Art nikon Wall Art

821 creative works found

  • 2nd Shot of Willie, he came back to visit me, this time he has feet! I’m improving…...... / Captured this Willet Sandpiper (thanks kathy for the id help) at Boca Grande State Park in Florida with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Nikkor 70-210 mm zoom / I am usually not a bird photoagrapher, but have been admiring kathy’s work and inspired to try : ) / / / Image also available in / / Featured in The World As We See It … 10-26-09 / 105 views 11-9-09 / 118 views 11-20-09

  • I got him! I chased this guy around and then would stand still and wait! Close as I could get until I can afford my dream lens! Used a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Nikkor 70-210 mm zoom, apparently capturing them is an adventure since this is number 2! The photo was taken at Boca Grande State Park, Florida, USA. My Other Dragonfly / / Featured in The World As We See It … 10-29-09 / 88 views 11-21-09

  • One of the ponds or lakes in the Babcock/Cecil M. Webb Wildlife Management Area in Charlotte County, Florida. / This was a very fun day! I met kathy and Gina / This shot was taken with Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens, focal length 17 / / Another shot from that day / / Image also available in / Featured in The World As We See It …10-30-09 / 106 views 11-20-09

  • Inspired by Surrealist artists Patrick Desmet and Imber / I created Beach Umbrellas from photos taken a Boca Grande Beach, Florida, all photos were taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens and postwork completed in PaintShopPro. / / / Images also available in / / / / 170 views 11-9-09 / 204 views 11-20-09

  • “Sail Away with Me Honey / Put Your Heart in My Hands” / by David Gray / MUSIC Thank you to someone from the past for teaching me to love singer songwriters and public radio too! I have so many genres of music in my iPod that I find inspiration from, this song has memories attached. Sweet and Sad. / / Image also available in / / Featured in The World As We See It, or as we missed it 11-4-09 / Featured in Buyers Club 11-4-09 / 103 views 11-20-09

  • The Dragonfly saga continues, the first one was in my backyard, and I am a dork / / The second, also at Boca Grande State Park, gulf coast in Southwest Florida / / The third (have I improved?) taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Nikkor 70-210 mm Zoom / / / / Featured in the Woman Photographer 11-6-09 / 121 views 11-9-09 / 134 views 11-20-09

  • Sunrise at Webb Lake taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR, my old film days 50 mm lens, and my old FLD Tiffen Rose filter, yes on the camera, not in it or post : ) The old way! Did this when I met I met kathy and Gina in the Babcock/Cecil M. Webb Wildlife Management Area in Charlotte County, Florida. / / Oh and Pink the Diva ROCKS Image also available in / Featured in The World As We See It 11-5-09 / Featured in United States 11-7-09 / 117 views 11-9-09 / 132 views 11-20-09

  • Sunrise at Webb Lake taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR, my old film days 50 mm lens, and my old Polarizer, yes on the camera, not in it or post : ) The old way! Just like “Pink” Below. Captured this when I met I met kathy and Gina in the Babcock/Cecil M. Webb Wildlife Management Area in Charlotte County, Florida. / / / / Image also available in / / / 117 views 11-9-09 / Featured in Florida the Sunshine State 11-13-09 / 149 views 11-20-09

  • Captured this shot on the other side of the road from Marl Lake 3 in the Babcock/Cecil M. Webb Wildlife Management Area in Charlotte County, Florida. / This was a very fun day! I met kathy and Gina before sunrise, bounced around the park and had some sincere laughs! These two were so fun to be with! Oh, I almost forgot, we were also accompanied by Al I’m on the left, kathy in the middle, and Gina on the right, holding Al. This landscape was taken with Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens, focal length 17, at Webb Lake in the Babcock/Cecil M. Webb Wildlife Management Area in Charlotte County, Florida. / / Other shots from that fabulous day / / / / / Image also available in / / Featured in Buyers Club 11-6-09 / 94 views 11-20-09

  • Al is a cow. He apparently was mysteriously seen in the swamplands in Florida! This time he was spotted in the Babcock/Cecil M. Webb Wildlife Management Area in Charlotte County, Florida the day I met kathy and Gina Where will he be next? / Photo taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens / / / Shots also captured that fun day are / / / / / / Featured in The World As We See It 11-9-09

  • This Orange and Red hibiscus plant was blooming outside my parents lanai in Port Charlotte, Florida and I thought they may look good as a triptych. All 3 photos were taken in Macro Mode, Manual Focus with a Nikon D90 DSLR, Sigma 17-70 mm lens, focal length 70 mm. / / / / Image also available in / / / / Image also available in / / Featured in Live and Let Live 11-8-09 / Featured in Buyers Club 11-8-09 / 119 views 11-13-09 / 141 views 11-20-09

  • Mr. Cricket was watching me! This one was on a ficus tree (type of fig) in my parent backyard in Port Charlotte, Florida. Photo taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens, focal length 70, macro mode, manual focus. / / / / Featured in Green 11-11-09 / Featured in Focus and Lighting 11-13-09 / 120 views 11-20-09

  • This Orange hibiscus plant was blooming outside my parents lanai in Port Charlotte, Florida.Photo taken in Macro Mode, Manual Focus with a Nikon D90 DSLR, Sigma 17-70 mm lens, focal length 70 mm / / / / Image also available in / / Featured in All Around Florida 11-14-09 / 145 views 11-20-09

  • This pink hibiscus plant was blooming outside my parents lanai in Port Charlotte, Florida.Photo taken in Macro Mode, Manual Focus with a Nikon D90 DSLR, Sigma 17-70 mm lens, focal length 70 mm / / / / Image also available in / / / Other shots from her garden / / / Featured in the World As We See It 11-15-09 / Featured in In The Pink 50% pink 11-18-09 / 77 views 11-20-09

  • Enhanced a photo of a Red Gerbera Daisy in PaintShop Pro to make this abstract! / / / 47 views 11-20-09 / Featured in Daisy and Company 11-29-09

  • Seasons Greetings from Florida / Sanibel Island Lighthouse at Christmas / Christmas card created for a challenge in / All Around Florida Group / / Placed in top 10 in a challenge in All Around Florida

  • Lone Tree Silhouette taken in the vacant lot next to my parents house in Port Charlotte, Florida with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens, manual focus, 70 mm focal length / / / Image also available in /

  • Captured this Great Blue Heron at the Gasparilla Fishing Pier in Florida with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Nikkor 70-210mm Zoom / /

  • Lose Something? Black Panties shot in a tree at the path to the Gasparilla fishing pier with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a sigma 17-70 mm lens / / / Featured in Speaking Photos 12-15-09

  • Yellow Fin Tuna Mosaic from Seashells-painted and unpainted surf clam shells, cracked, and Cape May, New Jersey oyster shells for the fin coming out. I opted for a purple squid lure. The photo doesn’t show all the cool textures. The water and bubbles are done with acrylics. / / / Featured in First Things 11-29-09 / Featured in Images & Ideas 11-30-09 / Featured in Live and Let Live 11-30-09

  • Eastpoint Lighthouse, Delaware Bay, New Jersey, USA Photo taken near sunset at the point in the road near the lighthouse with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Nikkor 70-210 mm lens, focal length 210 / Description from Lighthouse Friends / “Description: On the northern side of Delaware Bay, not too far from the Atlantic Ocean, is found the mouth of the circuitous Maurice River. In 1894, the Lighthouse Board used the following justification for a set of range lights at the entrance to the river. / It is claimed that some 500 sailing vessels are engaged in the oyster trade on the Maurice River during the season, and that they give employment on average to 1500 men; in addition, a number of coasting vessels visit this river, and the establishment of manufacturers at Millville, N.J. is increasing the marine traffic. / Half a century before, the Maurice River Lighthouse had been built near the river’s mouth, but the reason for the erection of the earlier lighthouse was seemingly due more to the persistence of an individual than the need of a trade or community. The Maurice River Lighthouse had its name officially changed to East Point Lighthouse in 1912. Mariners had for some time been using the name East Point before the change, likely to avoid confusion with the recently constructed Maurice River Range Lights. / Around the start of the year 1849, Joshua Brick wrote to his congressman, Representative Charles Brown, requesting the establishment of a lighthouse at Maurice River. Congressman Brown forwarded the petition to Stephen Pleasonton, Fifth Auditor of the U.S. Treasury, who was responsible for the country’s lighthouses. In his response to Brown, dated January 22, 1849, Pleasonton wrote: “I do not recollect ever to have heard it suggested before that a Light House was necessary at this place, and therefore cannot form an opinion as to the propriety of recommending an appropriation for the erection of it.” Pleasonton went on to explain the typical procedure for soliciting the construction of a lighthouse. “It is usual for the parties interested to unite in a petition to Congress, in which they will state their reasons, and this being referred to the Committee of Commerce of the proper House of Congress, is by them acted on. I would advise Mr. Brick to take this course in the present instance, more particularly as it is not probable that Congress will, at this short session, pass any bill for the erection of new Light Houses.” Congressman Brown or Mr. Brick must have had some powerful connections for Pleasonton sent a letter to Henry Hicks, Superintendent of Lights at Wilmington, Delaware on March 10, in which he communicated that $5,000 had been allocated by Congress for a lighthouse on the East Point of Maurice River. Hicks was asked “to cause the best site to be selected and purchase a few acres of land, if it can be had at a reasonable rate.” An elevated, half-acre knoll was selected on marshy East Point and purchased for $250 from its owner, who just happened to be Joshua Brick. Joshua Brick still wasn’t done with the lighthouse matter, for he sent Pleasonton a letter suggesting that he himself be awarded the contract to build the lighthouse. Pleasonton responded on April 10 saying, “It is my practice to advertise for proposals to build all Light Houses by contract, (unless it be very difficult work requiring an Engineer) and to give the contract to the lowest bidder.” Brick was then invited to submit a proposal when the project was advertised. The outcome of the bidding was known by June 22, and a Samuel Ellis, with a bid of $1,975, was the lowest bidder. Pleasonton didn’t feel Ellis could accomplish the task for that sum, but was constrained to accept the bid if Ellis was able to post a sufficiently high bond to ensure completion of the lighthouse if he should fail to do so himself. Pleasonton was likely relieved that Ellis was unable to post bond, and the contract was given to Nathan and Samuel Middleton, who had recently completed the second Cape May Lighthouse. Joshua Brick stepped in one more time and wrote to the Treasury Department asking that an additional story be added to the proposed lighthouse so that its light could be visible above low-lying fog. The patient Pleasonton replied that eight more feet could be added to the lighthouse if the Middletons could accomplish the additional work for a reasonable sum. Brick even offered to contribute the $250 he was paid for his land towards the extra story. The detailed exchange between Pleasonton and Brick is quite unique, and makes one wonder if Brick was trying to serve his own interests or was simply working for the good of the local community. William W. Yarrington was appointed first keeper of the Maurice River Lighthouse on September 10, 1849, but just two weeks and a day later, he was replaced by Francis Elberson. The following detailed description of the lighthouse at which they served was given in 1878: / Oil house at East Point Lighthouse / / The light is exhibited from [the] lantern on top of keeper’s dwelling, and is 48 feet above ordinary sea level; it is of the 6th order, fixed white, and is supplied with Franklin lamps. The dwelling is of brick, two stories high, and one-story kitchen adjoining east end, which is also used as oil-room. The first story is divided into two rooms and a hall, with stairway to second story, which is divided in the same way. There is a cellar under whole house, which is wet in very high tides; it contains a cedar water-tank of a capacity of 700 gallons.” / / Another NJ Lighthouse / / Featured in New Jersey Scenery 12-9-09

  • Come With Me To The Sea is a fusion of two images, one of an old pier in Cape May, New Jersey, the other was a foggy morning at the swamp on my way to work! The mermaid was added to be be the siren enticing you in! / /

  • Poinsettia Tree in Fort Myers, Florida USA Airport / I have seen this tree many times, as they place every year. This one is for my fiancees daughter, Madison, as she took photos herself of this last year! Photo taken with a Nikon D90 DSLR and a Sigma 17-70 mm lens / /

  • The heron did not move from this / / I moved and switched to my 70-210 mm lens on my Nikon D90 (because I can’t buy a second body right now). / Another work from Stump Pass State Park in Florida / / / /

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