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This mountain ridge was part of the direct blast zone from when Mt St Helens erupted. All the trees within miles were knocked flat, laying down like match sticks, with some of these trees protected by the ridge still partially standing.
I just took this a few minutes ago. I was outside and saw the Red-tail, and of course ran back in for the camera. Maybe lucky, but I sure am happy with the result!
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Highly active aurora borealis here in Tuktoyaktuk, NT during the early morning hours of March 23, 2017 Photo By: Francis Anderson
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A bright yellow neon street sign alerts vehicular traffic to a school zone further down Angas Street. The floodlights behind it are for illuminating the Roma Mitchell Commonwealth Law Courts building.
I have won a temporary victory in my battle with the squirrels, and the chickadees seem to appreciate it.
Another glorious day and beautiful evening in paradise.
Taken at the back of our local Arts Centre which overlooks the Nerang River toward Surfers Paradise - the Pacific Ocean is just behind these skyscrapers. The sun sets on the opposite side i.e. behind the photographer so you get all the colours reflecting off the glass of the buildings and then being reflected into the river.
Die Münze befindet sich hinter zwei Schichten transparenten Kunstzoffs. Mal sehen wann ich Zeit zum `auspacken' habe. Dann werde ich sehen, wo genau die Kratzer sind.
"Die Bildseite zeigt den polaren Raum aus einer ungewöhnlichen submarinen Perspektive." ... www.bundesbank.de/de/aufgaben/bargeld/euro-muenzen/sammle...
In the zone - new love on the historic Randalstown Viaduct. New Love, locked in together and photographed with a 10 year old Leica C-Lux Compact Digital Camera, - and look at the colour saturation and sharpness, the depth of field. Even the most basic Leicas are fantastic pieces of kit.
I keep this little gem of a camera in a small canvas pouch on my belt so it’s ready to shoot when some of the bigger cameras are not to hand.
Strictly linear! Taken in the so-called Telekom City in Darmstadt, Germany. This was one of the few shots I managed on that day before I was hassled by the security apes hired by a big German phone company - they threatened to call the police if I continued to take photos, and I called their bluff by insisting that they did.
Please view in full size for the best effect.
In the studio looking at the Goodman Zone medium format camera.
11/30 (4)
Nikon D750, Micro Nikkor 55mm f3.5 w/M2, 1:2, 30" @ f22, ISO 100
Using Atmosfear 3 in combination with Absolute Texture, enhanced grass draw distance, console controlled FOV, 'GOTZ' for enemy-, weather- and location-spawn, ingame console commands (fov, tilt), user.ltx tweaks (r2_lumscale etc.), CheatEngine (slomo, fake 'timestop' by setting timescale to 0.0 - no camera movement possible though), ReShade 2.x.
The Play Zone is part of the Buffalo Phil's Brick City. It was fun to design a colorful food and brick themed playground. If you find yourself in the Wisconsin Dells you can see this model in person at Buffalo Phil's Pizza and Grille along with the entire Brick City!
WEEK 44 – HLT Fall Photoset, Part III
Last time at the Horn Lake Target, we left off looking down the red zone; this time, we start off looking down the blue zone. The blue zone is by design a little less picturesque than the other areas of this store, if only because it lacks the neon that provides for so many different views of the same thing elsewhere. As it is, any pictures of the blue zone are bound to be a little stale: this horizontal shot looking toward clothes and my earlier vertical shot looking toward food probably cover about all the encompassing views one can imagine of this area.
(c) 2015 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
Sunset Rays ~ Florida Everglades U.S.A.
Great Egret ~ skimming the darkened river
Spring 2018 ~ Palm Beach County ~ 4/4/18
(three more photos 'from this night' in the comments)
Crepuscular rays (more commonly known as sunbeams, sun rays,
or god rays), in atmospheric optics, are rays of sunlight that appear to radiate from the point in the sky where the sun is located. These rays, which stream through gaps in clouds (particularly stratocumulus) or between other objects, are columns of sunlit air separated by darker cloud-shadowed regions. Despite seeming to converge at a point, the rays are in fact near-parallel shafts of sunlight. Their apparent convergence is a perspective effect, similar, for example, to the way that parallel railway lines seem to converge at a point in the distance.
The name comes from their frequent occurrences during twilight hours (those around dawn and dusk), when the contrasts between light and dark are the most obvious. Crepuscular comes from the
Latin word "crepusculum", meaning twilight.