View allAll Photos Tagged scraping

13 June 2015

Charing Cross Hospital, Fulham, London

I got this on the way to work 2 days ago... it was rainy and I skidded and lost control of my bike. The bike was okay after a little straigtening and I still made it to the bus on time, although I was bleedy and full of little rocks.

My first "visual" aurora of 2020, nothing too exciting and the clouds didn't help, but could be scraping the barrel this year as far as auroras are concerned, although reckon it should start picking up next winter as SC25 starts winding up.

College Station, Texas PC058059

First of the morning's waking to an ice covered windscreen.

Oban Harbour, beached fishing boat having its bottom cleaned.

Taken during a recent trip to Yosemite National Park. Dead trees reach out from the top of Sentinel Dome to scrape the blue sky above.

 

© John Krzesinski, 2012.

 

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From the Infamous Stroller Incident. He's zonked out in his swing here, not UNCONSCIOUS or anything.

She tumbled off her bike and picked up a scrape on her elbow.

Donn scrapes down Bode Concrete mixer truck at San Mateo High School construction site.

The Chrysler Building seen from the East River, New York City, Aug. 2015. Open to the public in 1930, the Chrysler Building was once the tallest building in the world (for 11 months, until the Empire State Building was completed). It is still the world's tallest brick building (though supported by steel).

This is the fiberglass hull covered in glue and foam from the fabric hull liner we're ripping out

A trip to remember ... to Kidepo Valley Uganda

Josh scraped out the vast majority of the popcorn ceiling. To soften up the texture, he used a pesticide sprayer and then scraped with a wide trowel into a paint pan.

Tracy and Kathy scrape loose paint from the deck in preparation for resurfacing it.

A close-up of the scrape. (008a)

1. umferð Íslandsmótsins í Kvartmílu 4. júní 2011. // First round of the Icelandic Dragracing Nationals June 4th 2011.

Toronto, ON

2011

Alannah Dymond

  

This was my experimentation between city sunsets and shutter speed. Typically I get frustrated when the shutter speed takes too long, so this time I challenged myself to embrace it and I must admit that it made me happy. Hopefully I will be changing this photograph into a painting this summer.

Pea lying around on the job.

Accidental double-exposure captured two interesting moments at the Disneyland. My father is posing for a portrait on the preceding frame, and the following frame (half-advanced) captured double imagery of children and high-speed rollercoaster.

Leica M7, Summicron 35 asph, Kodak TMax 100, Xtol 1:1

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