View allAll Photos Tagged zigzag

Université Paris 8, Saint-Denis.

Zig Zag Spider (Neoscona cookson)

 

Photographed on Santa Fe Island in the Galapagos. They like to spin their webs along the paths where the tourists walk. Image hard to take with the light directly behind it and it was hard to locate in the camera lens.

Zigzag River, Rhododendron, OR

I guess there are not many species of land animals that have few photos of them posted on flickr. Yet it seems that many of the fish we see often in the lagoon are rarely seen in photos by non snorkellers. One of the visitors here gave a reason a while ago; divers get to see and photograph far more of the species found in deep water, another possible reason is that many of the fish living in shallow water (like this zigzag wrasse - Halichoeres scapularis) move very quickly and constantly change direction so it is hard to focus on them or predict where they are going to be or prefocus to get the shot. This shot shows a close up of the terminal ( male) phase together with one of the things it likes to eat, the sea urchin. The yellow blur bottom right is part of the tail. When the water warms up I will be trying to get a photo of the whole fish; - )

Porch of St Scholastica Catholic Church, Clapton. Built 1963 and designed by architects John E. Sterrett & Partners.

Detail of a metal door

Spring has sprung on my balcony :)

This photograph, which comes to you by courtesy of the letter Z, is my twenty-sixth picture for the February Alphabet Fun: 2021 group.

 

Girl skating on zigzag hill...

A zig-zag, double cut string oak stair with a frameless, toughened and laminated glass balustrade.

All the fixings and construction parts have been hidden beneath secret panels to give a clean and uncluttered look.

 

Snail on alchemilla-leaves. Hope you don't get bored with all my snaily pictures! ;-)

on black

 

“Time sometimes flies like a bird, sometimes crawls like a snail; but a man is happiest when he does not even notice whether it passes swiftly or slowly.”

(Ivan Turgenev, Russian author, 1818-1883)

Zebrilus undulatus

 

Anangu Creek, Napo WC, Ecuador

 

P3094532

Ten Katestraat 20. dinsdag t/m zaterdag 8:45-17:00 www.zigzagfournituren.nl

I made my Zigzag Run up in Scrumptious by Bonnie & Camille for Moda. Love these colours and prints.

Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT and Sigma 17-70mm f/2.8-4.5 DC Macro

 

view large

The planetarium in Copenhagen.

trentbarton

Scania L94UB / Wright Solar

679 - FJ55AAZ

Seen on route V2 in Burton-upon-Trent.

 

Taken 29/10/2016

#73 -- Zigzag -- 118 Pictures in 2018

 

And for Studio 26, exercises from the Art of Seeing

#8 -- Put a wide angle or zoom lens by your bed at night. When you wake in the morning, shoot at least 5 photos from a prone position, & at least 5 more while sitting on the edge of the bed.

Silly me, I thought if I laid this quilt across the back of a chair instead of on the table, Natasha would stay off of it. Wrong again, although she did not settled down on it but moved to her bed on the table to sleep.

For the All New Scavenger Hunt #11 - Zigzag.

SOOC... discovered while playing yesterday that the BGC has a level in the viewfinder mode. have no idea how i turned it on but i'll bet it will come in handy. maybe i should see if i downloaded the manual for the camera?

©2012 Daniel Novotny, Inveraray Zigzag (3). Transparent Watercolor on Paper, 38 x 56 centimeters, 15 x 22 inches.

Painting #157

 

One more (and last) attempt. Trying to make use of the negative painting a bit more. I am satisfied with this design. The white shape is well connected throughout the painting, there are nice overlaps to suggest planes and depth yet all the shapes are quite flat.

Some interesting roof desing

Mountain Hare (Lepus timidus):-

 

Mountain Hares live in Scotland and the North. They graze on vegetation and nibble bark from young trees and bushes. Hares shelter in a 'form', which is simply a shallow depression in the ground or heather, but when disturbed, can be seen bounding across the moors using their powerful hind legs to propel them forwards, often in a zigzag pattern. Mountain Hares live in upland areas and are most common on heathland; they are at their most visible in spring, when the snow has melted but the Hares are still white.

 

(Courtesy of Scottish Wildlife Trust)

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