Peggy C

Peggy C club

Posted: 12 Apr 2014


Taken: 12 Apr 2014

2 favorites     8 comments    530 visits

See also...

SEEN IN SEEN IN


Tolerance Tolerance


I D please I D please


Canon Photography Canon Photography


DEEP PURPLE DEEP PURPLE


North Carolina North Carolina


Photo Potpourri Photo Potpourri


See more...

Keywords

2014
Copyright
All-Rights-Reserved
Canon PowerShot
SX40 HS
shot in Manual mode
full sun
in flowerbed
Central North Carolina
North Carolina USA
leaves are soft
beautiful petal details
PeggyC
This is a Money Plant


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

530 visits


mysterious bloom ... ID

mysterious bloom ... ID
Camera: Canon PowerShot SX40 HS
Exposure: 0.0025 sec. (1/400)
Aperture: f/7.1
Focal Length: 25.5 mm (35 mm equivalent: 142.4 mm)
Flash: Off, Did not fire
Max Aperture: 4.5
Original Date: 2014:04:12 12:37:39
AF Point Manual AF point selection
Aspect Ratio 4:3
Camera ISO 200
Canon Exposure Mode Manual

What is this ? Circle Of Confusion 0.005 mm

(c) All Rights Reserved

Amelia, William Sutherland have particularly liked this photo


8 comments - The latest ones
 Pam J
Pam J club
Henbit.....and maybe Periwinkle ?

Hugssssssss
10 years ago. Edited 10 years ago.
Peggy C club has replied to Pam J club
.. maybe Henbit .... but the flowers seems differnent - leaves match though ~
10 years ago.
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Fantastic capture! Love the colors!
10 years ago.
Peggy C club has replied to William Sutherland club
.. thank you so much for your visit and comments ~
10 years ago.
 Amelia
Amelia club
I have no idea what these flowers are - but I feel I should know! The flower reminds me of Lady's Smock, but the leaves are totally wrong.
7 years ago.
 Amelia
Amelia club
This could be 'Honesty' - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunaria_annua. I would need to see the seed heads though to confirm that.
7 years ago.
Peggy C club has replied to Amelia club
Amelia, you have it correct. For some reason here in North Carolina, it is called a Money Plant because of the seed pods formed that look like quarters.
7 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.