View allAll Photos Tagged layers
all layers in place!
red: cherry jello & can of cherry pie filling
white: plain gel with lemonade & cream cheese
blue: blue jello & blueberry pie filling
Many layers visible here, but the place is about so much more than that!
9 day Grand Canyon rafting trip www.flickr.com/photos/dieirdra/sets/72157630145098694/
Free Layer. All my images, except this one, are not for use by anyone but me.
However, if you want to use this as a layer, feel free.
Week 1 of Kim Klassen's Beyond Layers. About my photo
ISO 125
f/1.2
Shutter 1/1600
Added 'awaken' texture at soft light
These skates were part of my outdoor Christmas decorations and now they are all that's left with a single pine branch tucked into the boot. I paid attention to the light which was coming from above on a cloudy afternoon. I found the best angle for simple composition and could have opened up the exposure a tad more but I wanted to really blur out the background to enhance the skates..
Colorized (via Bayer Decoding) panorama of Curiosity images of eroded layers of rock on the floor of Gale Crater.
This completely immerse program is a great way for your child to learn and have fun while exploring language and
culture.Children learn to speak their new language naturally in a fun and effective way with this berlitz method
The layers were ripped from the Sixth and pressed between two pieces of plexiglass to represent a mausoleum or mummification of the project. The video and music was projected upon it.
The family of Cherise Lavender Brown, who died of an opiate overdose, pose at her grave. She left behind three small children.
For the full story, visit mysouthsidestand.com/more-news/raising-awareness/
| Photo provided by Layers of Hope, taken by DJ Igelsrud
A plinthic horizon contains a significant amount of plinthite. If the horizon constitutes a "continuous phase", zones that roots can enter are more than 10cm apart or plinthite makes up 50 percent or more of the volume of the horizon (proposed). Plinthite (Gr. plinthos, brick) is an iron-rich, humus-poor mixture of clay with quartz and other highly weathered minerals.
It commonly occurs as reddish redox concentrations in a layer that has a polygonal (irregular), platy (lenticular), or reticulate (blocky) pattern. Plinthite irreversibly hardens upon exposure to repeated wetting and drying, especially if exposed to heat from the sun. Other morphologically similar iron-rich materials that do not progressively harden upon repeated wetting and drying are not considered plinthite. The horizon in which plinthite occurs commonly has 2.5 percent (by mass) or more citrate dithionite extractable iron in the fine-earth fraction and a ratio between acid oxalate extractable Fe and citrate-dithionite extractable Fe of less than 0.10.
Soils that classify as Plinthudults have one or more horizons within 150 cm of the mineral soil surface in which plinthite either forms a continuous phase or constitutes one-half or more of the volume.
For more information on Soil Taxonomy, visit:
www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/soils/survey/class/
For more photos related to soils and landscapes visit:
Beyond Layers: Day 56: working with Type and creating brushes in PS
"Art enables us to find and lose ourselves at the same time. " T. Merton
Three Layer Cake Tour: An art installation by Audrey Molinare, Danielle Benson, and Erin Burke. (Graduate students at the University of Georgia). First of three installations done in residences of Athens, Georgia. To see past collaborative installations please visit www.greenblanky.com. The tour was made possible by a project grant from ICE: visit ice.uga.edu.
Jalina also wanted subtle long layers on thick natural hair-luscious!
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