View allAll Photos Tagged patches
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
There are four bisons in this photo. Can you spot them?
Tech Info:
Nikon D200
Nikkor AF 80-400mm f/4.5-5.6D VR @110mm | f/8 | 1/100 sec | ISO 100
Singh-Ray 0.6 Grad ND and Warm CP filters
Gitzo tripod and RRS BH-55 ballhead
Developed in LR4.2
Post-processed in PS CS5
5x5 patch design to go along with hatred for a human host.
available to purchase at lowercrassblatz.ecrater.com
California patch (Chlosyne californica) butterfly during fall butterfly count
NPS Photo/ Carmen Aurrecoechea
Alt text: An orange and brown patterned butterfly rests on a yellow petaled flower.
Some of my unit patches from when I was in the Air Force. The top right is for the 63rd Military Airlift Wing based at Norton AFB, California. The bottom right was my AFSC patch (Aircrew Life Support). The middle patch was from when I was with the 9th RW Physiological Support Division at Beale AFB, California. The top left is my command patch from Norton AFB (Military Airlift Command). The bottom left is my rank when I got out, which was Senior Airman/E-4.
The Bluebells are out - from an enjoyable wander around the woods at Patching with the South East Gang
We had a lovely day picnicking and walking on Max Patch on the Appalachian Trail. The views were stunning. Read more here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Patch and here en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appalachian_balds
Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission. © Barbara Dickie. All rights reserved.
Esta almofada fiz igual ao meu primeiro trabalho em patch, acho este modelo muito gostoso de fazer..
Not a Boeing sourced patch per-se, but I figured I would grab it. This distinct style of border is often found on BSA patches.
Trip to the local Pumpkin Patch with family... Tried making shot more interesting with some stylization..
Back in sunny Shoreham, a brief patch of iridescent colour appeared in thin cloud at the classic 22 degree sundog position - about an outstretched hand's width, to the right of the sun.
A patch here, a patch there, but the Rock remains. Valley Junction, East St Louis, IL, February 2023.
Tuckahoe Wildlife Management Area (WMA)
Screven County, Georgia, USA
Collard Patch Lake is an oxbow lake off the Savannah River.
An abstract view of the envelopes of two small balloons, seen at the Bristol International Balloon Fiesta.
Patch Budder in small thick paper box. Box is brown and has experienced some water damage to the top. One small face of the box has the following text, reading "Jones' Patch Budder / Pat'd Feb. 6th 1912 / J. F. Jones Lancaster, Pa." Inside is the patch budder, which is made of metal and contains a curved handle and four blades that are positioned to form a rectangle when looking at them from above. Inside is also a folded paper titled, "Budding Nut Trees," which details the Patch Method to "propagating nut trees" according to Jones. The paper is yellowed and delicate, has some ripes along the edges. Box is 3" x 1 5/8" x 1 1/4".
Belonged to Dr. Mila E. Rindge or her doctor father, Milo. Learn more about her at www.madisonhistory.org/doctor-in-the-house/. Purchased at a local antique store as a collection inside classic doctor’s bag by MHS Director Jennifer Simpson in October 2020
ACC# 2020.120.004
See other medical related items in the MHS museum at flic.kr/s/aHsmTm2Swj
(Photo credit - Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)
A patch of pretty "pinks" in the garden. They close each night and open up in the morning all fresh and new.
Finally got my sewing machine up and running while waiting to move into my new shop.. Sewing some club patches on a motorcycle leather vest for a friend.
When I tore a hole the size of my hand in one of my favorite skirts, I stuck it in the garage meaning to fix it or re-use the fabric some day.
After much thought I decided to rip the seams around the torn part, use the piece to make a pattern for a new patch, and then save the piece to patch some small tears on the rest of the skirts. I could have just used black or dark blue, but where would the fun be in that. So I used skulls to make a 'pirate patch'. Arrrrgh. And I have a bit of skully fabric left so maybe I'll make a belt or something to go with this.
The t-shirt is my newest embroidery project.
The shoes I'm embellishing with beads and baubles a bit at a time.
I finished the hat today. It is made from Plarn. Plarn is plastic yarn repurposed from shopping bags.
Cost: One fat quater of skully fabric .99. Everything else I made from items I already had.
...with a hole in the middle is the riddle. That is of course a chimney. This is a capture I noticed after I shot the wagon wheel at the Gold Hill Inn. The chimney at the Inn was undoubtedly not built from Chinese materials nor by licensed craftsmen, grin. I bet that they didn't have to freight that materials all that far. Gold Hill today is, in all actuality, a pretty popular spot what with the Lodge (posted) and events, dinners and concerts at the Inn of some repute. This open area is from the outdoors venue. Outdoor concerts are held at the Charles Sawtell venue outdoors. Charlie Swatell was popular in Boulder, Gold Hill and even the Boulder radio station, KGNU. That is an unbelievably ECLECTIC station that can be accessed on the web. I once heard a fellow in Japan make a pledge. Often, the local talent comes into the studio and plays live on the air.
A "lode" of opportunities exist up and down Main but I have limited time until the next round of rain. I expect the historical designation is responsible for most of the ambiance. Gold Hill is a remnant of the oldest Colorado mining days. To say Gold Hill tops a mountain ridge is accurate with the road east and west rise while Lickskillet, north, and Gold Run, south to Boulder, drop off the sides of the ridge. If I remember correctly, the Horsfall lode was perhaps the earliest strike in Gold Hill and was responsible for the earliest development. As Wiki puts it: Gold Hill is accessible from nearby Left Hand Canyon Road via Lick Skillet Road, the steepest county road in the United States. It IS safe in first gear IF you have good brakes. The NiWots were father and son Arapaho Indians. Phil [www.flickr.com/photos/boondocks/with/5371371329/] and I investigated what we thought was Gold Hill a few years back but it seems that we barely manage the project.
Gold Hill has lasted for decades through the original gold boom, the second gold boom, the silver boom and its 1893 demonetization and finally the return to reliance on gold mining and processing. It has never completely died and is not accurately, a ghost town. It's history of transportation was a bit tortured considering one route was Lickskillet. I assume most transportation was to and from the Gold Hill Railway Station when the Switzerland Trail rails were laid west on its way to Ward. The steep sides of the canyon originally meant the road up from Boulder had to ascent the canyon. Old Gold Hill still lives on in this century-old mining camp. The narrow gauge route was never built from old Hill Station (see the map). It continued to cling to the foothills above Boulder.
HST nameplate, 'Harry Patch The last survivor of the trenches', belonging to HST power car 43172 whilst at Paddington on 7th March 2018
43712 had arrived with 1P31 1209 from Hereford and would soon depart as 5P31 1547 to Old Oak Common H.S.T.D.