View allAll Photos Tagged mop
I usualy give my macro photos that I post here a tighter "flickr crop", because folks have to view them at such a small size that its hard to see the detail in the water drops. But I'm going to leave this as it is because I like the contrast of white flower on black and I like the big purple drop at the bottom right corner. You will have to view this large to see the refractions in the water drops of the English Daisy "Habanera" directly behind them.
As Susan Sontag put it in her seminal publication : On Photography “ The painter constructs, the photographer discloses.” This is Ted Serios, and as hard as they tried, nobody could figure out what the fuck he was doing . . .
Pixie Mops (Petrophile linearis). In this photo, you can see why members of this genus are often called conebushes. Lesueur National Park, near Jurien Bay, Western Australia.
313215 has come in from Brighton and waits to go back. At intervals along the platform are hoses, buckets (in Southern mint green) and mops. For side windows of units? Do the 313s not have built in windscreen washers? Either way the bucket was full of green slime, so presumably doesn't get much use - although would impart that well used patina to the train....
I captured this scene while visiting the island of St. Croix. I was amused to see the mop head hanging out the window and was drawn in by the simplicity, and the complementary colors
Missouri Pacific SD40-2 #3174 heads North at Tower 55 in Ft. Worth, TX in April of 1986. Southern Pacific MP15AC #2720 sits in the background.
One whole flower.
I normally do a macro of part of the Pixie Mop but decided to show you the whole flower.
Aussie native flower.
i really need to take up vectoring. kinda fucked this one up, but eh.
side note: the photoshop made it look like i cant draw lines for shit 0_____0
The main body of fire was knocked down quite a while ago but the mop up continues with water still flowing out of the structure. This was a vacuum cleaner company building in Suffern N.Y. which also housed some sort of fancy garment business. Pictured is Nyack NY's ALF 10-99 from Chelsea H&L Co.No.2. 1955 700 Series ALF 100FT Tiller 7-75-TEO. She was originally built as a 75 footer and had a fourth ladder section added in 1967. Howard Kent Jr. 07-14-1974