Greens of Summer – Rurality Blog Hop #21
Greens of Summer – Rurality Blog Hop #21

Greens of Summer – Rurality Blog Hop #21

Marsh - Near Pickering Passage - South Puget Sound WA

How many shades of green are there?

:  :  :

How many shades of green are there??

Some say about a million.

Wow!

:  :  :

Here on the southwestern end of the Olympic Peninsula

near Pickering Passage on the shores of Puget Sound,

a marsh is lush with the foliage of summer and

the shades of green are virtually endless.

:  :  :

Green is such a rich, soothing color to me.

I have always liked it.

What about you?

:  :  :

 

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‘RURALITY BLOG HOP’ #21

It’s time for you to enter your photos. ‘Rurality Blog Hop’ is open to everyone who would like to share something about rural life. The linky will open every Wednesday morning around 09:00 Pacific Time and will close Thursday at midnight.

GUIDELINES:

  1. Please just ONE family friendly post about rural themes per week please.
  • Rural photography, rural life, thrift, pets and livestock, recipes, crafts, etc.
  1. Submit the url of your ‘Rurality Blog Hop,’ blog post, not your main blog url, using the LinkyTools prompt below.
  2. Google+ users – submit the url of your posted photo on G+.
  3. Include the ‘Rurality Blog Hop’ badge (or a text link) in your blog post.
  4. Visit some of other entries, meet some new people and leave encouraging comments.

(I reserve the right to remove any post that is inappropriate and multiple entries from the same blog.)

(Permalink to create your own text link back to this post: http://www.theviewfromrighthere.com/blog/?p=9784)

Rurality Blog Hop #21

Thank you for visiting and sharing!

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25 Comments

    1. It is a combination of 3 EV stepped images into one HDR… I normally don’t do that, but just happened to be shooting into the bright light and took several trying not to blow out the highlights. I used Photomatix Pro 4 to create the image shown today.

    1. I used Photomatix Pro 4 – I don’t often process photos into HDR, but this one I was trying not to blow out the highlights (shooting directly into the sun) and took several shots using EV steps so they were a perfect candidate for an HDR photo merge and processing.

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