail, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Not that often you get to enjoy these showing pretty much in open like this. Thanks for viewing my photos. Best wishes Neil

jack white and jack lawrence,

the raconteurs, liverpool 15th may '08.

The Jack O'Lantern Mushroom (Omphalotus illudens) is a bright orange mushroom that grows in clusters at the bases of hardwoods and conifers beginning later in the summer and continuing long into the fall months. Jack o'lantern mushroom is a trick, not a treat. ... Eating a jack o'lantern won't kill you, but it can leave you very sick, with some of the worst throwing up, stomach cramps or diarrhea you can imagine. People sometimes eat jack o'lanterns thinking they are chanterelles, which are edible.

 

Looks like Chanterelle

Chanterelle is the common name of fungi in the genus Cantharellus. They are among the most popularly eaten species of wild mushrooms. They are orange, yellow or white, meaty and funnel-shaped. On the lower surface, underneath the smooth cap, most species have gill-like ridges that run almost all the way down its stipe, which tapers down seamlessly from the cap. Many species emit a fruity aroma, reminiscent of apricots, and often have a mildly peppery taste (hence its German name, Pfifferling).

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chanterelle.

Union Township, Pennsylvania.

Please fell free to correct me if you feel the ID id incorrect.

 

Thank you for looking!

Views really nice fullscreen.

 

@ Fullerton Arboretum, Fullerton, California USA

Explored # 66 ( 19-04-10 )

  

The Clayton Windmills, known locally as Jack and Jill, stand on the South Downs above the village of Clayton, West Sussex, England. They comprise a post mill and a tower mill, and the roundhouse of a former post mill Some believe that Jack and Jill Windmills got their names from the nursery rhyme 'Jack & Jill went up the hill...'. Jill, the white post mill, dates from 1821 and was originally situated in Brighton. Jack, the black tower mill, built in situ in 1866, is a private home.

One of Natures beautiful creations - Jack Frost

Jack Barakat

All Time Low

Bamboozle Roadshow

Minneapolis, MN

June 10, 2010

Here is another Jack Snipe in flight after I had unintentionally flushed it by almost standing on it. Though I much prefer to watch them on the ground without flushing. But they don't lend themselves to views on the ground as they hunker down and hide until you almost tread on them and they silently spring into the air to escape. They are only about half the body weight of Common Snipe (55g v 110g) and the bill is noticeably shorter. They also look darker and the pale tramlines down the back seem more prominent too. Common Snipe usually flush much earlier, and they turn and twist in flight while giving a sound like tearing cloth: www.xeno-canto.org/594199

 

And the title; Spring-heeled Jack was an English folklore character from the Victorian era. He was supposed to be of grotesque appearance but with extraordinary leaping powers.

This is meant to be dark, just in case you're wondering..... some commenters have said it looks too dark, but if you can see both his eyes, just, then that is how I meant it to be.

 

It looks better on black in my flickriver, link below:

 

www.flickriver.com/photos/izzys-photos/

The last one of these Jack Rabbit Trail shots.

 

Canon 5D mkIII, Canon 17-40 f4@17mm, f8@1/40th sec, ISO 250, Polarizer

★★★★★★★★ JACK & IBO ★★★★★★★★

At first you were just the nice boy on the set after mine on Fridays, for whom everyone said "Ibo....It's Ibo!" Today you have become a fundamental part of my life. Someone I have a special affection for, whom I learned to admire and have by my side in all the crazy things I do because you encourage me and make me believe that I can do amazing things. And together the two of us created the magic of fun for many of our friends. Now that we know and understand each other by a look, by a sigh, by a gesture, or even when we are silent, I want to say THANK YOU SO MUCH for your affection, for your dedication at all times, for your friendship, for your faithfulness. I feel honored to have THE LITTLE PRINCE by my side--small physically, but a giant in intelligence, cunning and responsibility. I already told you that I love you more than if you were my husband, that I respect you more than if you were my father, and that I admire you more than the best player on my football team at heart. THANK YOU SO MUCH TO MY BEST FRIEND!

Photo taken by Margaret Bradbury on our last photo walk. Yes, it was wet! (Thanks, Margaret!)

 

Jack Sparrow - Cosplay

 

Thanks for visiting if you like follow me on flickr and instagram!

See you soon!

 

-My best photos are available for sale click here!

 

For collab! www.federicoluciani.com

My Instagram, FOLLOW ME!!! :)

My Facebook

 

Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mark IV Body

Lens: Canon Obiettivo, EF 100 mm 2.8L, Macro IS USM

 

Federico Luciani - Copyright - All images are copyright © protected. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

 

Jack Spurgeon Courtis was born Tuesday 27th January 2009.

Brunnera macrophylla (I think it's a Jack Frost variety), photographed a couple of years ago in the wonderful Abbotsbury Subtropical Gardens in Dorset.

 

The history of Abbotsbury is tied closely with the creation of the monastery that once dominated the village and the Fox-Strangways family. In 1541, the abbey lands were leased to Sir Giles Strangways, who converted part of the old monastery into a mansion. Later, Sir John Strangways, who was a staunch Royalist, held Abbotsbury for the King until the civil war broke out in 1644.

 

Defoe, on his tour of England in 1724, said: ‘the mackerel are the finest I ever saw sold at the seaside for a hundred a penny’. The London Journal recorded in 1752 that ‘all the people of Abbotsbury, including the Vicar, are thieves, smugglers and plunderers of wrecks’. Changes were, however, taking place. Susannah Strangways-Horner, mother-in-law of the 1st Earl of Ilchester, left money in her will to found a school in 1758. In 1765 her daughter Elizabeth, 1st Countess of Ilchester, built the castle on a site overlooking Lyme Bay.

 

A short distance away, a wall was built for a sheltered kitchen garden to provide fresh produce for the family in residence. That walled garden is now the very heart of the Abbotsbury Subtropical Gardens that we know today.

Jack's Magazine (also known as the Saltwater River Gunpowder Magazine) is a located on the Maribyrnong River at Footscray, Victoria. It was constructed in 1871, to provide safe storage for bonded gunpowder and explosives imported into the colony of Victoria. The twin bluestone vaulted buildings are concealed behind high earth mound blast walls, and a tall brick fence, with a canal connecting it to the river. It was designed by government architect, designed by William Wardell, Inspector General, Public Works Department and built by contractor George Cornwell.

.It is registered by the National Trust, and listed on the Victorian Heritage Register and Register of the National Estate. The associated Footscray Ammunition Factory was mostly demolished and redeveloped for the Delfin Lend Lease Corporation's Edgewater estate. Jack's Magazine was proposed to be redeveloped for a commercial use, but following several calls for expressions of interests it was decided that public ownership was the only practical management for the historic site. (extract from Wikipedia)

Jack is 16 years old now

Not my greatest work I know, but Jack Snipe are so fiendishly difficult to photograph and this photograph shows the underparts and the underwing. That little pale spot on its bill is snow. Jack Snipe is a bird that intrigued me as a child. It wasn't even illustrated in my first bird book; The Observer's Book of Birds. And the text basically told me it was smaller than Common Snipe but otherwise similar. When I started to get more interested during my teens I bought the Collins Field Guide by Heinzel, Fitter and Parslow. For the regular British birds it had three symbols to indicate abundance and your likelihood of seeing it. And Jack Snipe was given the solid black circle suggesting it was widespread and common. Yet I wasn't seeing them despite seeing lots of Common Snipe. It wasn't until I went to University and went birding with others that I finally clapped eyes on a Jack Snipe, albeit briefly as it silently jumped up at our feet and settled a short distance away. But in that brief view I could tell it was different. It was smaller, and darker with gleaming golden stripes down its back, and a much shorter beak. If you want to see a comparable photos of flying Common Snipe here's one: www.flickr.com/photos/timmelling/50327198766/in/photolist It was a few years later still before I finally saw one on the ground. But this early interest and difficulty in seeing one has made me appreciate them each time I am lucky enough to see one. It is always a very good day's birding if you see a Jack Snipe and this one brightened my Covid exercise walk from home considerably.

Taken at candie gardens Guernsey

Kodak Portra 400 Film ~ Canon AE-1P 28mm f/2.8

Jack coming round from anaesthetic.

Enjoying a dip in Crantock Bay

PLEASE COMMENT IF YOU FAVORITE

 

Today marks the 98th birthday. If you don't know who Jack Kirby is, change that. He's the reason comic books exist as they do today. He designed most of the marvel universe from scratch, and went on to DC to create some of their most outstanding work. He'll always be remembered by his incredible creativity and outstanding art style. Rest in peace, Jack.

Jack Henry fishing boat. Hastings, East Sussex, UK.

Canon Demi S

30mm f/1.7

half frame camera

Kodak Tri-X 400

Kodak D76

Plustek Opticfilm 7300

My brothers cat Jack, captured on a lounge chair. Taken with 35mm f/1.8 at ISO200 and f/3.2, with SB600 flashgun with bounced light in RAW. Layered with CS4, converted to black and white, erased eyes and increased their saturation, contrast increased and bordered.

Jack, Lily's favourite horse. Retired from riding school due to illness.

broadway street - jack london square, oakland, california

1 2 4 6 7 ••• 79 80