View allAll Photos Tagged ruby
Ruby Weapon from Final Fantasy VII. No relaxing in the Gold Saucer here! Just, intimidating monsters.
Dorothy's ruby slippers from the movie "The Wizard of Oz" on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, DC.
A Ruby-Topaz Hummingbird visit the hummingbird feeders at Cuffie River Nature Resort, Tobago. Recorded on 03/12/2016.
We spotted this ruby-throated hummingbird taking a break in a tree while keeping close watch on a nearby hummingbird feeder.
Photo by Courtney Celley/USFWS.
We spotted this ruby-throated hummingbird taking a break in a tree while keeping close watch on a nearby hummingbird feeder.
Photo by Courtney Celley/USFWS.
A male ruby-throated hummingbird icoming in for a landing.
Blog post about my hummingbird photography, including setup shots:
www.paluck.com/2011/01/31/hummingbird-photography/
Strobist: Four 580EXII on stands surrounding the feeder at 1/64 +1/3 at around 10" away. Waited until the ambient dropped well below the flash exposure, 1/200 @ f/11, ISO 100 to knock the background down. Triggered with Pocket Wizards.
A ruby-throated hummingbird visits a hummingbird feeder. These amazing birds can beat their wings about 53 times per second!
Photo by Courtney Celley/USFWS.
Say hi! to Ruby, my niece's English Bull Terrier. She's big, she's strong, she's as mad as a box of frogs, but her personality is as soft as a summer's sun ripened peach. My niece loves her to death and was mortified when Ruby accidentally bit me as we were playing together. Ruby gets so excited when she plays that she can nip you in her enthusiasm. She's only a year old, just a child really (with big teeth!). :-)
A male ruby-throated hummingbird shows his vibrant red throat and tongue while perched at a feeder.
It's always eventful around the hummingbird feeders. Ruby-throated hummingbirds are working on bulking up for their long journey to overwintering grounds in Central America.
Photo by Courtney Celley/USFWS.
Ruby beach. I think one of the most beautiful beaches in Washington. I got here and it was cold, windy, raining hard- not a photographers dream neccasarily. I wasn't satisfied with most of the pictures i took that day. I failed to take a garbage bag or something to protect my camera, so I was using my rain jacket to protect my camera and I got soaked. Most of the images I got were dark and dreary and didn't feel great about them. I just recently put a few of them through HDR treatment and I think it turned out great. It really reflects what I was going through trying to take these pictures.
Another shot of the lovely Ruby from the Sept Brisbane Strobist meet.
Strobist info:
Sun camera left! Gold reflector camera right. Possibly silver reflector camera left.
Model:
Ruby Barrenechea (www.myspace.com/rubyperu)
I wish I'd grabbed that frond on the ground...sigh...
This is my attempt at a full body shot - I find these hard to compose for some reason.
This is a lovely raspberry-strawberry-ruby chocolate mousse cake on a chocolate crumble cookie base and covered with a ruby chocolate (plus a few drops of red colouring) ganache. I have to say it looks so "professional"! Amazed that I managed this, albeit under supervision from the instructor.
More photos here: www.flickr.com/photos/taking5/albums/72177720296132650
Ruby Tuesday (closed) [5,067 square feet]
1135 Broad Street, Wesmark Plaza, Sumter, SC
This location opened on June 29th, 1998 and closed in March 2020.
Ruby Tuesday (closed) [5,540 square feet]
2951 Plank Road, Central Park, Fredericksburg, VA
This location was built and opened in 1998 and closed in March 2020.
The first white man to enter Ruby Valley was Jedediah Smith when he crossed the southern end of the valley in 1827 while traveling from California to the Great Salt Lake.
Next, in 1846, the ill-fated Donner party traveled down Ruby Valley into White Pine County while searching for the Hastings cut-off and lost several precious days here before being caught in the unseasonable early snowstorms on what is now Donner Pass.
I'm having a hard time getting a good clear shot of this hyper little fellow....He's got a ruby crest that he raises in excitement, which is barely visible in this photo.
MOC: Ruby Roadster. The rear end reminds me of something British - and those new brackets are really useful as licence plate holders.
Ruby-throated Hummingbird (Archilochus colubris) male, 8/31/2022, The Landings Sparrow Field “Pollinator Garden Berm”, Skidaway Island, Savannah, Ga
Taken from my bed, through a window and screen. The bird just would not hold still, as is typical of the species, as Ruby-crowned kinglets flick their wings constantly, as often as once per second. Posted for the Birds of the World Field Guide to show the raised crown, which males display when agitated. This individual has been hanging out around my yard and circles the house every morning, stopping to fight its reflection in my bedroom window and getting agitated.
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Lyonia Preserve, Deltona, FL
The Ruby-crowned Kinglet is one of North America's smallest birds. It is only 9 to 11 centimeters long and has a wingspan of 16 to 18 centimeters. And it does not sit still for very long. Took me forever to get one shot that was in focus and actually had the bird in it. You won't believe how many shots of just branches I took... LOL
The Kinglet has gray-green upperparts and olive-buff underparts. It has two white wingbars and a broken white eye ring. The wingbar on the greater secondary coverts (closer to the wing-tip) is wider, and is next to a dark band. The Kinglet has a relatively plain face and head, although the male has a scarlet-red crown patch, which is usually concealed by the surrounding feathers. Females are identical to males (except for the crown). Immature birds are similar to adult females, since young males lack a crown patch.
The Kinglet usually moves along branches or through foliage with short hops, and flies with bursts of rapid wing beats. It is constantly active, and is easily recognized by its characteristic wing-flicking. Its flight has been described as "swift, jerky, and erratic".
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