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Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 22 8:17 pm)



Subject: Fairy Umbrellas


Misha883 ( ) posted Sun, 28 July 2002 at 8:54 PM · edited Wed, 15 January 2025 at 12:19 AM

file_18026.jpg

Posted some bigger versions of these over in the Gallery. Saw these starting to pop out of the ground last night in a downtown park. Returned early this morning before the small children wrecked them. Not early enough for fairies, I guess.


Artax ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 3:30 AM

really wonderful shot... very nice tones....


Michelle A. ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 7:17 AM

Oh these are wonderful! Going to check out the gallery now!

I am, therefore I create.......
--- michelleamarante.com


bevchiron ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 12:05 PM

Me too, this is really nice ; )

elusive.chaos

"You need chaos in your soul to give birth to a dancing star...." (Nietzsche)


azy ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 12:38 PM

Excellent photo wow!

Eggiwegs! I would like... to smash them!


Misha883 ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 6:50 PM

I went back today with more film. All gone. Carefully tended and raked away. There were DOZENS of buttons coming up last night. :-( Wonder if they dug up the body???


jacoggins ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 6:53 PM

shrooms! cool!


bonbon ( ) posted Mon, 29 July 2002 at 11:30 PM

or they might of ended up in someone's salad!! i love the shots and the one above is beautiful too.... you captured the perfect shot


starshuffler ( ) posted Tue, 30 July 2002 at 1:19 AM

LOL @ bonbon... I told ya Misha they look yummy. ;-) Hehehehe... (*


Misha883 ( ) posted Tue, 30 July 2002 at 7:22 AM

Attached Link: http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artjun00/jpfungi.html

"There is no safe and simple method to distinguish a toxic from an edible mushroom. The only and tiresome way is to learn the species in the field, helped by an expert and good books. However, it is possible to learn very quickly when extreme care is necessary. When a mushroom or toadstool has white gills, a ring and a bulbous volva at the base of the stem, it belongs to the genus Amanita, and in that genus you will find the really deadly poisonous species. In Europe, Amanita phalloides, the Death Cap, is responsible for probably more than 90% of the fatal mushroom poisonings. The Death Cap is a beautiful mushroom, looking very tasty, but one specimen is more than sufficient for a painful death. The onset of the symptoms is delayed, gastrointestinal symptoms occur usually after 8-12 hours. The terminal phase is after 72-96 hours. The main poisons of the Death Cap are phallotoxins and amanitins. These compounds are all bicyclic peptides; amanitins are octapeptides, phallotoxins are heptapeptides, so the latter have one less amino acid. Alpha-amanitin is extraordinarily toxic for humans. 5-10 milligrams can kill the average person and the average cap of Amanita phalloides contains 30-90 milligrams. The poison inhibits the workings of RNA polymerase with the consequence of inhibiting all protein synthesis. Cell death ensues. Because the liver is responsible for a major portion of protein synthesis in the body, the failure of the liver is the most prominent feature of a poisoning by the Death Cap. The genus Amanita contains some of the most beautiful mushrooms we know."


randyrives ( ) posted Tue, 30 July 2002 at 10:16 AM

My wife will not eat mushrooms, she says big frogs piss on them and little frogs piss under them :) Great shot by the way. --Randy R


mysnapz ( ) posted Tue, 30 July 2002 at 5:07 PM

Cool shot Misha, Love the colour treatment and the diagonal composition. I little crop from the bottom just to remove the out of focus high light might just help this image a little, fantastic detail. :O)

Those who do not want to imitate anything, produce nothing. Salvador Dali


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