View allAll Photos Tagged relationship

Art - Black and White with texture, from photo

Symbiosis is any type of a close and long-term biological interaction between two different biological organisms, be it mutualistic, commensalistic, or parasitic. The organisms, each termed a symbiont, must be of different species. Wikipedia

 

zoom in to appreciate

 

Thanks to everyone that views and comments on my images - very much appreciated.

  

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. On all my images, Use without permission is illegal.

 

"I'm not addicted to coffee, we're just in a commited relationship."

 

=> "Baby" cami, shorts & sweater by .Lunar.

=> Coffee cup by Foxy

olympus omd - lightroom - silver efex pro - lightroom

"It's a relationship that started with your lies.

 

You're a man. I can't be attached to you even if I know

 

you're a man. It's not immersion.

 

It's true. Find your identity. You always curse me,

 

but you realize it's also an obsession.

 

This is really the last message for you.

 

Goodbye forever please "

 

please wake up.!!!!!

  

[Music]

wish you were gay

Feat. billie eilish

youtu.be/Wzqc3fl64Ic

Leica M6 I Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f1.5 II I Ilford HP5+

SÜDAFRIKA, Pinguinkolonie Stony Point

SÜDAFRIKA, Pinguinkolonie Stony Point,

Stony Point Nature Reserve conservation

This unique mainland seabird breeding colony is the home to three endangered seabird species and one rarity, all of whom are visible from the reserve’s elevated viewing boardwalk.

 

The iconic black and white African penguin is the focus of conservation efforts. Our hardy endemic arrived from declining off-shore island colonies to this rocky mainland location in 1982 and has thrived ever since to currently support the largest penguin colony in the Western Cape with over 2 000 seasoned breeding pairs (data correct as of 2014).

 

The uniformed black Bank cormorant pairs, with courting white rumps, predominate at the rocky outcrops of Beacon Bay in Stony Point. The clumsy Cape cormorant roosting numbers are increasing at this location due to their symbiotic foraging relationship they share with the deep diving penguin and other neighborly marine predators. Finally, our rarity at this unique location is the Crowned cormorant whose pairing numbers are also increasing. They too brood alongside the Bank cormorant and also predominate the rocky out crops of Beacon Bay. Their tea-pot form, crest of plumage and ruby colored eye amongst the black and turquoise of the larger Bank cormorant

 

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️ ❤️ ❤️

Macro Mondays "Redux 2018 - My favorite theme of the year " [Double Exposure]

January 8: Double Exposure

 

Life is a Rainbow - One year in colours

Black - 52/52 weeks

 

Thank you very much for your visits, faves, and kind comments - Chandana

How privileged I felt to be welcomed back to my favourite beach. She knew... oh she knew alright how much I loved seeing her again.. I do believe she loved seeing me too and this was her welcome to me and yes I am only a visitor but I love her so much and I miss her......

My grandad was a fireman on the trains and him and grandma spent much of their time in St Ives, maybe that how come I feel a spiritual relationship with this place...you never know ;)

 

As found, after 8 inches of snow melted, in November.

It is a symbiotic relationship. The peony produces nectar from unopened buds that ants love to eat, much like Bamboo says. There are a few species of plants that produce nectar outside of their flowers to tempt ants to live nearby.

 

The peony or paeony is a flowering plant in the genus Paeonia, the only genus in the family Paeoniaceae. Peonies are native to Asia, Europe and Western North America. Scientists differ on the number of species that can be distinguished, ranging from 25 to 40, although the current consensus is 33 known species. The relationships between the species need to be further clarified.

 

Higher classificationPaeoniaceae

Scientific namePaeonia

KingdomPlant

OrderSaxifragales

ClassMagnoliopsida

Biological classificationsGenus · Family

Lower classificationsPaeonia Suffruticosa · Paeonia Lactiflora · Paeonia Officinalis · Paeonia Delavayi · Paeonia Californica · Paeonia Brownii · Paeonia Mascula · Paeonia Daurica Subsp. Mlokosewitschii · Paeonia Ludlowii · Paeonia Tenuifolia

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peony

2 Yellow Beak Cardinals Talking Things Through

That’s about relationship?

See my story about this journey

 

youtu.be/eYbx_FE8Xyk

Tense relationship between this heron and this boat. The heron is sulking while the boat asks him to leave him alone "Fish moi la paix (in french)". There will probably be no fish sharing tonight!

 

Relation tendue entre ce héron et ce bateau. Le héron fait la tête tandis que le bateau lui demander de lui "Fish la paix". Il n'y aura probablement pas d'échange de poisson ce soir !

Artwork by Glenn Brown @ Art Gallery, Arles, France

The photograph NOT the Artwork is my work, therefore my copyright is the photograph only

 

Glenn Brown CBE (born 1966 in Hexham, Northumberland) is a British artist known for the use of appropriation in his paintings. Starting with reproductions from other artists' works, Glenn Brown transforms the appropriated image by changing its colour, position, orientation, height and width relationship, mood and/or size. Despite these changes, he has occasionally been accused of plagiarism.

   

Interactive relationships across the picture plane and imposing an integrated internal framework.

 

Taking multiple points of interest and bringing equal value to each one...

 

Olympus XA

Ilford Delta 100

A Green Knight Pine and Japanese Maple outside my home.

2018,Osaka Japan.

 

My photos are not complete with just one photo. What matters is the relationship with other photographs. Therefore, I recommend you to view the following series. Please feel the city of Osaka through my photos,”OSAKA STREET FRAGMENTS” www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72157719832072690

 

Would you like to write something about my photos? The flickr "About" page has a corner called "Testimonials."

www.flickr.com/people/153962322@N05/

If you would take your precious time to tell me about me, I would like to say "Thank you!" from the bottom of my heart.

 

My series, “Something.”

www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72177720313290...

 

Cat portrait series,"Memories of stray cats" www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72157690113266...

 

"In explore" www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72

 

"OsakA"

www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72157689638422...

 

Thank you everyone.

As simple and complicated as that.

  

Candid Street Photography

 

Circular Quay, Sydney

  

June, 2019

After nearly 4 years I've decided to give Flickr another chance. My relationship with the admins here hasn't been good. I suppose things can only get better, We'll see... Monochrome from White Sands on a bluebird day. Taken early in the morning. It's nice to see some of the same old faces still posting.

  

2018,Osaka Japan.

 

My photos are not complete with just one photo. What matters is the relationship with other photographs. Therefore, I recommend you to view the following series. Please feel the city of Osaka through my photos,”OSAKA STREET FRAGMENTS” www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72157719832072690

 

Would you like to write something about my photos? The flickr "About" page has a corner called "Testimonials."

www.flickr.com/people/153962322@N05/

If you would take your precious time to tell me about me, I would like to say "Thank you!" from the bottom of my heart.

 

My series, “Something.”

www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72177720313290...

 

Cat portrait series,"Memories of stray cats" www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72157690113266...

 

"In explore" www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72

 

"OsakA"

www.flickr.com/photos/153962322@N05/albums/72157689638422...

 

Thank you everyone.

London Wall Place, City of London

On a falling tide in the Mersey estuary one of Antony Gormley's cast-iron statues, a few hours ago semi-submerged, stands watch as a ferry departs the port of Liverpool and heads out towards the Irish Sea and its destination, Dublin.

 

The vessel is the 'Victorine', a roll-on, roll-off type that mostly caters for commercial trucks. It's a leisurely journey over too with the 5.30pm departure from Liverpool turning in to a 3.30am arrival at the Irish port - presumably to allow plenty of time for drivers to get their regulation rest before heading off to their next destination.

 

Per the Liverpool Biennial website:

Antony Gormley’s installation comprises 100 cast-iron life-size sculptures made from 17 different moulds taken from the sculptor’s own body, installed on Crosby Beach on the Mersey Estuary. The 'iron men' all face the open sea, and evoke the relationship between the natural elements, space and the human body. ‘Another Place’ covers a distance of almost 3km, with the pieces placed 250m apart along the tide line, and up to 1km out towards the horizon. The movement of local tides and daily weather conditions dictate whether the figures are visible or submerged. It has become one of the most well-loved and widely recognised public art works in the UK.

 

From personal experience, and with the huge cranes of the Port of Liverpool out of sight on my left, it's a surreal and magical place. By my reckoning, 11 of the men can be seen in this shot. Unsurprisingly, given the salty atmosphere and conditions, the statues have started corroding to varying degrees, which surely adds further to their appeal.

 

6.45pm, 25th July 2024

With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️

The Relationship

 

The first winters snowfall at one of my fave locations not too far from Leadhills. As everyone knows I always love a lone tree, I have photographed this one before, but it is the relationship between this one and the group in the distance that makes the image for me...perhaps it says more about me and my photography:) who knows.

 

Southern Lanarkshire, Scotland

 

Sony A7RII

Sony FE24-70mm f2.8 GM

 

All rights reserved

© Brian Kerr Photography 2016

It was turning into one of those indecisive mornings. “Shall we go and lounge by the pool and read until lunchtime, and then head down to the beach? Or will we get in the car and head off for the day?” Neither of us could make our minds up. It’s often like this, and until we close the front door, we could be heading anywhere between fifty yards away and the other end of the island. It’s part of what makes us so fascinating, and no doubt would drive anyone else unfortunate enough to end up in a long term relationship with either of us to the edge of their senses. All things considered, it’s a good job Ali and I found each other. Neither of us seems to mind when one asks the other what we’re going to do today, only to draw a distant gaze and a blank response.

 

If anything, I’m a little more driven than she is, and so I made the call. “Right, we’ll go back to that place in Femes for lunch, then we’ll go and visit one of the bodegas at La Geria, and after that I want to go and walk up the red mountain for sunset” – that’s Montana Colorada by the way. “Ok,” came the predictable response. And so we had a plan; a nice simple one that didn’t require too much thought or too much driving. We’d drive up the mountain pass from Playa Blanca to the village of Femes that sits on the saddle, and the rest of the day would follow as planned.

 

Except that it didn’t. 12:30 we agreed was a bit early for lunch, and so we drove in the other direction and headed for a menu del dia at the place we’d stumbled across in Teguise a few days earlier. And just to make things interesting, we decided to go along the main road rather than the wine route, just to have a bit of a test run for that inevitable drive to the airport just over a week later. “It’ll be faster” I reasoned. It wasn’t, especially after a couple of wrong turns, one of which almost had us heading into the jams of Arrecife, the island capital. Eventually, we arrived at a dinner table to be served by a very harassed looking waiter, whom it seemed was working solo through the busy lunch hour. As he unceremoniously thumped our drinks onto the table and feigned no interest whatsoever in our opposing views on the inclusion of tuna in our ensaladas mixtas, we wondered who’d thrown a sickie and left him in the lurch. After the meal I was too frightened to ask for coffee as well, and spent the next twenty-five minutes looking for another establishment to replenish the caffeine deficit. The first such attempt found us hastily evacuating our seats, scarpering around a corner and tracing an elaborate circuit of the town after Ali had seen the price list. Six euros for a scoop of ice cream? Not on your Nellie!

 

Some time later, happily refuelled with coffee and ice cream we sat at a bench in the church square. By now it was some time after 4pm, and with less than two hours until sunset we considered the options. At the far end of the island, just another twelve miles or so away lay the Mirador del Rio, offering a classic view of the three small islands that fan away from the northeast corner of Lanzarote, while retracing our tyre treads down to the coast would bring us to the wreck of the Telamon, a long exposure magnet that lies a few yards out to see between Costa Teguise and Arrecife. Tentatively, we set course for the former, where the road rides up to its highest point on the island between Los Valles and Haria. And still several miles short of our target, as we sat at a layby gazing down at the white coastal villages of Punta Mujeres and Arrieta far below, we changed our minds again – and then furthered the endless mystery of our final destination by missing the turn without signpost that was supposed to take us to the Mirador del Risco de Famara.

 

As you can see, the error turned into what Bob Ross would call a happy accident. Finally, somewhere around five, we ended up here, at the lonely and altitudinous Ermita de las Nieves. Quite how often there’s ever been snow here, even at this distance above sea level I’m not sure, although I did need to put my long sleeved top on over my tee shirt to brave the last hour of daylight on this late November afternoon, as a fellow visitor from France told me his wife was very jealous of my telephoto lens. The view across the volcanoes that dominate the landscape over to the west from where we’d come was, well you can see for yourself can’t you? Even before the golden hour, it seemed evident that we were going to be in for a show, as layers of cloud allowed sunbeams to filter through and light up the spaces in between the distant cones. For an hour I watched from behind the long lens transfixed, as the colours deepened and the sunbeams bounced and weaved their way into ever more epic frames. As the sunbeams moved, I continually followed the drama, recomposing and focussing as quickly as I could keep up. It’s not often that I get to spend time in a landscape like this, and certainly I’d never seen a sunset sky such as the one we were witnessing now in the mountains. Eventually, the sun having disappeared for the day and the magic leaving centre stage almost instantaneously, I headed back to the car with an enormous grin on my face. The day of sliding door decisions had given us the best possible outcome with a sunset we’d never forget. It’s a good job we’re not that great at making our minds up, or we’d have probably missed it.

 

Woodland Relationship

 

One of those cold and frosty misty mornings in the Eden Valley. Its always nice to find a nice wee woodland that you can spend a couple of hours walking about just taking in the atmosphere of the place, and actually take the time to look for views that you think will work for a shot.

 

Eden Valley, Cumbria

 

Sony A7RII

Sony FE24-70mm f2.8 GM

 

All rights reserved

© Brian Kerr Photography 2017

“I was beaten up by quakers”

woody allen

über die Beziehung und Bezogenheit ...

  

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