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Double exposure exit

Posted | Views: 3,776


Bread alone?

Posted | Views: 3,367
“But he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
- Matthew 4:4


Amazing Clouds

Posted | Views: 3,827


Thanksgiving to God

Posted | Views: 4,222
Being enriched in every thing to all bountifulness, which causeth through us thanksgiving to God. 
-2 Corinthians 9:11


Blue Neon

Posted | Views: 4,248


Film Bokeh

Posted | Views: 3,533
Bokeh balls on 35mm film
AF-S NIKKOR 24-85mm f/3.5-4.5G ED VR
Yellow, pink, purple and blue bokeh balls.


W&Y Flowers

Posted | Views: 3,489
FLOWERS ON FILM
Lomo CN 100


Spaceship Earth x2

Posted | Views: 3,531
Spaceship Earth
double exposure


Red Converse

Posted | Views: 3,926


CVS FILM

Posted | Views: 3,651
Consumer Value Store
at Night on Film


Lipstick on a gator

Posted | Views: 3,479


Open

Posted | Views: 3,926
Openroad.


Ye are the branches

Posted | Views: 4,019
I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing.
John 15:5


On top of spaghetti

Posted | Views: 3,117
On top of spaghetti
All covered with cheese
I lost my poor meatball
When somebody sneezed.

It rolled off the table
And onto the floor
And then my poor meatball
Rolled out of the door.

It rolled in the garden
And under a bush
And then my poor meatball
Was nothing but mush.
On top of spaghetti


Palm Exposure x 2

Posted | Views: 3,429
Double exposure on Fujifilm Superia X-TRA 400 film
Nikon F6 film camera with the Voigtlander 40mm f/2 lens


Golden hour light

Posted | Views: 4,274
Golden Hour light with Sunny 16
Shot on Kodak Ektar 100, I used Sunny 16 as a guide and set the shutter speed to 125 and the aperture to F/5.6. I should have used F/4 because it's  slightly underexposed in the shadows.


Pink & yellow flowers

Posted | Views: 4,132
FLOWERS ON FILM
Lomo CN 100


The kinda road I like to be on

Posted | Views: 3,743
COUNTY LINE ROAD 1200 W  
Fair Oaks, Indiana 


Cecropias!

Posted | Views: 1,005
   By Sam Ortiz

   How big was the largest moth you’ve ever seen?
   The largest moth in North America is the cecropia. These moths are part of the silk moth family and can be anywhere from five to six inches in wingspan. Cecropias are said to be common, but you may not see them often because they are nocturnal.
   Their wings are a grayish-brown color with the base of their forewings being the same red color as their bodies and having an orange stripe near the edge and an orange teardrop shape closer to the center. The edge of the forewing has a wavy white line and a black circle.
   The hindwings of the cecropia look very similar except for the absence of the black dot and a white stripe directly above the orange one.
   Its antennae are, just as all moths’ are, feathered. The body of the cecropia is a bright red color accented with white and dotted with black down the sides of its furry-looking abdomen.
   Moths are commonly known to have scales on their wings, but what about that fur you see on some kinds’ bodies? This “fur” is actually just more scales. Research has shown that these scales can absorb sound and allow them a better chance against predators that use echolocation, like bats.
   However, even if a cecropia manages to avoid death by bat, it won’t live for long. Cecropias can only eat when they are caterpillars. Cecropias, and a few other kinds of moths, lose their mouth during their metamorphosis. Cecropias cannot eat and can only live for about two weeks.
   In those two weeks that a cecropia is fully grown, it only has one objective: to find a mate. Cecropias can lay up to 100 eggs in a batch, though most won’t survive until adulthood.
   Cecropia caterpillars right after they hatch are black. As they go on and molt a few times, they grow in size and eventually change colors to green. Then, when they are ready, they spin their cocoon and begin the cycle again.
   The life of a cecropia may not be very long, but these beautiful bugs are much more than the stereotype of the ugly and plain-looking moth everybody knows.
  Beware of the Cecropias!


Bears in Gatlinburg

Posted | Views: 3,474