View allAll Photos Tagged tiny
Okay... okay... it had to be done. You can't take a photo like this and not make a tilt shift miniature out of it!
:-D
Have a look at some of the other photos in the set if you want to find out how it's done.
Their white calcareous tubes are just a few mm in diameter. Ubiquitous on sides and underneath intertidal rocks.
I live in what is quite possibly the smallest apartment in Los Angeles, but I love my neighborhood and the rent is good, so I like it here and I'm staying. This week, in an effort to make my ridiculously tiny kitchen more functional, I underwent a bit of a reorganization project.
I got a big metro shelf from Target but rather than arranging the shelves evenly, I am using one of them as a bit of a countertop space where I can do work or extra cooking space, etc. There's even enough room underneath for a stool so you can actually sit and use the space.
To make it even more functional, I got a sheet of MDF cut down to fit that shelf and then I cut some small notches into it so that it won't slide around. I did something special with it, too, but I'll take pics when it's dry.
Also finally framed a lot of art I've been meaning to get up. I have too much, but wanted some of these pieces shown for sure, so I made it happen. Now what to do with the rest?!
Tiny flower while out taking some sunset photos.
Was surprised while out in this remote area, no one else around, to see some guy come walking out of the woods. He seemed out of place, not sure what he was doing there. I got the feeling he was up to something! : )
Taken on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada
This was very tiny, about half an inch tall. Growing on a rotting tree stump.
Tiny things make big things..
this is part of a tiny series.. I'm posting a few, all in the tilt-shift set..
best viewed large on..
Tiny Empire's first show at Barfly.
Check out their pages for their upcoming show in July.
Tiny Empire's first show at Barfly.
Check out their pages for their upcoming show in July.
Scuba Seraya's house reef is most interesting. Due to its location with the ocean currents and nearby rivers, it is a nursery for cool critters. We saw so many frogfish - different colors and different species but all were TINY. As they grow up, they must leave for greener pastures.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
The Tiny Tim air-to-ground missile was the largest American rocket in service during World War II. It weighed 1,250 pounds (567 kg.) and was also designated the 11.75-inch aircraft rocket (its diameter or caliber). The TNT warhead weighed 148.5 lbs (67.3 kg.), which could destroy coastal defense guns, pill boxes, bridges, tanks, and ships. The missile was primarily used by a Marine Corps Air Group and was mounted on F4U aircraft.
Tiny Tims sunk at least one Japanese ship and seriously damaged another. During the Korean War, one Tiny Tim knocked out a key bridge. Visible in this partial cutaway are simulated solid-propellant sticks and the rocket's 24 exhaust nozzles.