Padlock(s) #12 by goodoleboy
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Description
Locks on gates that keep various farm animals inside and visitors outside.
Captured 7/15/12, mid noon, at our local nature center, within easy pedestrian distance of my perspicacious place.
Awesomely ZOOM worthy.
I seriously doubt that the bottom lock has been used for quite a while. It was on the other side of the gate and I had to reach over to photograph it.
Totziens, thankx for the peek, and for any and all favs and noncritical comments.
Comments (9)
durleybeachbum
I love the light in the top one, and the angle on the bottom one!
magnus073
Really fantastic collage Harry, that is one cool collection of old locks
jocko500
cool shots. look like a spider may be on the bottom one. at lest his web is. look like he gone now.
morningglory
I see one or more spiders in the bottom shot. Love the top shot.
npauling
The top one wouldn't keep anyone out as the bolt isn't going into the lock but I guess the chain may help. Cool shots and the web looks great on the bottom one. That would keep me out more than the lock lol.
danapommet
Nancy said what I was thinking. Both are from great POVs!
Hendesse
Superb shots, fantastic details!
MrsRatbag
Excellent additions to your padlock series, Harry; nice work!
anahata.c
this deserved a lot more comments than it got. The top one reminds me of a "High Noon" moment, I think because of the jaundiced "western" glow. I really like the light. It's also such an odd place for a padlock (to my limited knowledge). The bottom one is an angle I would never have dreamt of: It's abstract, a powerful "construction" which hits us because of your most unusual angle, completely messing with gravity. (Ie, the wall or door is now the ground.) And the white against dark shadow is fine abstraction; and then that grungy web---filled with 'stuff': You couldn't have done better if you built this thing. (The angle keeps us guessing where the gravity really is.) Really fine seeing, Harry. Also, the top shot has an eerie sheen on its metal parts, contrasted with the wood and the ground behind. More fine choices. One of your most unusual collections in this excellent series...