View allAll Photos Tagged pinecones

Minolta 7D + Minolta 50mm 1.7 @ 1.7

Shot with Nikkor 50 mm 1:1.8 D.

Had to hold this thing still in the wind because I was using the olympus for the capture.

Baby pine cones in early Spring. Doylestown, Pennsylvania

Been so busy (and use app most of the time) I have no clue what the flickr protest is all about. Way behind on uploading as well, so, not to be insensitive, but now that I'm here, I will put up the doodles of the past week. Don't want to wait another week while being clueless ;)

In my living room I have pinecones in my fireplace. I took a photo of one of them and today I edited in using Photoshop Express Editor online (www.photoshop.com/tools/expresseditor?wf=editor). I cropped the photo and converted it into Black and White.

 

I used these Setting on my Canon 350D:

 

1/60 Æ’/5.6 ISO 100

 

And I shot it at 55 mm

 

See This Shot on My Website: (paddysphotography.weebly.com/5/post/2013/01/pinecone.html...)

  

Happy New Year Flickr!

 

Now On 500px: 500px.com/photo/23049255

 

PLEASE VISIT MY NEW FLICKR ACCOUNT: www.flickr.com/photos/patricklowe/

Mamiya 645, generic petzval 150mm f3,75

Chilkoot Valley, Alaska

Y15D37

 

Since January 1st 2010, I have been taking and uploading one square picture each day.

seem coy.

 

And Fibonacci numbers.

 

Finally got my hands on the sexy D5100. This is my first picture in manual, and I'm still trying to figure this out. Also, I think I'm officially the worst person with detecting focus through the viewfinder..

Nikon FM3A | Nikon Micro-Nikkor 55mm f/2.8 | Kentmere Pan 400 @ 800

 

Digitized with Nikon D7200 & AF-S VR Micro-Nikkor 105mm f/2.8G IF-ED | CineStill CS-LITE | Valoi 360 135 Holder

 

Home developed in Kodak HC-110 1+31 | 9:30/68F | Paterson Tank

 

Negative Lab Pro v2.4.2 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: Linear Deep | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: None

Takumar 135mm f/2.5 non SMC on Canon Rebel XSI.

Snap in Ohori Park, Tenjin, Fukuoka.

A cone (in formal botanical usage: strobilus, plural strobili) is an organ on plants in the division Pinophyta (conifers) that contains the reproductive structures. The familiar woody cone is the female cone, which produces seeds. The male cones, which produce pollen, are usually herbaceous and much less conspicuous even at full maturity. The name "cone" derives from the fact that the shape in some species resembles a geometric cone. The individual plates of a cone are known as scales.

 

The male cone (microstrobilus or pollen cone) is structurally similar across all conifers, differing only in small ways (mostly in scale arrangement) from species to species. Extending out from a central axis are microsporophylls (modified leaves). Under each microsporophyll is one or several microsporangia (pollen sacs).

 

The female cone (megastrobilus, seed cone, or ovulate cone) contains ovules which, when fertilized by pollen, become seeds. The female cone structure varies more markedly between the different conifer families, and is often crucial for the identification of many species of conifers.

 

Pinecone laying on the floor of the woods

…on a pavement.

The fruit of a pine tree.

 

Pinecone pine cone is the part of a pine name "sticky" refers to the resin on the pinecone is a decorative and simple craft gathering consumer opinion also related terms for pine from a tree branch outside dedicated to preserving and promoting traditional forms is an exclusive most ancient plant genera on the planet exists to showcase and floral arrangements.

A pinecone on my driveway.

Another upclose look at at Sequoia National Park.

These pinecones were begging for some warmth at the tail end of a late spring blizzard that pounded Colorado a few weeks ago. Taken at White Ranch Open Space in Golden.

 

Canon EOS 70D

Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM Lens

1/800 - Æ’/4.5 - ISO 800

Handheld

Polaroid SLR 670

PX 600 BlavkFrame

Close Up Len

I took this photo on the afternoon of May 13, 2015 during a visit to Dewey Lake Manor in the Irish Hills of southeast Michigan. These developing pine cones almost look like they are blossoming.

 

View my collections on flickr here: Collections

 

Press "L" for a larger image on black.

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