View allAll Photos Tagged time"

Sony A7C + Nikon Micro-NIKKOR P Auto 55mm f3.5

Imagine, that someone from the faraway future looks at digital photo archive and see old photos. What people on them? What fashion? What emotions behind photo?

 

Tmes change, eras change, fashion change. Pose is eternal. The same couple through times. Is it reincarnation or similarity?

 

Idea was to show different eras and fashion, how's everything changes, only pose remains as classic.

This is travel in time. Depiction of the PINK MOON pose.

More at PRIMFEED

Thank you to my beloved Orpheus Paxlapis-Savior was being by my side for all the times.

Time with my family...Shooting film in my AE1 program and a 28mm lens upload pictures after I get film back

Sway's FLF (29th January)

Sway's @ Lost and found

Sway's @ WayWard Winter

 

blog

ovhorrizon.blogspot.com/2016/01/cozy-break-time.html

Silhouette

Peace Valley Park, Pa.

 

Many thanks to all who take the time to view, comment and fave my images. Enjoy the day.

Yemek zamanı :)

Ile d‘Oleron France

Fine art prints available at: www.JxnPx.com

Thank you for supporting my art!

Voigtländer Nokton 50mm new M f/1,5; LR mobile

Misty morning field at hay harvest time

Found some time to create an image fitting the latest Macro Monday theme (6 June 2016): "time".

Apology to those who are used to see an insect here ... I have something for you tomorrow ;-)

 

Studio work - obviously - using an HO scale model of a worker, an old timepiece, some fine gravel and a pinch of lichen.

Focus stack based on 101 images, assembled in Zerene Stacker (Pmax), not cropped.

Sony A6300 + Metabones EF to Sony E + Canon EF 100mm 1:2.8L IS USM. ISO-100, f/3.5, 1/250s, tracing paper diffused daylight led.

 

Find a previous shot with this timepiece in the first comment line

Where's the love song?

To set us free

Too many people down

Everything turning the wrong way around

....

  

And you've been so busy lately

that you haven't found the time

To open up your mind

And watch the world spinning gently out of time

  

Tell me I'm not dreaming but are we out of time?

(We're) out of time

 

....

 

i.

  

Time-lapse sequences from around the State of Alaska. Music by Epidemic Sound

Time-Life Building

541 North Fairbanks

Chicago, IL

Harry Weese, arch. 1969

 

Here, the aforementioned sculptural lobby on several levels, thus enabling access to the double-deck elevators...one of the first of their kind in the US. One will also recognize the similarity of the ceiling with that of the Washington DC subway system.

 

👓👓

Brows photos of ARRRRT on FlickRiver

 

Alias: Time Bomb

Real Name: N/A

Gender: N/A

Alignment: Villain

Powers: Explosion Manipulation

Backstory: The villain Time Bomb has an unhealthy obsession with the other explosive Cardinal City villain, Detonator. Even going so far as to meet the Bestower, to be given very similar explosive powers. Time Bomb has even fashioned a costume that looks similar to Detonator's. With the newfound power, Time Bomb would become a force to be reckoned with, only wanting to be recognized by Detonator.

 

Status: Recently become more active, with Detonator getting locked up. Constantly challenging Solar to a fight

Time breaks a bit when we pass.

This fawn carried around these dead leaves for the longest time. Would drop them on the ground, flip them with its nose and then pick them up again. Our beautiful world, pass it on.

Lunch Time, On Black

 

Thanks for stopping by and commenting.

No. 60 tucking in!! Frankley Worcestershire UK - 31-03-25

Classic sunrise or sunset question hehehe

It is time to ask the animals to help us solve our problems.

"The Thief of Time" by Terry Pratchett (No 26 in the Discworld series)

Mom and pup enjoying the warming sun together.

 

Harbor seals need to haul out of the water regularly to rest and let their bodies warm up. They can't maintain body temperature if they stay in cold water all the time because of their small size and thin blubber layer.

 

The pup won't be weaned until around 4-6 weeks old.

Behind time goes a whole world of mechanism which needs elaborate craftsmanship to produce and maintain... This is nr. 10 in the series "A Watchmakers Inheritance"

 

26.3.2018, in Explore, thank you everybody :)

Leica M6, Summicron 50/2, Kodak Vision 3 250D.

I tend to seize on insignificant time markers this time of year. Anything at all to indicate we are beginning the annual ascent from the depth of winter. Super Bowl is one of them. Also the appearance of car and boat shows, as well as home and garden expos. I saw a large display of vegetable and flower seeds the other day at the hardware store. The little packets all lined up in neat rows, ready for planting. Sure signs that spring is on the way. Groundhog Day is one of the more symbolic harbingers of spring. The actual prediction is rather meaningless. After all it's early February and there's still more winter ahead here in Ohio. Still there's some degree of comfort in knowing Groundhog Day has passed. The realization that the darkest part of another winter has been survived is comforting. Of course it's tempered a bit with the apprehension that with winter, another year of precious life has passed. But dark thoughts like that are much easier to shrug off in the face of gaining daylight. Groundhog Day this year coincided with a warm spell. More importantly it brought a break in the incessant cloud cover that was locked in over us for going on two consecutive weeks. It had become oppressive even to me. Sunday morning saw the sun revealed in a few occasional flickers of brilliance as the clouds began to thin out. Then suddenly it was revealed full on, the dreary winter landscape bathed in warming sunlight. Residual snow began melting and fast. I was delighted that this sunny interlude coincided with down time so that I could fully appreciate it. Evening saw the clouds beginning to roll back in, but not before a color saturated sunset. I spent the dusk hour outdoors watching night descend around me. There was still the sense of suddenness as daylight faded, but not nearly as extreme as it was back in November and December. The sensation was positively uplifting after weeks spent largely indoors. I captured this image of the deepening sly reflecting off of the inky blackness of a small woodland pond.

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