View allAll Photos Tagged teeth!
The Dents du Midi
are a multi-summited mountain situated in the Chablais Alps in the Swiss canton of Valais.
@Wikipedia
Montreux, Swiss
Lake Geneve
Alligator Everglades Florida, U.S.A.
No post-processing done to photo, only cropped. Nikon NEF (RAW) files available. NPP Straight Photography at noPhotoShopping.com
Canon EOS 6D - f/10 - 1/5sec - 100mm - ISO 250
- for challenge of the group 'Macro Mondays',
theme: 'Intentional Blur"
- the height of the closed dentures is 4.7cm, so inclusive the chattering movement the total heigth stays within the allowed dimension.
- another (earlier) photo of this peculiar ice tong is in the first comment.
Gold teeth and lemon haze
Repeated for seven days
Reverb and tape delays
Ice cream and ultra phase
Fast food and microwaves
Physical burn and fade
Copy, paste and remade
No sleep till I get paid
Writers: Hugh James Pescod, Harriet Zoe Pittard
1 3/8 inches square.
In montagna le stalagmiti si formano una goccia alla volta, alternando il disgelo al freddo della notte... e dopo alcuni cicli, arrivano ad assomigliare ai denti di un mostro di ghiaccio
Canale d'Agordo, inverno 2023
#ice #stalagmiti #teeth #denti #mostro #caverna #tunnell #cave #freddo #cold #soffitto #roof #montagna #agordo
...on a rare Simplex 35/70mm sprocket given to me by a projectionist who passed away over two decades ago. Weighing one pound (454g), it makes a distinctive paperweight.
This is a breaching Grey Whale in San Ignacio Lagoon on Mexico's Baja peninsula. Grey Whales are "Baleen Whales" meaning they have filtering baleen (whalebone) plates instead of teeth. An old term for Baleen Whales is Rorqual, which comes from Norwegian meaning "ridged whale" as most species have expandable ridges down the throat so the whale can gulp huge quantities of plankton-laden seawater like this: www.flickr.com/photos/timmelling/10622305786/in/photolist But you will notice that the throat of this Grey Whale only has three throat grooves. Grey Whales feed on benthic (bottom dwelling) invertebrates so they plough the seabed and filter out the tasty bits. To feed in this manner they need to have a robust lower jaw, and their scientific name robustus reflects this. Also feeding Grey Whales have a preferred side for bottom feeding, usually the right side, so one side of their head is usually free from barnacles and whale lice that live on Grey Whales: www.flickr.com/photos/timmelling/8553265697/in/photolist
This is a Nile Crocodile showing some of its 68 teeth. These crocodiles grow to 3 to 4 metres in length.
Macro image of the translucent teeth of a baby crocodile.
This is my neighbor's dog. His name is Hudson. He has a talent for leaping when he runs as displayed in this image I captured him.
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Copyright ©Zino2009 (bob van den berg) . All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, kopie, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission.
The San Rafael Reef rises spectacularly, with uplifted monoliths of bare sandstone reaching hundreds of feet above the desert. This formation, which continues for many miles, is accented by a repeated pattern of soil and brightly colored rock forming "teeth" at the bases of the uplifted slabs. This shot shows the repeated pattern and the layers of the "teeth."
The pattern formed by many teeth is seen in the first comment.
Details and more details. Notice the light layer of grease and how it has been steadily pushed aside.
At Bembridge Windmill on the Isle of Wight.
I love the marks of use on this wheel, as well as the odd woodworm holes. Clearly a long and well used piece of equipment.
Some knife for MAcroMondays : Tableware.
Making Off :
www.flickr.com/gp/sdup/JYuWH7gzeL
Song by 5 Seconds of Summer.
For #MacroMondays and this week's theme #zipper
Happy Macro Monday!
Thanks for all your faves and comments everyone!
I really appreciate them!
Here is another of my experiments with kinetic Photography. This one makes me think of shark teeth. What do you see? www.graveyardworker.com/