Inspector 

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46 creative works found

  • Picture taken at Chichester Sussex UK. I used ISO 100 and 30 second exposure.The only way is up.Not lying on my back for a change.set camera remembered the focus point sauntered like hell and posed

  • What appears to be a ticket inspector giving a train driver a speeding ticket (at least that is my interpretation of the situation).

  • Shops such as Jay-Jays have all those old school superhero t-shirts now so I thought I’d make my own. / Wear it and pretend you know the most obscure of all nerd things when in actual fact, this guy has never appeared anywhere before.

  • This is a bit of a deviation from my normal style, I don’t normally post candid shots, but this is simply my favourite of all time. My nephew Charlie turned spontaneously to wish his Papa (my Dad) a very sincere happy birthday and I managed to capture a really perfect moment. This is for my family.

  • Bugar takes his calling with a flair of the tail

  • As per gemlenz suggestion-the lady bug has come in closer. Hope you enjoy All artwork is © Crystal Zacharias, All Rights Reserved. You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent. All photos available with or without text upon request.

  • From the show ‘Friends.’ / I don’t know if it is copyright, the character in the show only showed it to the female character for humor, but did not wear it. / Let me know if it is so I can delete it, thanks.

  • WOFT female body inspector

  • So, as all of you know, I take my gladiolas in to work and put them in a vase on my desk. The other day, after I got all settled, I noticed a ‘stick’ inside one of the blooms. I went to pull it out and it was stuck. It was a stuck stick? No… an inch worm, apparently pretending to be a stick. He stayed in there all day while I was was working. At times, I thought he had died. I decided to take him home. Since the bloom he was in was fading, I plucked it off the stem and toted him inside it, down to my car for the ride home. I figured I should take him back where he grew up, as it was my fault he’d had such a harrowing day. But I had a stop to make. I needed to go to the car wash, to get rid of the nasty mess that ‘Neighborhood Thief’ left on my car. I didn’t want him to get injured, so I placed him, inside his flower, in the glove compartment for safe keeping. Ten minutes later, I was back in my car, and the first thing I did was remove the flower from the glove compartment. No inch worm. I look over at the open door of the compartment, and there he is, happily inching along the edge of the protective sleeve I keep my registration and insurance card in. The guy hasn’t moved all day… and now, in the dark of a cubby hole, he’s haulin’ arse. I get him safely out and put him back inside the flower. I lay the flower on top of my lunch kit so I can watch him while I drive. He’s a race car, now. He can’t sit still. Seconds later, he is whizzing along the edge of my lunch kit. I decide to put him on the dashboard where I can watch him better. He’s Evel Knieval now, risking certain death, hovering by nothing but his back feet, off the edge of the dashboard, gazing down at the speedometer. (Everyone’s a critic) After being chastised and placed back in a safe place more than once, he finally gave up and decided to behave the rest of the way home, pretending to be a stick (sulking, I think) until I got home and could find him a place to live. He didn’t like the tree. Too coarse. He didn’t like the Calla lily leaf. Too slippery. Then I realized, he rode in on a gladiola, maybe a gladiola. You’ve never seen a happier inch worm. But not before I could get a few photos… : ) LavenderMoon~

  • WOFT gear

  • woft

  • Selfportrait

  • Bontebok ~ Damaliscus pygargus The adult Bontebok went on seconds later to knock the dry leaf out of the baby’s moth. I guess the baby didn’t need the junk food deprived of nutrition. The Bontebok is an antelope found in South Africa and Lesotho. The Bontebok has two subspecies; the Bontebok (Damaliscus pygargus pygargus), occurring naturally in the Fynbos and Renosterveld areas of the Western Cape(and which is an endangered species), and the Blesbok (Damaliscus pygargus phillipsi) occurring in the highveld. The Bontebok stands 80 to 100 centimetres at the shoulder and weighs 50 to 90 kilograms. The Bontebok is a chocolate brown colour, with a white underside and a white stripe from the forehead to the tip of the nose, although there is a brown stripe across the white near the eyes in most Blesbok. Bontebok also has a distinctive white patch around its tail (whence the Latin name), while this patch is light brown/tan in Blesbok. The horns of Bontebok are lyre-shaped and clearly ringed they are found in both sexes and can reach a length of half a metre. Blesbok live in highveld where they eat short grasses, while Bontebok are restricted to coastal Fynbos and Renosterveld (Skead 1980). They are diurnal, though they rest during the heat of the day. Herds contain only males, only females or are mixed and do not exceed forty animals for Bonteboks or seventy for Blesboks. Bontebok are not good jumpers but they are very good at crawling under things. Mature males form territories and face down other males in displays and occasionally combat. Bontebok were once extensively killed as pests, and were reduced to a wild population of just seventeen animals, but the species has since recovered. Blesbok are extinct in their natural habitat but they have increased in population to the point where they are now very abundant and avidly farmed, because they are popular quarry for hunters and are easy to sustain.

  • Please take a look at my website: www.ihatehelvetica.co.uk

  • I’m going to make you a deal but its okay if you refuse it. /

  • Spring has sprung and it’s time for all good gardners to start spending time in the garden inspecting the flowers. Taken in Wheatland in Northern California with Linda’s / Nikon Cookpix P90….brand new out of the box. AS IS straight out of the brand new Camera. /

  • This one is for fans of seriously good fiction. The Oxford Bar on the corner of Young Street and Young Street South Lane in the New Town area of Edinburgh, Scotland. The name of the bar will be familiar to fans of the Scottish fiction writer Ian Rankin as it is the favoured pub of his Inspector Rebus character in the long running Rebus series of books and and also in the TV series). In reality of course, the Oxford Bar has long been one of a handful of Edinburgh watering holes favoured by Scottish writers and artists since the 19th century including Ian Rankin himself. Information supplied by Wikipedia. Camera: Canon EOS 450D (Digital Rebel XSi in the USA) BEST VIEWED LARGER Related shots can be found at: Edinburgh.

  • Bus Shelter / Gurranabraher / Cork City / Ireland / Nikon D300 / 50mm AF-G

  • Filming The Hotel Inspector

  • The late great John Thaw as “Inspector Morse”. Pen and ink on A4 Bristol board. From my Crime Detective Series.

  • INSPECTOR LEE OF THE NOVA POLICE by Matthew Dunn Ink, acrylics, old canvas and photoshop

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