Macro of corn on the cob with husk
Dragonfly on a flower / Winnipeg Manitoba Canada Panasonic DMC-FZ50 / Raynox 250 attachment
This morning I found this spider sleeping on my ‘honey pot’ poppy seed pods and so the next thing I did was get the camera out of course! This photo is 100% natural and untouched.
Watch the Video here when we look back at it all as i know we will / you and me, wide eyed / i wonder will we really remember how it feels to be this alive? and i know we have to go / i realize we only get to stay so long / always have to go back to real lives / where we belong / where we belong / where we belong when we think back to all this and i’m sure we will / me and you, here and now / will we forget the way it really is / why it feels like this and how? and we always have to go i realize / we always have to say goodbye / always have to go back to real lives but real lives are the reason why / we want to live another life / we want to feel another time / another time… yeah another time to feel another time… when we look back at it all as i know we will / you and me, wide eyed / i wonder… / will we really remember how it feels to be this alive? and i know we have to go / i realize we always have to turn away / always have to go back to real lives but real lives are why we stay / for another dream / another day / for another world / another way / for another way… one last time before it’s over / one last time before the end / one last time before it’s time to go again… The Cure
Ok.. not really cotton candy.. but it’s the first thing I thought of when I saw the color! :D Thanks for looking!
The sunflower (Helianthus annuus) is an annual plant in the family Asteraceae and native to the Americas, with a large flowering head (inflorescence). The stem can grow as high as 3 metres, and the flower head can reach 30 cm in diameter with the “large” seeds. The term “sunflower” is also used to refer to all plants of the genus Helianthus, many of which are perennial plants. What is usually called the flower is actually a head (formally composite flower) of numerous florets (small flowers) crowded together. The outer florets are the sterile ray florets and can be yellow, maroon, orange, or other colors. The florets inside the circular head are called disc florets, which mature into what are traditionally called “sunflower seeds,” but are actually the fruit (an achene) of the plant. The inedible husk is the wall of the fruit and the true seed lies within the kernel. The florets within the sunflower’s cluster are arranged in a spiraling pattern. Typically each floret is oriented toward the next by approximately the golden angle, producing a pattern of interconnecting spirals where the number of left spirals and the number of right spirals are successive Fibonacci numbers. Typically, there are 34 spirals in 1 direction and 55 in the other; on a very large sunflower you may see 89 in one direction and 144 in the other. source: wikipedia
Same daisy as this black and white one! Please see my Etsy listing for this image – and purchase a pearlescent metallic print of this beautiful daisy. This photo is featured in my calendar A Bouquet. Please take a look!
Canon PowerShot A80 / iso 100, f 2.8, – 1 Ev, 1/125 sec., 35 mm. macro Thank you for your attention Featured in the group Domestic Art – Home Is Where the Art Is / Featured in the group The Compact Group / Featured in the group Depth Of Field Top ten in the challenge Still life / Top ten in the challenge Black & Red / Top ten in the challenge Red! / Top ten in the challenge Happy Food / Top ten in the challenge Food Straight From Nature
Amongst the sand dunes / Canunda National Park, / South Australia. Canon 50D. 17-85mm.
~ W. Somerset Maugham
~quote by storypeople.
I don’t know why the top of this droplet looks like liquid silver but I’m thrilled that it does! I thought it was just beautiful. This one again has had very little post processing, just a slight crop and the slightest levels adjustment, that’s all. Canon Powershot A480 point and shoot, hand-held. Proudly New Zealand-made. :) Featured in Canon Vs Nikon, Oct 12, 2009.
Daisy looking inviting for that one special bee to come along ;-) Kwinana Western Australia Olympus E-410
Two daisies…. Kwinana Western Australia Olympus E-410
TAKEN AS IS Noticed this wonderful flower in a garden, I have been trying to take a photo of them for a while in my own Garden but never quite got what I wanted until now. Featured in the D90 Nikon Users group 21.12.09 Featured in the artists of Norfolk and suffolk group Dec 09 Nikon D90 and Nikor 18-105vr lens / Focal length 105mm / F/. 6.3 / Exposure 1/640 sec / ISO 400 Hand held, some light through cloud.
I’d been wanting to take some photos of the enormous, beautiful pink flower that has sprouted from a native plant in a pot on my deck (no, no clue what it’s called). When I finally got around to it, I couldn’t believe my eyes when I looked through the viewfinder and saw, not water droplets, but tiny houses with pink roofs. It was impossible picking a favourite but this one suited the title best, so here it is! :D Straight off camera apart from a slight crop. Canon Powershot A480 Point and Shoot, hand-held. Proudly New Zealand made.:) Featured in 1:1 Macro Photography Nov 10, 2009.
Sparkle and Shine.
another close up of the petals of one of the biggest flowers in the world.. :) i love the hibiscus. and yellow is my fave. . this one is from my yard. reminded me of those lobby hotel shots:) lol / fort myers, florida, usa flower♥
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