View allAll Photos Tagged treetrunk
Lodgepole Pines in the geothermal areas of Yellowstone soak up minerals turning parts of the trunk white and petrified... hence they call them the bobby socks trees.
Viewed through a heavy flurry of snow pellets (also called graupel), the trees on the far side of the lake (most of them still holding onto their leaves) assume a ghostly appearance.
This particular snowstorm on March 9, 2023 were all taken from the comfort inside my home! It was a particular nasty snowstorm. So glad I was able to capture it. Photo images credited to Vickie Lynne Klinkhammer of Vickielynne Photography and Designs (VLP&Designs) Photo images may appear on wearableart and/or home essentials @vlpdesigns.com
Southwest Colorado Landscapes. San Juan Mountains. Uncompahgre National Forest.
I help aspiring and established photographers get noticed so they can earn an income from photography or increase sales. My blog, Photographer’s Business Notebook is a wealth of information as is my Mark Paulda’s YouTube Channel. I also offer a variety of books, mentor services and online classes at Mark Paulda Photography Mentor
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Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)
Lens: Novar Anastigmat f/3.5 75 mm
Film: Ilford Delta 3200, rated @ ASA 1600
Exposure: 1/200 sec and f/11, hand-held
Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab
Edited under Adobe Lightroom
What looks like an evil gnome was seen carved into the trunk of a tree on a quiet street in Hillsborough, California. This scowling face may be meant to ward off evil spirits.
In the Eucalypt lawn of the Melbourne Royal Botanical garden.
Planted September 1925 by Lord Forster, Gov.-General of Australia 1921-1925
Spring Hieroglyphics - Sony A7S II, Fotodiox C-mount to E-mount adapter, Wollensak Cine Velostigmat 25mm f/3.5 C-mount Lens.
"I can't remember, was I supposed to eat the mushroom and spider legs, before or after I boil them?..."
It was a nice funeral.
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My 8th entry for the CCC, in the category 'Small misc.'
#TreeTrunk #Growth #Nature #Branch #Tree #Tranquility #Forest #Outdoors #Green #landscape #landscapephography #lanscape_captures #fog #fog_captures #fog_brilliance #forest #forest_captures
On a rainy day, I have to amuse myself by looking back. This was early December with fresh snow along this line of trees.
One the way to Achtermann mountain (Harz, GER) with my old 550D and fisheye lens.
earthviews.de video archive
Jardín Botánico Canario - Gran Canaria - alrededor de 1100 aC/ tua 1100 CC / Fossilised tree trunk circa II00 BC
My 6 year old grandson, Ellis, took this photo with my cell phone this morning. I like Mary's observation that it looks like an elephant's foot. The tiny bits of ice was put there by Ellis, from a small mound of ice on the sidewalk.
Thanks for visiting, enjoy each day
Reputedly 400 years old
Located on Calle Amargura, it was erected between the 15th and 16th centuries. This building has Gothic and Renaissance elements.
Its main façade follows the typology of most Cáceres palaces, with granite masonry highlighting the semi-circular arched doorway, large voussoirs reaching to the ground , a large image of Carvajal’s coat of arms framed in an alfiz, and a corner balcony under a pointed arch.
Inside the house, there is a rectangular cloister with arcades on columns.
Its twelfth-century round tower made of rough ashlars also stands out. At its base you will find the palace chapel, decorated with some interesting frescoes.
Recommendations: You must visit the garden, with a spectacular fig tree--a clear example of the interior green spaces that can be found today in these buildings in the Historic Centre.
On this day, fog had blanketed Grimsby, Ontario in, predominantly the area below the edge of the Niagara Escarpment and northward out to Lake Ontario some 1 km North. But in the area near the gorge of the Forty Mile Creek (simply The Forty to locals), light breezes carried the fog into the woods atop the escarpment and into the Beamers Falls Conservation Area lands. While walking the trail to locate some moody scenes to photograph, I came across this dead tree with a few still green leaves (unusual give the mid-December date) onto which a stray beam of sunlight penetrated the fog and just kissed the top of the tree’s residual trunk.
Date Taken: 2015-12-14
Tech Details:
Taken using a hand-held Nikon D7100 fitted with a Nikkor 18-105mm VR lense set to 80mm, ISO100, Auto WB, Aperture priority mode, f/10.0, 1/40 sec. PP in free Open Source RAWTherapee from Nikon RAW/NEF source file: set final image size to be 9000px high, enable Shadows/Highlights and recover a little of both highlights and shadows, bring up a bit of contrast and a fair bit of Chromaticity in L-A-B mode, boost Vibrance a bit, in the Channel Mixer reduce the blue channel blue component slightly to tame the fog colour which had picked up a noticeable blue tint, sharpen, enable micro-contrast, enable noise reduction, save. PP in free Open Source GIMP: adjust tone curve to reduce overall brightness lightly, use the Hue-Saturation-Brightness tool to desaturate the blue channel and thereby restore the fog colour to a near-neutral tone and then boost the green channel to bring out the leaves a bit more as well as the red channel, duplicate the image to a new layer and significantly boost contrast and saturation (somewhat) so tree trunk detail stands out more and then add a black/transparent layer mask on which I painted white in the areas corresponding to the foreground tree trunk only, create new working layer from visible result, use the dodge/burn tool to burn/darken the darks only in the tree trunk, sharpen, save, scale to 6000 pixels high, add fine black and white frame, add bar and text on left, save, scale to 2048 px high for posting.
We passed this tree trunk on a backroad near the Pecos River in San Miguel County, New Mexico. Somebody made this lovely creation, complete with necklace and buttons. I loved how the greenery looked like beautiful long tresses....
“Because in ~ The End ~ , you won’t remember the time you spent working in the office or mowing your lawn. Climb that goddamn mountain.”
― Jack Kerouac