Tamron 

202 creative works found

  • My love

  • A cute litte Triangular Spider enjoying the Sunday afternoon sun. I adore the colours on his (or her) back. And it wasn’t until review the shot back on my notebook that I noticed the detail on the leaf.

  • Some pretty Calla Lillies

  • A long journey for miss ladybird ..

  • Just a peek inside this little ground cover daisy

  • A leucadendron …. safari sunset ….

  • The centre of a very beautiful rose

  • My favourites … the gerbera making another appearance

  • A pretty Gerbera with a very shallow DOF ..

  • Last one of these, I promise! Also see Twirled and Twirled Again. (I’m real creative with names and stuff.) This time I kept seeing it as some undersea creature/plant, so I gave it a green tint. Please see my Etsy listing for this image – and purchase a pearlescent metallic print of this beautiful photograph!

  • A shot of some flower stems and buds that reminded me of space and the cosmos. And then of CS Lewis and his Space Trilogy, for some reason. I have yet to read it. But I love the name of that book. Please see my Etsy listing for this image – and purchase a pearlescent metallic print of this mysterious image. This photo is seen in two of my calendars – please take a look at them! / Everyday Mysteries A Bouquet

  • Woke up early this morning on my day off to give the weather another chance. Luckily for me it was a calm morning. Thought i’d try a panorama style shot with only minimal photoshop adjustments.

  • The first image in the Dreamcatcher series. These were taken early one foggy and soggy morning as the sun rose to shine through the dewdrops. Please see my Etsy listing for this image – and purchase a pearlescent metallic print of this beautiful image. Please take a look at the calendar Everyday Mysteries, which features this photograph. The two others in the Dreamcatcher series are Prose and Meteor.

  • Light does some crazy things… If you like this image, you’ll appreciate my calendar Still Life & Structural. Please, take a look!

  • I can’t help but like this one and be drawn to it. I know it’s kind of strange but I thought I’d see what you all thought of it. :) This photo is featured in my calendar A Bouquet. Please take a look!

  • Taken with a Canon 400D, Tamron 90mm prime lens, F11 shutter speed 1/30 second ISO400, edited in Photoshop Length: 38-43mm A summer and autumn species, this dragonfly can be found well into November and may be one of the last on the wing in the UK. The thorax in both sexes is brown above with poorly defined antehumeral stripes and yellow panels on the sides. The eyes are brown above and yellow below. The legs are black with a diagnostic yellow stripe along their length. / The males become a bright orange-red with maturity. Females have a pale, yellowish-brown abdomen often developing red markings along the segment boundaries and medial line as they age. Please view large

  • This was taken off the side of a highway in the middle part of Minnesota….flat, gray and very cold. We were on our way back home from our Thanksgiving trip and I begged my sister to stop when I saw this fence. :) The icy frost was amazing to drive in…miles and miles of it.

  • Another macro-ish shot of some beautiful atrophy. looks like a planet, as seen from the sky. keep an eye out for an upcoming calendar with these images of entropy.

  • Wildflowers in Colorado’s Winter Park. Taken in July of this year. I needed a break from winter and gray drudgery… Please see my Etsy listing for this image – and purchase a pearlescent metallic print of this beautiful photograph!

  • One of my best infrared pictures so far! Obviously this was taken several months ago, when it was not frozen solid here in Nebraska. :)

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Tamron 90mm lens, F6.3, shutter speed 1/30 second ISO640, edited in Photoshop This is a lovely Tengmalms owl, the shot was taken at Turbary woods bird of prey centre. Tengmalm’s Owl, Aegolius funereus, is a small owl. It is known as the Boreal Owl in North America. This species is a part of the larger grouping of owls known as typical owls, Strigidae, which contains most species of owl. The other grouping is the barn owls, Tytonidae. Please view large!

  • Taken with a Canon 400D, Tamron 90mm lens, F11, shutter speed 1/160 second ISO400, edited in Photoshop I took this shot last September at Martin Mere, it was my first proper venture out with my Tamron 90mm macro lens, I could not believe my eyes when I got back home!!! This is a Common Darter dragonfly Please view large!

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