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183 creative works found

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia This Black Kite was flying low over the red sand dunes of Roebuck Bay, Broome Western Australia

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Black-necked Stork flying over Roebuck Bay, Broome, Western Australia.

  • Black Kite ~ Searching
    by Robert Elliott

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia This Black Kite was flying low over the red sand dunes of Roebuck Bay, Broome Western Australia

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia This Black Kite seemed to just float over the red sands of Roebuck Bay, Broome Western Australia

  • © Keepsakes Photography / All the materials contained may not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission. My images do not belong to the public domain. / Using this image for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action / This was located along the Mornington Peninsula’s Nation Park at Point Nepean Portsea Australia

  • On a moody Spring evening, dense but scattered clouds roll across the bay threatening to open up and pour on anything that falls their path. The setting sun casts its light across the clouds making them glow in a way that makes them appear to be on fire. The stunning colour of the sand comes up through the shallow water in unusual blues and greens while at the same time mixing with the oranges and reds of the sky.

  • Port Phillip Bay
    by Darren Stones

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    A Sunrise over Port Phillip Bay at Beaumaris in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

  • Eden
    by Rebecca Cruz

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    The Butchart Gardens in Brentwood Bay on Vancouver Island, Canada, is one of the world’s premier floral show gardens. Jennie Butchart began to shape this magnificent landscape in 1904. She established, in the style of the grand estates of the period, several distinct gardens to evoke a range of aesthetic experiences. An abandoned limestone quarry was transformed into the dramatic Sunken Garden. More from Butchart Gardens:

  • The Surfers
    by Mark Hayward

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    Byron Bay, late afternoon, The Pass.

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Silver Gull appearing to have a bath in Roebuck Bay, Broome, Western Australia.

  • The Lighthouse
    by Mark Hayward

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    Well I have just gotten back from a stint up the East coast on Sunday night, and of course had to stop in Byron Bay for what was supposed to be a night, but turned into 4. Took about a million photographs but only a few were Red Bubble worthy in my own estimation. Unfortunately for me, a very talented Lee Burgess has beaten me to the punch on the lighthouse by about 8 hours…Oh well, pays not to sit on piccies too long huh! For what its worth, this is my take…

  • “Impact Zone” You think you’re sitting / outside the break, / When here comes a wave / you’re not going to make. / Along the horizon / a darkened blue, / must start the scramble / arms digging deep too. / It breaks before you / with a crack and a peel, / a smile on your face / life is surreal. / Waves are breaking / on top of your head, / a mountain of water / is now what you dread. / Whitewater comes, / it hits like a brick, / white and foamy, / a turbulent thick. / Waves keep on comming, / three , four, and five, / You think to yourself, / just one more duck dive. / And when you think / you that got your breath, / the ocean pushes / you down to new depths. / Waves back off / you’re stuck in the foam. / Welcome to / the / Impact Zone By: Andy Harney

  • Sunken Garden
    by Rebecca Cruz

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    The Butchart Gardens in Brentwood Bay on Vancouver Island, Canada, is one of the world’s premier floral show gardens. Jennie Butchart began to shape this magnificent landscape in 1904. She established, in the style of the grand estates of the period, several distinct gardens to evoke a range of aesthetic experiences. An abandoned limestone quarry was transformed into the dramatic Sunken Garden. More from Butchart Gardens:

  • parting of the red sea
    by aglaia b

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    for the very lovely and talented artist jemimalovesbigted In the summer of 2000, sudden summer storms washed large amounts of nutrients into Port Phillip Bay. These nutrients caused blooms of microscopic algae called dinoflagellates. The increased nutrients and warm water meant that these planktonic organisms may be present in sufficient numbers to colour the water. This happened late in November and the eastern shores of Port Phillip Bay were stained red by an algal bloom. / Although the dinoflagellates were apparently not toxic, they were able to glow in the dark. During this phenomenon, many locals would arrive on the beach shores at night, pick up a hand full of sand and throw it into the sea to see it glow in the dark. Bioluminescence is simply light produced by a chemical reaction which originates in an organism. / Bioluminescence is a primarily marine phenomenon. It is the predominant source of light in the largest fraction of the habitable volume of the earth, the deep ocean. / Bioluminescent bacteria occur nearly everywhere, and probably most spectacularly as the rare “milky sea” phenomenon, particularly in the Indian Ocean where mariners report steaming for hours through a sea glowing with a soft white light as far as the eye can see.

  • Tutorial: Photographing the Milky Way with a standard DSLR camera
    by Cain Doherty

    Due to the home page feature and requests to understand how I developed my image Milky Way from Apollo Bay...

    Due to the home page feature and requests to understand how I developed my image Milky Way from Apollo Bay with a Canon 350D and a wide angle lens, I’ve decided to put together a basic tutorial. For this to be repeatable you must be shooting with clear dark skies, free from light pollution. The settings I used on my camera are detailed with the image. A shutter release cable is also a great tool and can keep your camera clicking as it sits on the tripod. The more images taken, the better for the final result, because this will improve the signal to noise ratio that plagues digital sensors during long exposures. A tracking mount is not necessary with a 20 second shutter speed because the rotation of the night sky is undetectable at such a wide angle. Please read the following steps for more information. All images are hyperlinked to larger sizes. 1) Save unaligned images to drive 2) Load them into hugin_0.7_beta_4 which is available here. 3) Manually align images with control points – don’t automatically align. I aligned three images to a common one. Click the screenshot for details. 4) Click Edit – fine tune all points 5) Click View – preview window 6) Click Center and Fit buttons to achieve this view 7) Click Edit – Optimise 8) Click Stitcher – image format – multiple tiff . Final screen before clicking Stitch Now . 9) Prealigned images available here 10) Load each image onto a new layer in photoshop adjusting the blend mode to screen which is good at lightening images without lightening the darkest areas 11) Add a medium contrast curves layer 12) Add colour balance layer: shadows (-90,-25,-10), midtones (-15,-5,-20), highlights (0,-5,30) 13) The final result For comparison’s sake, shown below is a typical accompanying jpeg to a raw file I began with for one of the individual images. I used Adobe Camera Raw to extract the jpegs provided in step 1 for processing. In closing, I’d like to point out this is not the only way an image like this can be captured; there is myriads of possibilities. I have developed this simple and inexpensive method by just experimenting with the tools at my disposal. Comments are welcomed. If you haven’t done so already, please check out another tutorial I have written: Layer Masks and Transparency Gradients for The Heart.

  • Humpback Whale
    by Darren Stones

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    Humpback whale, Hervey Bay, Queensland, Australia.

  • This is another case of right place right time. I normally check the tides to see where they will be at sunrise and sunset, but as my fiance and I were staying near Geelong for a few days, I didn’t bring a tide chart with me and so I had to take guesses as to where it would likely be. Anyway, at the last minute I decided to head down to Point Lonsdale to take a few shots of the lighthouse and to my delight the tide was out and slowly creeping in. By the time I finished shooting, I was walking through water to get back to the shore.

  • Port Phillip Bay
    by Darren Stones

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    Sunrise over Port Phillip Bay, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

  • Heavens Above
    by Sam Sneddon

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    I shot this from Point Richards on the Bellarine Peninsula (Victoria) looking across Corio Bay. From all of my visits to ‘the other side’ of the bay, I’ve come to realise that the cloud formations are often very different to the Mornington Peninsula (where I spend most of my time). So far, and probably extremely luckily for me, I have never been disappointed with a sunrise or sunset shot taken on the Bellarine.

  • for the very lovely and talented artist Helen Chierego In the summer of 2000, sudden summer storms washed large amounts of nutrients into Port Phillip Bay. These nutrients caused blooms of microscopic algae called dinoflagellates. The increased nutrients and warm water meant that these planktonic organisms may be present in sufficient numbers to colour the water. This happened late in November and the eastern shores of Port Phillip Bay were stained red by an algal bloom. / Although the dinoflagellates were apparently not toxic, they were able to glow in the dark. During this phenomenon, many locals would arrive on the beach shores at night, pick up a hand full of sand and throw it into the sea to see it glow in the dark. Bioluminescence is simply light produced by a chemical reaction which originates in an organism. / Bioluminescence is a primarily marine phenomenon. It is the predominant source of light in the largest fraction of the habitable volume of the earth, the deep ocean. / Bioluminescent bacteria occur nearly everywhere, and probably most spectacularly as the rare “milky sea” phenomenon, particularly in the Indian Ocean where mariners report steaming for hours through a sea glowing with a soft white light as far as the eye can see.

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Red-capped Plovers at Roebuck Bay, Broome, Western Australia.

  • Kangaroo
    by Darren Stones

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    Eastern grey kangaroo at Pebbly Beach, Murramarang National Park, New South Wales, Australia.

  • On a still spring morning, I headed down to Balnarring to walk along the beach. As I arrived I saw that I would have company. Local race horses are brought here to train, they trot along the beach to the point and return in the water. Before being loaded back on to the truck they are given a moment to roll around and enjoy the sand.

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Black-winged Stilt in the wetlands at Homebush Bay, Sydney.

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