The stunning colours of autumn in New England, USA are a sight to behold. Despite looking like it could be a painting, this is definitely a photo!
All work in this portfolio is © Stephanie Rachel Seely. / These materials (images and poems) may NOT be edited, copied, reproduced, printed, distributed, displayed, performed, or used in any way, in whole or in part, without my written permission. Please respect copyright and do not save or upload any images or poems to Photobucket, Flickr, Myspace, Facebook etc. These creative materials are NOT public domain. Check out my autumn art A shot of a purplish plant in the front yard made all the more cool by Photoshop. / A newer version can be seen here
All work in this portfolio is © Stephanie Rachel Seely. / These materials (images and poems) may NOT be edited, copied, reproduced, printed, distributed, displayed, performed, or used in any way, in whole or in part, without my written permission. Please respect copyright and do not save or upload any images or poems to Photobucket, Flickr, Myspace, Facebook etc. These creative materials are NOT public domain. This work was featured in A Fascinating Purple Check out my autumn art
If Monet would have painted an autumn scene… / water + colors + reflection+wind / RAW converted into Jpeg. (no post-work) Sony A100 + DT18-70mm 3.5/5.5 / . / features (thank you !!) Sets of two (Dec 12th 2009) Colors of water (2008) / - / Copyright -> MCN: C12D4-107C6-BF748 / / the other one of the duo / — /
Onrus, Western Cape, South Africa EOS 40D / Sigma 10-20mm All rights reserved. This may not be used or reproduced in any way.
Nikon D80 with a 70-300mm VR lens. Featured in A Beautiful Blur – February 19, 2009
Taken at Allaire State Park in Howell, New Jersey on Oct 16, 2008 / More of Allaire State Park / / Nikon D80 w/24-120mm VR, w/ warm filter, vivid, sun +3. / HDR / Re-edited using HDR and resharpened. / Reuploaded 11/19/08 / Featured / Nov 29, 2008 Group – Country Bumpkin / THANK YOU!! :)
“Roji niwa” meaning “Tea Garden”. This is a beautiful section of the Portland Japanese Gardens, Portland, Oregon.
Autumn in Hyde park, Sydney [canon 1000D, tamron 18-200mm lens] Featured – Just Brown – May 2009 / / /
Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Rainbow coloured Dahlia For a dramatic spread of colour in summer and autumn Dahlias are hard to beat. They are named after the Swedish botanist, Dr Anders Dahl, and come from the family Asteraceae, which is part of the daisy family. These wonderful flowers originated in the mountain ranges of Mexico, Guatemala and Columbia, before becoming popular throughout the world. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of different cultivars and hybrids of Dahlias and about 30 species. This tuberous-rooted perennial plant is characterised by the different flower types. Dahlias come in many lovely shades including bi-colours. / Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/320sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 100
Autumn leaf, concrete, rivets….... simple. / [canon 1000D] Featured – Canon Vs Nikon – July 2009 Featured – Dimensions – July 2009 /
The Holga is an inexpensive, medium format 120 film toy camera, made in China, appreciated for its low-fidelity aesthetic. The Holga’s cheap construction and simple meniscus lens often yields pictures that display vignetting, blur, light leaks, and other distortions. The camera’s quality problems have become a virtue among some photographers, with Holga photos winning awards and competitions in art and news photography. Similar to polaroids, pictures taken with a Holga are called holgaroids. And now you also can try to myke some of them with this great holgaroid photoshop action, which you can download for free. Designer colors:
Share this picture: Featured in Photography 101. Autumn’s Rain would look great framed as a set with After the Rain: Canon 400D f/5.6 1/25 50mm macro lens
THE WINNER of the challenge ROADS – 15th of October theme
Canon 400D Digital Rebel / Brandywine Falls Ohio / 3 bracketed shots / HDR 3 images processed in Dynamic Photo HDR / Used Photoshop Elements 8 / adjust levels and sharpen / Hand Held / F/5 / Iso-200 / 1/80 Sec / 40mm / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / Click to View By Category: / -—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- / - Waterfall Photos / - Selective Coloring / - Infrared Photos / - Black and White Photos / - Animal Photos / - Downtown Cleveland / .......................................................................................................... /
Autumn Yellow Tree in October Nikon D300 / Tamron 10-24mm / 1/10 (+0.67) f/3.5 ISO160 No Effects, as is
Allaire State Park / Howell, New Jersey / Oct 2009 / Nikon D80 w/24-120mm VR Featured in Live, Love, Dream: Featuring tribute to our host Tammy – October 29, 2009
For more than 900 years the Parish Church of Rye, dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, has dominated the hill on which the old town stands. When the building of the present church was started, early in the 12th century, the town itself and much of the surrounding area was still held, under a Royal deed of gift, by the Abbey of Fecamp in Normandy. It is because of this link with Fecamp and the fact that it had become an important member of the Cinque Ports Confederation that Rye has such a magnificent church, which has sometimes been called ‘the Cathedral of East Sussex’. The worst disaster in the church’s history Pack & Chapman bells cast in 1775occurred in 1377 when the town was looted and set on fire by French invaders and the church was extensively damaged. The roof fell in and the church bells were carried off to France.They were recovered the next year when men from Rye and Winchelsea sailed to Normandy, set fire to two towns and recovered much of the loot, including the church bells – one of which was subsequently hung in Watchbell Street, to give warning of any future attack. It was not returned to the church until early in the 16th century. The ‘new’ clock was installed in about 1561-2 and was made by the Huguenot Lewys Billiard. It is one of the oldest church turret clocks in the country still functioning. The pendulum, a much later addition, swings in the body of the church. The present exterior clockface and the original ‘Quarter Boys’ (so called because they strike the quarters but not the hours) were added in 1760. Today, if you wish, you can climb the church tower where you will see the 8 bells now hanging there. These are not the same bells that were stolen in 1377 as they were re-cast in 1775 and new bells added. The total weight of the 8 bells and clappers is almost 5 tons. HDR and Photoshop… Also Seen on Flickr
Well, it did tell me, just to upload things I was “proud” of… so, I must be proud of this! At least I am taking a chance on it. It is a “kind” of abstract, but it WAS a Palm branch in the beginning. Added a few extra things. You never know…if someone… ANY ONE…will like what you put up. / /
This is Hubbards Hills in Louth, Lincolnshire showing all the colours of autumn. / Hubbard’s Hills is a glacial overspill channel formed as the last ice ended about 40,000 years ago. A marginal lake of meltwater trapped between glacial ice sheet and the Lincolnshire Wolds spilled over a chalk ridge and gouged a steep sided valley with a flat bottom. The river Lud, far too small to create such a valley, now flows through it. Please visit me at my website / / PaulThompsonPhotography Canon 5D Mk2 / F16 / ISO 100
/ AUTUMN MAGIC / Canada geese and autumn colors at Kathryn Albertson Park in Boise, Idaho Pentax K20DSLR – 135mm / Enhanced with Photoshop Elements 8 / Taken October 2009
RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.
On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.
It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.
Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 335,300 items to more than 70 countries around the world.
Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.