Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
This Moss is to be found in Fen HeathLand and Bogs in the Netherlands.Perfect to use as Natural Background.Related images:
Close-up of small white elderflowers. The flowers are covered with tiny dewdrops. The background is dark
Close-up of Lacy Umbel Flowers Against Vibrant Green Background.
Evergreen shrub, Hebe, with blooming flowers in Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Macro of delicate amazing blossoming of black sambucus (Sambucus nigra) on dark green background of garden. Selective focus. Nature concept for design
Cow Parsley in a field.
White wood aster Eurybia divaricata (Aster divaricatus) flowers, herbaceous perennial plant in the family: Asteraceae, native range: Eastern North America.
Closeup detailed macro photo of the blooming flower in the summer.
Close up of a libertia grandiflora flower in bloom
A low angle view of wild flowers
Chionanthus retusus
Close up of white flowers of whorled milkweed, Asclepias verticillata. Doolittle Prairie, Story County, Iowa, USA.
Aegopodium podagraria, belongs to the wild herbs and wild vegetables. It is a wild plant with white flowers. It is an important medicinal plant.
A DSLR photo of Hydrangea (Hydrangea paniculata) large, cone-shaped white flowers. Green defocused garden in the background with beautiful bokeh light.
sorbus intermedia Swedish whitebeam spring white flowers on twig
Blossom in springtime
Spiraea Vanhoutei flower tree
White allium blooms
A closeup of a Persian shallot (Allium stipitatum) plant
Allium flower macro close up for use as a background or plant identifier.
Rhododendron tomentosum flower growing in Italian countryside. High quality photo
White flowers close-up. (shallow depth of field)
Clover, also called trefoil, are plants of the genus Trifolium, consisting of about 300 species of flowering plants in the legume family Fabaceae originating in Europe.
Hebe in Kent, England. This flowering shrub is native to New Zealand where it is the largest plant genus
flowers captured in Bohinj valley Slovenia
Pyracantha is a genus of thorny evergreen large shrubs in the family Rosaceae, with common names Firethorn or Pyracantha. They are native to an area extending from Southeast Europe east to Southeast Asia, resemble and are related to Cotoneaster, but have serrated leaf margins and numerous thorns (Cotoneaster is thornless).\nPyracanthas are valuable ornamental plants, grown in gardens for their decorative flowers and fruit, often very densely borne. Their dense thorny structure makes them particularly valued in situations where an impenetrable barrier is required. Pyracantha berries are not poisonous as commonly thought; although they are very bitter, they are edible when cooked and are sometimes made into jelly.[2] In the UK and Ireland Pyracantha and the related genus Cotoneaster are valuable sources of nectar when often the bees have little other forage during the June Gap.\nThe plants reach up to six metres tall. The seven species have white flowers and either red, orange, or yellow berries. The flowers are produced during late spring and early summer; the pomes develop from late summer, and mature in late autumn (source Wikipedia).
Close up of white echium flowers in bloom
Fools parsley in a grass meadow
one flower in focus in the foreground, many ohters blurred in the back
White Elder Flower
Free Images: "bestof:Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8404.JPG en Sphagnum fallax de Sphagnum fallax Trügerisches Torfmoos own HermannSchachner 2015-12-13 Aufnahmeort Umgebung"
Leucippus fallax.jpg
Leucippus fallax in Isla Margarita.jpg
Splachnum sphaericum (b, 134704-465656) 1180.JPG
Pellia endiviifolia (fa, 144836-474709) 5108.JPG
Brown leaf on sphagnum moss.jpg
Haeckel_Muscinae.jpg
Bazzania tricrenata (d, 145456-474255) 8610.JPG
Dicranum elongatum (b, 113209-471249) 6803.JPG
Pohlia elongata (b, 112725-471212) 6758.JPG
Alosa_fallax_subsp._fallax_(Lacepede_1803)_als_Clupea_finta_1.Kiemenbogen_Fig_110b_(Matschie_et_al._1909).svg
Alosa_fallax_subsp._fallax_(Lacepede_1803)_als_Clupea_finta_Fig_109_(Matschie_et_al._1909).svg
Karte A Sbg SL.svg
Karte A Bgld EU.svg
Karte A Noe WU.svg
Karte A Ooe UU.svg
Karte A Stmk GU.svg
Karte A Stmk DL+G+GU+HF+LB+SO+VO+WZ.svg
Kompressorkuehlschrank.svg
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8404.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8445.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8452.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8454.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8402.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8407.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8449.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8453.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8456.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8499.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8504.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8507.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8509.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8510.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8511.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8513.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (a, 150143-481741) 8518.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8567.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8572.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8576.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8579.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8581.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8587.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8589.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8592.JPG
Sphagnum fallax (b, 150147-481741) 8593.JPG
Sphagnum magellanicum (b, 150145-481742) 8437.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (c, 150147-481742) 8468.JPG
Sphagnum magellanicum (b, 150145-481742) 8444.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (c, 150147-481742) 8466.JPG
Sphagnum magellanicum (b, 150145-481742) 8435.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (c, 150147-481742) 8459.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (b, 144736-474751) 7240.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (b, 144736-474751) 7238.JPG
Sphagnum squarrosum (a, 142736-474310) 9179.JPG
Sphagnum squarrosum (a, 142736-474310) 9180.JPG
Sphagnum squarrosum (a, 142736-474310) 9185.JPG
Sphagnum squarrosum (a, 142736-474310) 9187.JPG
Sphagnum squarrosum (a, 142736-474310) 9192.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (a, 144748-474743) 8341.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (a, 144748-474743) 8342.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (a, 144748-474743) 8347.JPG
Sphagnum angustifolium (a, 150138-481740) 6964.JPG
Sphagnum angustifolium (a, 150138-481740) 6967.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (a, 144748-474743) 8339.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (a, 144748-474743) 8350.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (a, 144748-474743) 8351.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (a, 150136-481739) 8887.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (a, 150137-481740) 6996.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (a, 150137-481740) 6998.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (a, 150137-481740) 7001.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (a, 150137-481740) 7005.JPG
Sphagnum girgensohnii (a, 150137-481740) 7008.JPG
Sphagnum inundatum (a, 141216-472406) 0558.JPG
Sphagnum inundatum (a, 141216-472406) 0559.JPG
Sphagnum inundatum (a, 141216-472406) 0560.JPG
Sphagnum inundatum (a, 141216-472406) 0562.JPG
Sphagnum inundatum (a, 141216-472406) 0565.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (b, 144738-474654) 8135.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (b, 144738-474654) 8137.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (b, 144738-474654) 8139.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (b, 144738-474654) 8140.JPG
Sphagnum riparium (a, 145655-482731) 0153.JPG
Sphagnum compactum (a, 141136-472352) 9737.JPG
Sphagnum compactum (c, 141120-472344) 1020.JPG
Sphagnum squarrosum (b, 122011-471334) 1090.JPG
Sphagnum riparium (b, 145622-482723) 0136.JPG
Sphagnum riparium (b, 145622-482723) 0139.JPG
Sphagnum riparium (b, 145622-482723) 0142.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (a, 150136-481739) 8883.JPG
Sphagnum palustre (a, 150136-481739) 8894.JPG
Sphagnum angustifolium (c, 144738-474654) 8153.JPG
Sphagnum angustifolium (c, 144738-474654) 8156.JPG
Sphagnum angustifolium (c, 144738-474654) 8159.JPG
Sphagnum quinquefarium (b, 143418-473931) 1283.JPG
Sphagnum majus (b, 141220-472355) 6021.JPG
Sphagnum majus (b, 141220-472355) 6017.JPG
Sphagnum majus (b, 141220-472355) 6016.JPG
Sphagnum majus (a, 141136-472352) 5237.JPG
Sphagnum majus (a, 141136-472352) 5239.JPG
Sphagnum majus (a, 141136-472352) 5243.JPG
Sphagnum majus (a, 141136-472352) 5247.JPG
Terms of Use   Search of the Day