View allAll Photos Tagged layers
The layer-cake basalt slopes of Mt. Esja, seen over the rhyolite shoulder of Mt. Móskarðshnjúkar. Esja is a typical pre-ice age Icelandic mountain, made up of countless layers of dark basalt lava flows. The light-coloured rhyolite is rarer, found at the core of an extinct volcanic centre.
Three-Layer Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting. Recipe by Martha Stewart.
For the recipe, visit my blog Paris Pastry:
parispastry.blogspot.com/2010/03/easter-layer-carrot-cake...
Just a view from behind the little waterfall at the Calgary Zoo, looking up towards the sky. Beautiful layers of ice have formed and I liked the different shades of grey.
I will admit to trying to do this assignment in PSE – then decided that the Instagram thing just might be easier – and it was.
I’m so out of my element with it and my closest grand child is over 500 miles away. So I’ll be learning it on my own. I was caught up in capturing/sharing an image, that I forgot all about the hashtag thingy…also new to me. I can't even remember what filter I used on this image.
I think by the end of this week, I will get the hang of most of it. Will that make me an Insta-gram-ma?
I joined the Beyond Layers class by Kim Klassen yesterday, so this is my first task, I love this 6 word Six Word Memoir from
and I thought it would be a good idea to try out the texture from the first week
Digital Photo Layer Collage - 90"x72"
The photo-layer collage is most definitely inspired by David Hockney. I study his photo-collage work often, but I also took in an equal part of inspiration from the work I do with my MacGyver Camera. I always wondered what the image could look like if the overlapping was controlled.
I am in love with the narrative this process creates and I want to get lost inside all the little nuances that are layered on top of each other.
Some interesting layering in the soil, exposed by erosion of a beach on the bay side of Sandy Hook (the long sand spit forming the northern terminus of the Jersey Shore). I wish I knew how to read this. Maybe the black layer is silt from an epoch underwater? Likewise the reddish layer, which is presumably the local red clay. Not coincidentally, the nearby town on the Navesink, which empties into the bay here, is named Red Bank. Seems to have a large number of roots exiting right there; I think they may be running along above it in the much softer sand rather than penetrating the clay. The flora on the bank was mainly some small Eastern Junipers, with a few other shrubby things.
Layers of sedimentary slate rock with embedded fool's gold and lichen growing on top. A closeup, taken on the coast near Easdale.
Layer cake is a cake consisting of multiple layers, usually held together by frosting or another type of filling, such as jam or other preserves.
Friends are Flowers that never fade away"
i made this for class .. it was a layers project i took all the pics the flowers are of course fake lol
St Mary, Layer Breton, Essex
Locked, no keyholder notice. A small 1920s brick-built mission hut, but with an absurdly large and ambitious weatherboarded belfry plonked on top, quite out of proportion.
In fact, the church is not without interest as it contains a number of survivals from its predecessor a mile off, and also from neighbouring Birch.
It was pretty good, I don't really love buttercream icing, so I would only give the overall recipe a 7.5 out of 10. Chocolate sponge was lovely and moist, which I would make again with a different icing.
Recipe from Canadian Living: www.canadianliving.com/food/chocolate_layer_cake.php
Oliver +S basics/favorites: 2-2 blouse in Liberty, Puppet show shorts in navy twill
Blogged: sisforsewing.wordpress.com/2012/11/05/updating-on-layerin...
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. All rights reserved.
Crazy layered cuffs i have been cobbling out of ostrich, alligator and stingray. Way fun to make!
In the shop: missmonster.bigcartel.com/
Small perfectly round tide pool formed within the "lava" like sediment. Here you can see the many layers of sediment.
FWC photo by Jessica Therriault