• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Unfocussed Photography

  • Unfocussed Photography
  • Prints
  • Archives
  • Contact
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 30 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • A Pink Flaming Searches For Food In The Shadows
    Flamingo In The Shadows.jpg
  • A buck trots out from the woods and catches enough light for a photo stop
    A Buck From The Shadows.jpg
  • Kevin Peeks From The Shadows.jpg
  • A Dark-Eyed Junco Sitting On A Tree Branch Masked In The Shadows
    Junco Tree Perch.jpg
  • A Bald Eagle's Majesty Shines From The Shadows
    Majesty On Black.jpg
  • A dark and dusky field with a midnight splash of light and shadows illuminates the golden grass and burn orange wildflowers under a raging rolling sky.
    Raging Midnight Field.jpg
  • Poking a macro lens into the weeds can reveal some hidden magic.
    Morning Garden Butterfly.jpg
  • A scorched Earth Perspective of an isolated bench to rest your feet after a long hike through Klondike.
    A Place To Sit at Klondike.jpg
  • Proud Kevin.jpg
  • Spring Colors and Foliage Are Beginning To Fill In The Tree Lines Reflecting On The Lakes at The August A. Busch Memorial Conservation Area
    Busch Spring Filling In.jpg
  • An Autumn Tree on the edge of a scenic cliff soaks up the warmth of a sunset beyond the fence line at Klondike Park
    Soaking Up A Sunset Glow.jpg
  • Titmouse Seed Tree Spotlight.jpg
  • Portions of the August A. Busch Memorial Conservation Area were used by the Department of Army in the 1940's for TNT and DNT production and by the Atomic Energy Commission in the 1960's for uranium ore processing. The affected portions were all part of a federal environmental cleanup project and required to meet certain environmental health and safety standards. The area is now considered to be safe for all recreational pursuits allowed on the area, as well as the wildlife found within the area.
    Busch Bare Reflections.jpg
  • August A. Busch Memorial Conservation Area - This 6,987-acre area contains 3,000 acres of forest in addition to grassland, cropland, old fields, prairie, and wetlands. Facilities/features: boat rentals, picnic areas, pavilion, hiking trails, 43 fishing jetties, fishing docks, staffed firearms range, archery range, five viewing blinds, and a visitor center. The area also has 28 fishable lakes and ponds totaling 550 acres.
    Blues at Busch Sunset.jpg
  • A Long View of the Klondike Park Cliff From Below against a backdrop of puffy white clouds.
    Klondike Cliff From Below.jpg
  • Kevin Peacock Soaking Up Sun.jpg
  • A female Northern Cardinal perched atop an old, decaying tree stump basking in what little light is left in the day, just out of reach from the shadows of the woods behind her.
    Female Cardinal From The Shadows.jpg
  • A Shadow Play Climber Scales The Garden Wall Toward The Hanging Flower Blooms
    Scaling The Garden Wall.jpg
  • Ladybug taking off into flight
    Taking-Off.jpg
  • Moss Phlox Evening Shadows.jpg
  • Thought it was an interesting pose of the East African Crowned Crane, especially just popping out of the shadows like it was.
    IMG_3045.jpg
  • Glassy Lake Reflections at Klondike Park as the sun sets at cast a bare light through the trees. Deep shadows hide the abundance of colored foliage and faintly shimmers the top of the water
    Glass Klondike Lake.jpg
  • Morning Light Open The Shadows Along Buffalo National River
    Early Morning on Buffalo River.jpg
  • A Tufted Titmouse Perched In The Tree Just Clearing The SHadows
    Moody Titmouse in Trees.jpg
  • A nature abstraction with a heavy play on light and shadows
    Laden in Light.jpg
  • A Double-Crested Cormorant casts a shadow against textured peeling paint at the Saint Louis Zoo. The Double-crested Cormorant is a member of the cormorant family of seabirds. It occurs along inland waterways as well as in coastal areas, and is widely distributed across North America. he Double-crested Cormorant is a large waterbird with a stocky body, long neck, medium-sized tail, webbed feet and a medium sized hooked bill.<br />
<br />
Recently the population of Double-crested Cormorants has increased. Some studies have concluded that the recovery was allowed by the decrease of contaminants, particularly the discontinued use of DDT. The population may have also increased because of aquaculture ponds in its southern wintering grounds. The ponds favor good over-winter survival and growth.<br />
<br />
Adult Double-crested Cormorants are black or dark brown and have an orange-yellow patch of skin at the base of their bills. In breeding plumage, adults have two whitish tufts behind their eyes, hence the description 'double-crested.' First-year birds are pale on the upper breast and darker on the belly. Double-crested Cormorants have slender, hook-tipped bills that are often tipped up at an angle as they swim. They can be distinguished from the other two Washington cormorant species by their thicker bills and by the pronounced kink in their long necks in flight.
    Cormorant By Cracked Paint.jpg
  • The Marco center of a pink peony flower In shadowed light <br />
<br />
The peony is a flowering plant in the genus Paeonia, the only genus in the family Paeoniaceae. They are native to Asia, Southern Europe and Western North America. Boundaries between species are not clear and estimates of the number of species range from 25 to 40
    Peony Pink Press.jpg
  • A Shadowed Moody Shot of the Elephant Statue in front of the Saint Louis Zoo. This sculpture is named Reaching Elephant by  Kent Ullberg
    Dusky Elephant.jpg
  • Bald Eagle hanging out and stalking it's next prey.
    Baldy In The Shadows B-W.jpg
  • Squirrel From The Shadows.jpg