View allAll Photos Tagged sunbathing
On the Road Trip of 2004: Blue skies on South Beach in Miami. Three of us Columbia folks laying out their place in the sand. Straight line to the ocean.
Sunbathers sitting on Lake Harriet North Beach, Minneapolis, as the last of the lake ice melts on a warm spring day.
File name: 08_06_025836
Title: Girls sunbathing
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1947 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 negative : film, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.
Genre: Film negatives; Portrait photographs
Subject: Bathing beauties; Sunbathing
Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright Leslie Jones.
Preferred credit: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
I saw this little guy out my window just sunbathing on the neighbor's roof on a beautiful sunny fall afternoon. I guess even squirrels know when to take a minute and enjoy the day.
Copyright Gerard Mc Grath. Do not download or reproduce without my permission.
This image is part of a series,captured on 35mmB&W film in the Summerof 1991 on Bull Island, Dublin, Ireland.The series show ordinary people on enjoying time off on the popular daytrip destination.These imags are now published in a book called Bull Island Memories, available at www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/688996
Taken and originally posted in 2011.
A woman sunbathes on a sandbar in Bass Hole. She used her kayak to get there. The water in Bass Hole flows in and out of Cape Cod Bay with the tide, an action that creates these semi-permanent sandbars. I took this from the Bass Hole Boardwalk in Yarmouthport.
This photo shows a gray ratsnake, Pantherophis spiloides, sunbathing in a broken bucket behind my neighbors house. This snake was about 4 feet long. Since snakes are ectotherms, using the sun when it is warm out helps the snake to regulate body temperature while it also adds in digestion. The bucket was in the middle of a patch of small grass near an old shed. Since their diet contains small rodents, birds, frogs, and lizards, the shed and tall grass are perfect places for this snake to hide and hunt. Gray ratsnakes use scent and constriction to hunt and kill their prey.
A woman sunbather enjoying the afternoon sun on the Royal Crescent in Bath.
The 18th century Royal Crescent was the work of architect John Wood the Younger, to the design of his father.
Dating from the Georgian period and built between 1767 and 1774, it was the first crescent in Bath – and England – with its giant Ionic columns marking it out as Palladian in style.
The shape of the street is believed to have been inspired by either the Colosseum in Rome or by the New Moon, complimenting the sun-like shape of the King’s Circus, which was built a decade earlier.
As was typical at the time, the architects only designed and oversaw construction of the front of the houses, with the rear built by those who bought the properties and thus lacking the same uniformity.
The crescent was laid out to embrace the open landscape on the slopes below.