View allAll Photos Tagged multiply

Olympus mju 9010 - f/3 - 4sec - 5 mm - ISO 100

 

flying saucer

vliegende schotel

Fliegende Untertasse

soucoupe volante

platillo volador

#CrazyTuesday #SoftToys

This ain’t no way to be

Stuck between my shadow and me

The sun’s going down

It’s getting dark in here

Still folks say:

“I got nothing to fear”

 

I’m so tired over beating myself

Beating myself up

Gonna take a trip and multiply

Please go under with a smile

 

♫SONGSPIRATION♫ Multiply – Jamie Lidell

 

Credits in my Blog:

LILAROZEN.COM

   

.. soft instances of our first flower on the balcony .. happy weekend :)

Green windows not up to date anylonger

Our resident house sparrows are are nesting and raising their chicks.

Purnululu National Park is a national park in the north east of Western Australia. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

 

The Bungle Bungle Range, lying fully within the park, has elevations as high as 578 metres (1,896 ft) above sea level. It is famous for the sandstone domes, unusual and visually striking with their striping in alternating orange and grey bands. The banding of the domes is due to differences in clay content and porosity of the sandstone layers: the orange bands consist of oxidised iron compounds in layers that dry out too quickly for cyanobacteria to multiply; the grey bands are composed of cyanobacteria growing on the surface of layers of sandstone where moisture accumulates.

#NP1031 | Small, Medium | Available for exclusive use

 

About this photo:

Did you miss the water droplets? Here are some on a daffodil leaf

 

About the process:

I added a multiply layer to darken the background, a high-contrast overlay to make the water drops more pronounced, and a vignette to even the lighting. Oh, and I also flipped the image to make it more interesting :-P

© Copyright Arielle Kristina

Explore #114

Orchis bouc (Himantoglossum hircinum)

“Flickr Friday” ,

“Multiply” ,

Dandelions,

Macro,

Forest,

Nature,

Macro,

United States,

Pennsylvania,

Flora,

“Flickr Nature” ,

Spring.

Flickr Friday: Multiply

DMU start up on a frosty morning

I've taken glass spheres for the theme multiply which are greatly increasing in volume from bottom to top. I thought that they looked like an insect's eye but maybe I've been doing too much macro photography.

.

Brows photos of ARRRRT on PICSSR

multiple cook books for sale at the Ballymaloe Cookery school shop

Thank you for visiting!

Guelph, Ontario Canada

 

Flickr Friday #Multiply

  

Raindrops on a spider web suspended over an English daisy.

Hope you have a good Monday. Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for all of your kind comments -- I appreciate them all.

 

© Melissa Post 2016

 

Canon EOS 70D

EF24-70mm f/4L IS USM

ƒ/10.0 1/15 100

.. They go forth and multiply.

screenshot taken from my new 'Evolution' video - if you have a few minutes' spare you might want to take a look - YouTube www.youtube.com/user/peryburge

//

 

[ Song : Multiply - Woodz

youtu.be/qmSOA2sPHUU ]

Sluishuis, Amsterdam.

 

Design (2016): BIG (Bjarke Ingels Group) and Barcode Architects.

 

barcodearchitects.com/projects/sluishuis/

#FlickrFriday

#Multiply

 

Part of an expanding (multiplying) grove of mangroves exposed at low tide, Wynnum, Brisbane, Australia. Mature trees produce floating seeds that wash around tidal areas until trapped in the substrate, eventually becoming new mangrove trees. As the trees age, their networks of aerial roots (pneumatophores) also multiply, extending further out from each trunk.

I needn't have worried about filling up the front garden this year, as Mother Nature has done it for me. With all the excess rain we've received, plant growth has multiplied and occupied every last inch of space. This is our banana palm offering a lovely hiding place for one of several local predatory cats. I have to be extra vigilant now to spot these stalkers BEFORE they leap out of the herbage and dispatch yet another innocent victim.

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