View allAll Photos Tagged nut
This little fella was on a cushion covering a patio chair.
Thanks to Theo Groen and Photospool for identification.
This type of screw nut is called "wing nut" for a good reason.
And when you consider that this is a detail of a wooden plane, you get a plane wing... nut. So, perfect match for this week's theme "wing", right?
Anyway, I'm late to the party, this time around, just a few hours shy of the end of the submission window, so it'll have to do. 😉
I found these cookies in the States a long time ago and fell in love but they weren't available in Canada. They have now arrived in Canada and I had to grab some. Now the new thing is this cookie dipped in chocolate which is even better. If you haven't tried Nutter Butter cookies you don't know what you are missing.
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I have several new ideas and dioramas for my squirrels but they seem much more interested in gathering pine cones theses days, so I am finding photos from the archives
On the fleamarket i bought a little book with handmade paper from Nepal, but alas, it is no good, the paper swigs too much water
Am Flohmarkt hab ich ein kleines Büchlein mit handgeschöpften Papier aus Nepal gekauft, aber leider, es ist wieder nix, das Papier sauft die Farbe zu sehr.
3.28.2011 ~ Day 87 of 365
Loving these lil' banana nut mini muffins! Need a little snack? Pop one ( . . . or two . . . or four ;) of these guys and you're set!
If you hadn't ever seen a nuthatch before, one of the few birds that can not only walk up but down a tree easily, you might think you were seeing things!
Their name comes from the fact they will lodge a nut or acorn into tree bark then "hatch" the nut by knocking it with their beaks.
This specimen is a white-breasted nuthatch male. Taken on Theodore Roosevelt Island in the Washington, D.C. area.
I found this nut when I was out on a walk some time ago, brought it home and plunked it down on my computer table, with the vague intent of somehow trying to make a photograph out of it. Finally, I decided I'd best do something with it before it withered up and combined it with this old dead leaf and a piece of driftwood we had in our garden. The lighting was deep afternoon shady window light, plus a swirling flashlight beam.
This is a re-do of an image I posted over 10 years ago. Topaz has lots of powerful new processing tools that weren't available back then, so I ran it though Topaz Studio 2, and I believe improved it Noticeably.
A plump little squirrel at my local church
Website: www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/photo/nutter-royalty-free-im...
. . . Boston Common, Boston, Massachusetts. Reminds me of the cover from Steely Dan's "Pretzel Logic" album, only with nuts.
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Cola Nut Gall caused by the asexual generation of the gall wasp Andricus lignicolus they resemble marble galls but are rarely more than 15mm in diameter, and they have a rough surface. These are mature galls and are very hard. The adult emerges in early autumn and lays eggs in the buds of Turkey Oaks the first galls are purple in the winter but then turn pale brown in spring. I saw these galls all over the oak tree in a small copse and wondered why the other oak trees had non on, now I know, there was only one Turkey Oak!
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It looks like a nut is thrown at him. He's actually chasing and playing with the nut.
On February 23, 2008, I took my 2-year-old Pomeranian BoBo to play in my backyard. He was chasing a nut like a rabbit hopping up and down. I was very attracted by his funny action, so I returned my house and grabbed my Nikon D300 with Sigma 50-150 F2.8 APO EX DC Lens. During noon, the weather was cloudy, so light was not very bright.
I set the ISO 1,250,
shutter speed priority Auto 1,600 second, (f/4.0)
metering-3D Color Matrix II,
auto white balance,
continuous servo AutoFocus,
shutter release mode - Continuous high speed CH
exposure compensation +0.3 EV,
Dynamic AF Area - 51 points (3D tracking)
Focal length 80 mm (120 in 35 mm)
I laid down on the grass for a lower angle view, and handheld the camera with no flashlight. I took 6 frames of my Pom in a second.
I cropped this picture on the Photoshop CS2.
I love his expression and pose.