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Low angle, shot on Samsung S23 Plus. Edited in Lightroom and Pixlr. Cropped for cell phone Screensaver.
Made in Austria, I love these little brooms. Not sure if you can still find them around.
Monthly Scavenger Hunt
April 2016
#5 Low Angle
in the background, the humans blur into soft shapes of color and light. they are the temporary occupants of the city, always coming and going. in the foreground, the true resident walks with purpose. a pigeon, a creature of asphalt and concrete. it drinks from a shallow puddle, its feet reflected in the dirty water. it is not beautiful or exotic. it is simply there. it owns the ground it walks on. it is a small, gray, overlooked fact of the city's life.
Temple de Neptune à Paestum, ancienne colonie grecque sur la mer Tyrrhénienne, 2500 ans avant moi-même. Une claque, une émotion comme rarement j'en ai ressentie...
An ex-Southern Pacific EMD GP40-2 holds down an Indiana Harbor Belt train at Melrose Park under threatening skies.
DDC-Low Angle
She was watching Stu change the filter in my shower head and I took the opportunity to snap this photo while she was watching him.
Cookeville, TN
One of two sculptures in front of Cookeville Performing Arts Center.
Created by Brad Sells.
Olana State Historic Site home of Frederic Church who is well-known as a painter, but he was also a world traveller, a family man, and a self-taught architect, farmer and landscape designer. He and his wife Isabel were pious, wellread, and funloving. They raised four children at their estate overlooking the Hudson.
Image taken from Third Beach in Vancouver BC.
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The Green Horse Bar and Nightclub. Centinela Heights neighborhood. 1662 Centinela Ave, Inglewood, CA.
Taken at Boundary Bay, BC, Canada - September 2016.
While birding last weekend at Boundary Bay, I spotted some golden plovers mixed in with the abundant Black-bellied Plovers. There were 4 Pacific Golden-Plovers and 2 American Golden-Plovers. Approaching plover flocks is usually extremely difficult, and the tide was also very high, which meant that if I was going to approach the birds, I would get soaking wet. I decided to go for it, since it is very rare to see such a large group of golden-plovers in this area. The water was about 5 inches deep, meaning I got soaking wet as a crawled towards the birds, holding my camera above the surface, keeping it dry. Thankfully, the mud was hard and there was no wind or waves, so I felt my gear was very safe. After a very slow approach for a long time, I found myself around 4 metres away from these beautiful birds. In the years I have photographed shorebirds at Boundary Bay I have had many amazing moments, but this was definitely one of my favorite ones ever. I got the shots I had hoped for of Pacific-Golden, American-Golden, and Black-bellied Plovers. I got soaking wet, but it was undoubtedly worth it! After some time with the birds I moved off, leaving them to their resting and feeding.