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Tree Lined Path
A path lined by trees near to Herrenhauser Große garten, Hannover. Taken on my Nikon D40 with a 70-300mm lens.
I took this picture through the windshield as we were driving away from one of Dave's photoshoots. We had stopped by the edge of the road to take in the beauty of frozen Lake Wingra -- the ice had thawed and refrozen, making the little valleys that were filled up by the drifting snow powder that morning. It was a lucky shot.
I love the way it turned out. Reminds me of Zelazny, for some reason.
I love this photo but unfortunately I was not aware of the droplets on the lens from the rain. The photo is sort of dismal in the rain but has a mood I like. I don't know how to remove the blurring if it is even possible to remove. This tree is growing away from the prevailing SE winds.
Guyys..... My camera has broken :'( :'( when i put my memory card in it, it says it is locked, when it isnt... what ever card i put in it. So its the camera not the card :L and its christmas in 4 dayyys! :L i would do anything for it to be working christmas day :'( any ideas what might help? has this happened to anyone else? :L apart from taking it to the shop.
sorry ive been away for a while :L went to switzwerland for the weekend to see family :) it snowed there! But still no snow here :( had an amazing day with my best friend today :')
Hopefully my camera will be ok soon, i really have to take some proper photos reallllllyyy soon :(
hope you all doing well :)
Trees marching in military style. I'm not sure why the first one is wanting to stop so abruptly, but the following line are going to pile up into its back.
A tree fell on our play set yesterday and it of course created a photo opportunity for me.
I've been using holga script a lot this week in combination with increased saturation, contrast, shadows. I then remove the holga streaks, add a lighten curve as the top most layer and then more saturation as the final top layer.
Fortunes, known as omikuji in Japanese, seen tied to tree branches near the Rinnō-ji.
When the prediction is bad, it is a custom to fold up the strip of paper and attach it to a pine tree or a wall of metal wires alongside other bad fortunes in the temple or shrine grounds. A purported reason for this custom is a pun on the word for pine tree and the verb 'to wait', the idea being that the bad luck will wait by the tree rather than attach itself to the bearer. [Source: Wikipedia]
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I liked the contrast of the bright light brown of the dying top of this small young fir tree, against the background and its surroundings.
Used my new old c.1981 Nikkor 135 f/2.8 manual lens.
Another new set of trees for use in Mobile Frame Zero: Rapid Attack.
This was photographed at Rogue River in Siskiyou National Forest that runs through the border of California and Oregon. In this coniferous woodland, colorful foliages are quite rare. This lone tree with beautiful foliages was standing out in the evergreen forest.
Tree with words. It says "Your inside is out and your outside is in so come on come on make it easy"
Forests affect the severity of climate change, and climate change affects the health of forests.
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Olive trees are just amazing. Each of them is unique and they can be thousands of years old. I'll find a couple of other with stunning shape and structure
One of the few interesting things on the drive from here to D.C., Sideling Hill is a huge cutaway exposing strata that curve in the opposite direction of the present-day hill. This is a closeup of some of the layers and trees growing on the exposed surface.
A Sacred Fig tree which has overgrown a gateway at Ta Som (sometimes spelled Ta Sohm) in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Ta Som is a small temple at Angkor, Cambodia, built at the end of the 12th century for King Jayavarman VII. The King dedicated the temple to his father Dharanindravarman II (Paramanishkalapada) who was King of the Khmer Empire from 1150 to 1160. Like some nearby temples, Ta Som was left largely unrestored, with numerous trees and other vegetation growing among the ruins. --From Wikipedia