View allAll Photos Tagged smoke
9F 92212 at Ropley Mid Hants Railway 03 January.
There was heavy rain most of the day
Nice to see the Green Park shed code plate on the smoke box door
523 smoke pictures later ... I landed on this for our Macro Monday challenge. When I finally figured out that the thicker the candle wick, the better the smoke and that two wicks were even better I was already more than 400 pictures in with various backgrounds and lighting. To me it looks like music rising out of a horn .. a little soft jazz.
In what is without a doubt one of my best days of shooting this year, ECT leads a WNYP storage train east of Corry PA with a foamers dream lashup of MLW and Alco products. As the foamers came into view ECT was kind enough to give us a grand smoke show which completed a awesome scene!
Smoky Sunrise at Roosevelt Lake Arizona. Major Forest Fire in the Mazatzal Mountains causing the smoke.
Absent of clouds, an eerie orange sky and hazy mountains can be seen as the sun rises, effects of smoke in the atmosphere from a wildfire in Canada
put a different scent in each and let it go, Frankincense in one, myrrh in the other and Sandalwood to finish.
Just fell in love with this amazing view through the branches of the smoke tree. Had to stop and take this photo.
Another one from the archives I rejected a few years ago, I think I wasn't happy with my (awful) fingernails.. Anyway, a quick blast with Lr colour toning and here it is..
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
A shot from September 2019 re-edited in black and white with a different crop. Oh, by the way, I am now at 127 days since my last ever cigarette. Whoop! Stay safe everyone!
Taken for the Macro Monday theme of smoke. Far more challenging that I expected and this is the only shot of many that is halfway tidy - but since I have run out of matches will have to be the one!
The James R. Barker arrives under the Duluth Aerial Lift Bridge while belching a wild amount of smoke. The ship also put on a ridiculously long horn show - talk bout an entertaining entrance.
One of the more clear manifestations of climate change is the increasing frequency and intensity of wildfires across the globe. These fires generate widespread plumes of smoke that impact regions far from their sources, including large cities hundreds of miles downwind.
While the smoke can provide a pleasing filter in the sky, as seen here at sunset in Boulder Colorado, it also poses a major health risk to millions of people. The main threat is the generation of small particles (PM 2.5) that impact lungs and get into the bloodstream, leading to increases in asthma, heart disease, and low birth weights.
I guess Smokey Bear's message should have been a bit broader...