View allAll Photos Tagged pinecone
Light source: behind and top
Light quantity: medium
Light quality: Soft (from sun and clouds) and filtered (from table)
Time of day: morning
Weather: heavy cloud
Got the folks an ash bucket for the cabin for Christmas filled with homemade pinecone firestarters. Such an easy project from one of my favorite design sites.
www.designsponge.com/2010/03/diy-project-pinecone-fire-st...
continuing to add autumn nests, trees, and other creations to the shop this week
i've used some lovely twisting vines to create the wreath (from my sis's back yard!), and sewn fabric acorns, attaching them to real chinquapin acorn tops, along with a real pinecone. the leaf is hand sewn using hand dyed wool and cotton
A pinecone attached to a branch that fell from a tree..I'm surprised it held on!
I used picnik, and like the new one better!
Pinecone on White - A single pinecone on a white surface.. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24696634-pineco...
I want to tell you how proud I am of you. How you have grown and flourished and I can see that clearly here. I want you to know that I love the person you have become and I hope you never lose what you have learnt. You have a beautiful heart.
Old and new at the same time.
Pretty purple immature pinecones spotted on a stroll, Limerick, Maine
Related (in the Power of Positive Relationships group):pinecones
One of the rare times I got to play with my mom's digital Canon Rebel (a few months after she got it). Everything I did came out amazing.
two of my favorite ornaments on this tree are the pinecone set and the acorns made from glass. i can't get a good shot of either of them, but i don't care. it's going in here.
Should've seen me, kneeling down on pine needles...wearing shorts...ouch on the knees! Worth it, though!
Taken at Cox Arboretum.
I went for a walk in the afternoon. The road was scattered with tiny, freshly fallen (and therefore unflattened) pinecones. I collected them until they spilled out of my hands back onto the street below.
Southern pine trees are cone-bearing plants in the genus Pinus. These native trees thrive in the northern regions of the Sunshine State and grow to heights of 90 to 100 ft. (27 – 30 m) tall. Seed cones on Florida pines are identified by their light brown scales arranged in a spiral pattern and measure anywhere between 1.5” to 10” (4 – 25 cm) long. It seems a shame to pick up bins full of these beautiful cones every year and put them out for yard waste pick-up.
Marasmius capillaris
Often mistaken for the better known Marasmius rotula, this tiny mushroom differs by growing on fallen oak leaves, rather than sticks and woody debris. Additionally, it has a more rounded cap (Marasmius rotula looks flat-topped when viewed from the side), and slightly larger spores.
After summer rains in eastern North America's oak-hickory forests, Marasmius capillaris can often be seen fruiting by the thousands, like tiny white flowers blanketing the litter layer. Close inspection of the same leaves during dry spells often reveals that the little mushrooms are still there, shriveled up until they are literally pin-sized, waiting for more rain and the chance to come back to life and distribute spores once again.