View allAll Photos Tagged treetrunk

In 1875 Marie-Charlotte Constance Say, heiress to a sugar fortune, bought the Chateau and her husband, the Prince de Broglie, commissioned Henri Duchene to develop the gardens. Part of his work was a wild garden, approached across a ravine via a rustic concrete bridge reached from a spiral staircase built inside a concrete treetrunk.

Photo taken in or near Amani Nature Reserve

East Usambara Mountains, Tanzania

By N.J. Cordeiro

Post-Production by J. Quicho

A tree stump and behind Spirit Lake, still showing the aftermath of the 1980 eruption.

this is how my friend, Siah TM looking for the best angle when meet a beautiful sunset. A dried tree trunk that fallen on the mud, which can support his weight is more than enough for him to stable himself, just to get a better angle to shoot this beautiful sunset :) bravo siah siah!!

With [flickr.com/oape] did a lightpainting exercise on a white covered trunk i found a while ago. Led light (or fluid fire as it seems) and different torches are what are used here. No flash. And LONG exposuretimes :)

Thank Oape!

Not a great interesting photo but it is a fossil sticking out of the side of a cliff along the Bay of Fundy in a little place called Joggins, Nova Scotia. It's a root from a tree that lived during the coal age , 300 million years ago. If you want to find more follow this web site.

 

jogginsfossilcliffs.net

Spanish

Colonia El Jardín de la Rosa (Chamartín): Se construyó en terrenos de la Huerta del Caño Roto, en Prosperidad. Está situada entre las calles de López de Hoyos, Padre Claret y Valdomir. Fue construida por A. Sanz Marcos en 1927. La colonia tiene forma triangular con viviendas de una y dos plantas.

  

La mayor parte de las colonias existentes en Madrid se construyeron en los años veinte y treinta del siglo XX, al amparo de las Leyes de Casas Baratas de 1908, 1911, 1921, 1924 -entre otras- para la construcción de viviendas para obreros, funcionarios y militares. Para ello se buscaron terrenos en el extrarradio -sobre todo en el antiguo municipio de Chamartín de la Rosa-, que fueran sitios apacibles y económicos para vivir.

 

De casas baratas para clases modestas han pasado en la actualidad a ser viviendas de lujo para aquellos que quieren vivir en un hotel individual o adosado con jardín dentro de la ciudad.

(from Madripedia)

 

English

The "colonia" El Jardin de la Rosa (Chamartin) It was built on land of the "Huerto del Caño Roto", in Prosperidad between the streets of Lopez de Hoyos, Padre Claret and Valdovin. It was constructed by A Sanz Marcos in 1927. The "colonia" is made up of one and two storeyed houses and is in the shape of a triangle.

The majority of the "colonias" that still exist in Madrid were built in the 1920s and 30s under the protection of the Cheap Housing Laws of 1908, 1911, 1921, 1924, among others, for the construction of dwellings for workers, civil servants and members of the armed forces. To this end land was looked for on the outskirts of Madrid which were peaceful and economical places to live,especially in the former municipality of Chamartin de la Rosa (now Chamartin).

From cheap houses for the lower classes they have become luxurious dwellings for those who wish to live in the city in detached, semidetached or terraced houses with a garden.

 

(My translation)

Dallas Wisconsin - Doug and Mya's Wedding Summer 2008

Original Painting Mixed media on paper. 20"x14" 2018 Clear tar gel and lightfast, waterproof ink on acid-free watercolor paper Learn more at www.CrowRising.com/gallery.

Kennoway Road. Leven. Fife. Scotland.

Another quote for my collection!

 

“Fairy Tales are more than true; not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.”

Photo taken in or near Amani Nature Reserve

East Usambara Mountains, Tanzania

By N.J. Cordeiro

Post-Production by J. Quicho

Treetrunks and shadows in beautiful pond @Nuuksio, Espoo

to be considered for a printed and framed mosaic

It was tough to capture this scene. Rather than using the ambient light, I decided to use flash light.

 

After setting up the camera and kit lens on the tripod, I asked my cousin to trigger the flash as soon as he hears the shutter sound (I use a low cost Achiever flash. No metering and no wireless trigger :) ). Camera was in manual mode and set to ISO 100, f18, 1/2 shutters.

 

We tried a lot of flash angles and finally decided to stay underneath the leaf. This rendered the trunk details as well as the leaf perfectly with minimal shadow.

I was quite pleased with this and the photo of the thrush next to it as the birds were flitting about and I was on full zoom on my Fuji Finepix.

 

#82 Bird in a tree for 114 pictures in 2014 group

 

A huge tree trunk with beautiful bark patterns.

From the series Tree Trunks San Bernardo del Viento

This log is across a route deer take routinely here at Golden Hills. Not only is it regularly struck by their hooves, the insects are also -- and probably more effectively -- doing their part to see to its thorough disintegration.

having a fiddle with radial blur and trying to invoke movement/light with pp only

With [flickr.com/oape] did a lightpainting exercise on a white covered trunk i found a while ago. Led light (or fluid fire as it seems) and different torches are what are used here. No flash. And LONG exposuretimes :)

Thank Oape!

by Peter

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