Archive for the ‘Farm pond’ Tag

It’s amazing what a little bit of saturation can do—okay, maybe a LOT of saturation can do.
Link back to Weekly Photo Challenge: Transmogrify
You’re welcome to visit my Barns! Barns! Barns! photostream in flickr where you can register for free and upload your own photos of old barns, farm houses and other farm-related items. There are currently 501 members and over 3,000 photographs and growing. If you love barns, you’ll love this website!
Thursday I went about the farm with my camera, determined to find something to take a photograph of. There wasn’t much of a photographic nature, everything wearing a coat of brown, left over from fall.
But I was determined and just started shooting away at everything that looked just a bit different. I walked around a farm pond and started taking photographs of reflections in the water, as it wasn’t otherwise very photogenic.
Imagine my surprise, when the next day the new photo challenge was Reflections. So, I uploaded my photographs to the computer and started looking through them and came across a number of these reflection ones.
And here they are. I hope you enjoy them.
Comments are welcome.
You’re welcome to come visit my Barns! Barns! Barns! photostream in flickr where you can upload your own photos of old barns, farm houses and other related items.
Link back to Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections

©2014 Cris Coleman All Rights Reserved

©2014 Cris Coleman All Rights Reserved

©2014 Cris Coleman All Rights Reserved

©2014 Cris Coleman All Rights Reserved
Finally, looking down upon a stream that borders the property.

©2014 Cris Coleman All Rights Reserved
It’s amazing what one little old button can do to a photograph. Wild, but I kind of like it.

©2012 Cris Coleman

Distorted Farm Pond by Cris Coleman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

©2012 Cris Coleman

Distorted Farm Pond by Cris Coleman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
Farm ponds are a regular fixture in the Midwest. So are wild grasses. But are these wild grasses and farm pond from the Midwest? Or are they from another dimension? Another universe? Or only in the imagination?