Sunset at Wallaroo on the Yorke Peninsula, South Australia / 28th January 2008 Wallaroo to Lucky Bay (near Cowell) Ferry on the Eyre Peninsula. / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
The Moonta Mines The historic town of Moonta is approximately 165 kilometres north-west of Adelaide, in the upper Yorke Peninsula region known alternately as South Australia’s ‘Copper Triangle’ or ‘Little Cornwall’. Ruins of Hughes Pumphouse / More images of Moonta Mines / 1 OF 6
The Moonta Mines The historic town of Moonta is approximately 165 kilometres north-west of Adelaide, in the upper Yorke Peninsula region known alternately as South Australia’s ‘Copper Triangle’ or ‘Little Cornwall’. Ruins of Hughes Pumphouse / More images of Moonta Mines / 6 OF 6
Normanville / Located 72 km south of Adelaide and 35 km west of Victor Harbour, Normanville is a pleasant holiday resort town. At one stage it was a busy port servicing the area which was one of South Australia’s richest wheatbelt districts. Its focus is now firmly on modern tourism. Image taken Easter Monday 2008 / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
/ / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
In the tradition of all images of nessie this photo has been kept out of focus to protect her identity. / Although sightings of the creature on land around the loch reputedly date back to the sixth century,modern interest in the monster was sparked by a 22 July 1933 sighting, when George Spicer and his wife saw ‘a most extraordinary form of animal’ cross the road in front of their car. They described the creature as having a large body (about 4 feet (1 m) high and 25 feet (8 m) long), and long, narrow neck, slightly thicker than an elephant’s trunk and as long as the ten- to twelve-feet (3.0–3.7 m) width of the road; the neck had a number of undulations in it. They saw no limbs because of a dip in the road obscuring the animal’s lower portion. It lurched across the road towards the loch 20 yards (20 m) away, leaving only a trail of broken undergrowth in its wake. For more info on Nessie / / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
One of the best locations on the Fleurieu. / A must visit if you are to come & see our coast. OTHER CALENDERS AVALIBLE IN MY COLLECTION / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
The modern English word blue comes from the Middle English, bleu or blwe, which came from an Old French word bleu of Germanic origin (Frankish or possibly Old High German blao, “shining”). Bleu replaced Old English blaw. The root of these variations was the Proto-Germanic blæwaz, which was also the root of the Old Norse word bla and the modern Icelandic blár, and the Scandinavian word blå, but it can refer to other colours. A Scots and Scottish English word for “blue-grey” is blae, from the Middle English bla (“dark blue,” from the Old English blæd). Ancient Greek lacked a word for colour blue and Homer called the colour of the sea “wine dark”, except that the word kyanos (cyan) was used for dark blue enamel. / From Wikipedia / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.
Featured Work-Equine Art and Photography Majestical.. / Cranbourne Cup 2008…... Photos For Sale
A scene with 3 yachts passing an island on sydney harbour 18-02-2009 at 7:09PM, nearing sunset. Taken from Balmain wharf. Canon 40D, 60mm f/2.8, 1/1250s, ISO 400, single RAW. I have prepared 6 variations of the same original photograph with the Dynamic Photo HDR software package then crop/straightening and noise reduction in Lightroom to finish off.
6:13am at Black Head Point (Gerringong), 23-Dec-2008. 1/320 sec, f/5.6, ISO 200, 210mm HDR/Orton-effect processing in Dynamic Photo HDR and finishing off (noise reduction) in Lightroom.
Gerringong 23-Dec-2008. f/7.1, ISO 100, 1/100 sec, 160mm The sky over-head turning ugly and preparing to rain down on us as we head back up the coast after a night of camping. Usually, when one looks to the heavens, one does not expect to see an angry face (see right 25% of photo) in the clouds staring back at you with a malevolent glare. Six variations of the same raw image, prepared with Dynamic Photo HDR then finished off with noise reduction in Lightroom. /
A focus merge in photoshop of 4 photos of a ???? flower. / You have to wonder if this thing is alive – I mean, what kind of innocent little flower would go all out (as it were) to make life tricky for the average working bee. Sigma 150mm, hand-held (suffering under the weight) / f/8, 1/125, ISO 400.
Tasmania can get mighty cold at night.
10-Apr-2009 1:46pm / Sigma 150mm @ 1:2 / 1/250 (flash), f/11, ISO-200 I’d just like to say… I love this shot. This is my best BEE yet! / I was so close. It could have stung me if it had the urge, / but it had other problems… :-)
Palm Beach Jetty in Pittwater, NSW. [Palm Beach, NSW] Sun 29 Nov 2009 A dreamy HDR with an almost natural look, / taken after 2 beers and a fantastic lunch at Baranjoey House. / ps: The Brooklin Rock Oysters were fantastic! HDR; 3 images; handheld(seated); Photomatix Canon 5D2 + Canon 28-300L at 50mm. / f/22, ISO 50, AEB +/-2 / 1/2sec, 1/8sec, 1/30sec ps: I replaced this image on Tue 01 Dec 2009 with a more standard style HDR composition with better defined shadows and more interesting detail. Selective high pass sharpening in Photoshop to bring out the detail along the line of the jetty. Hope this pleases more. The image now has amazing levels of clarity and sharpness when viewed at 100%. Perfect for a Poster print.
some uncomfortable angles at 28mm / black/white with steel blue tint the road to the nation’s capital / Canberra, NSW long shadows, approaching sunset
Coffs Harbour Marina from Muttonbird Island. / Mid-North Coast, NSW Engineered to a miniature in Photoshop, following the Tilt-Shift tutorial on http://www.pxleyes.com/tutorials/photoshop
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