View allAll Photos Tagged toothpaste
One of Schwarzlogger's pet peeves is when he loses balance of all the Chocolate Logs he was lifting. The other one is when people squeeze toothpaste from the top of the tube!
For this week's MacroMondays challenge Bathroom.
For making of:
www.flickr.com/photos/digifred/50663004253/in/dateposted/
Welcome to my Flickr space & thank you for visiting,
hope you enjoy my images.
Many thanks to everyone who takes the time to look,
like and comment on my pictures.
Don't use this image on any media without my permission.
You can contact me on my website at:
Thanks for more than 14 000 000 views.
For #MacroMondays and this week's theme #Ridge
Happy Macro Monday!
Thanks for all your faves and comments everyone!
I really appreciate them!
SDIM4989
Wolf's milk slime mold is often mistaken for a mushroom since they look like tiny pink puffballs fruiting from a rotten log, but they are definitely not a fungus. Before they begin to fruit, in the plasmodial stage, they can crawl around on the log and engulf bacteria and plant spores much like an amoeba. Now they've come together to form those pretty pink blobs filled with pink goo that will eventually dry into dark gray spores. I've popped one open to see the paste oozing out and that result is the reason I often refer to them as the toothpaste slime mold.
In 1824, an American chemist created a toothpaste that actually cleaned teeth for the first time in history. The paste consisted of soap and glycerine and had to be spread on the teeth with a stick. In 1850, the first toothpaste was produced that was comparable to the toothpastes as we know them. This was Dr. Sheffield’s Creme by the British dentist Washington Sheffield. The toothpaste consisted of a combination of soap and chalk. At first, it was only sold in glass jars, but from 1892 it was also available in tubes. www.dentalclinics.nl/blogs/tandenpoetsen-eeuwen-heen/
You never know what neat stuff you'll find out in the woods. This marvelous little slime mold always grows on well-decayed wood. Notice that I squeezed the top tube open and the pink paste is oozing out. No more cavities now!
Had a completely different plan for this challenge. Everything I needed is in my grand girls room and sadly her test for Covid came back positive yesterday. Had to think of something quick!!
Crazy Tuesday
The theme on JANUARY 18th is
HEAD
(the top part of something / someone)
Toothpaste, antiseptic & ulcer treatment tubes.
Update : I had to stop taking the painkillers when my hiatus hernia started playing up on Saturday morning. 😒
I then got a phone call from the hospital late this afternoon; the radiologist, to tell me that I had in fact broken a rib. 😢😢
She's leaving a new prescription at the front desk for me to collect asap for something else which won't cause another problem. But will easy the pain, oddly ribs hurt rather a lot when they break. 😉
Maybe view large and thank you for your favourites. :)
Sage powder
salt
baking soda
A handful of salt
Sage favorite amount
Baking soda favorite amount
Salt tightens gums
Baking soda is an abrasive
Sage is an herb that is effective on the gums
It comes in spearmint or wintergreen flavors.
Inspired by www.flickr.com/photos/96739476@N04/14654485821/
The end of an empty plastic tube of toothpaste, cut open, with lots of adjustments in GIMP.
With colors from my favorite piece of trash.
I like that this round tube ends with an interesting shape.
Happy Sliders Sunday!
Focus stack (7 images) Shot with a single off-camera strobe (Godox AD200Pro/Godox XPro II L trigger, bare bulb, mounted on overhead boom, bounced off 32 inch white umbrella.
Shot for Macro Mondays - tune
Tube dimensions 58 mm (l) x 12.5 mm (w)
Amtrak’s Phase VII livery P42DC 125, commonly referred to as the toothpaste locomotive, as it's similar colors to the Crest and Colgate brands, leads the Vermonter by Trackside Pizza in Wallingford, CT. I have many pictures from here, and my viewers always ask about the subway car. It’s a former 1920s Philadelphia car that serves as the dining area. They have delicious brick oven pizza and stuffed bread, and you can’t forget about a cold soda from Connecticut-based Foxon Park Beverages.
Have a look at my facebook page
2015 Challenge, Week 13: MACRO - BATHROOM
#photochallenge.org
Tinkered a light tent out of an old cardboard and butter-paper and used a floodlight. Used a Nikon macro 105 mm on a Nikon D5100 with f16 1/25 ISO 200 and did some post processing in lightroom to achieve a little bit of high key effect as a contrast to the saturated blue tones.
********************************************
Feel free to comment my pics or contact me - in English or German.
I am very thankful for every constructive criticism that helps me to get better!
************************************ Thanks xfoTOkex ***
I think we should use less plastics to solve the waste problem, so this is my entrance for today's theme container.
Thanks for taking time to comment, fave and look at my work. I really appreciate.
Many substances that we encounter are good for us but too much of something can be a bad thing.
Fluoride which is used in toothpaste is good for cleaning teeth and keeping them healthy but ingestion of too much of this substance will give us acute Fluoride toxicity and therefore this is also poisonous to us.
from magazines in my collection
Show this picture to anyone you know and ask them what it is. Do you think anybody would identify it as the back end of a bus? Then come along to an Edinburgh Transport Group meeting (on the first Thursday of every month) and show the same picture to all who are present. They'll know!
I love taking close-ups of buses and here's a bit of the Nokia (mobile telephone unit) advert which is a all-over promotion on Royale number 272. I like this one myself and you'll see lots of the complete bus elsewhere on my website.
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart_montgomery/sets/
The ETG group is such a friendly society and as a newish member I have been very warmly welcomed. So much so that I discovered I am member number 281 - how scary is that for someone who says Royale 281 is his favourite bus in Edinburgh?
At these meetings it's nice to be able to see the faces behind the names of local enthusiasts and at the July 2009 outing I was especially happy to be introduced to Douglas Scoular and to hear more about his great restoration work on PD2 798 (originally from 1954).
It's easy for us enthusiasts to take the pictures but those doing the restoration work are slogging it out - it makes me feel proud also to have met with Brian and Calum Melrose who, among others, are doing so much for the preservation of our hobby and of course for future generations. Marvellous stuff gentlemen!
13/80