View allAll Photos Tagged zigzag
A homemade Christmas bobble. Since I wasn't quite ready to be seeing Christmas colours I decided to take this one monotone.
These needles are 4 cm wide.
Thanks for taking time to fave, comment and look at my picture. I really appreciate it.
This week's theme in the 7 days of shooting group is Onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia is all about words that sound like their meaning - e.g. splash, bang, rustle.
7 days of shooting
week#14
Onomatopoeia
Geometry Sunday
Zigzag
The harbour wall at St Monans, taken during our break in the East Neuk of Fife for the October week. Since taking this shot, I've seen a few efforts form the same spot that are infinitely better ( see Simon's). However I took this a while back, and keep coming back to it, so thought worthy of an upload. A scary spot to be standing in a strong wind!!!
Have a look on black by hitting your "L" key.
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the Café in the Musée des Beaux-Arts, wall painting by Claudia Comte
www.mcba.ch/expositions/nouvelles-salles/
I couldn't stay long in this room because the walls move if you look at them for a few seconds
A beautiful outcropping of white sandstone domes in the Canaan Mountain Wilderness. Here, the domes form a zigzag shape in the foreground. At the bottom of the zag, off in the distance, the peaks of Zion can be seen. Beyond them are some snow-capped mountains.
Double exposure
Praktica L
CZJ Tessar (50mm, f/2.8) + Vivitar 3x teleconverter
Fomapan 400 (@800, developed in ID-11 "stock")
Euphorbia tithymaloides, also called Lady Slipper, Devils Backbone, Zigzag Plant (due to zig-zag stems) or Jacob's Ladder.
The little slippers (flowers) are about 10mm.
If you are interested in weird plants you can see an interesting collection here: za.pinterest.com/janeteberle/weird-plants-succulent-and-c...
Something a bit random. Painting my front hall and found some dried lily stamen that had fallen down behind a set of drawers :)
Iris brevicaulis from Panola County, Texas.
This native iris has blooms that often sit low to the ground nestled in its foliage, and may be difficult to see at first glance, despite their large, gaudy appearance.