United States
Australia
United States
Enjoy!
Berry, NSW, Australia / >
A pair of raspberrys in my garden i coulden´t resist to make a picture of. / Airbrush-painting and some pencil-work.
close up of strawberry dive bombing into a glass of water from a really really tall height…. :-) Thank you everyone for your kind comments with regards to these 3 images. I have been requested to supply so more technical information on how I took these…. Tall vase about half filled with water. / Lighting – just the unshaded Aussie direct sunlight (no reflectors) / Good sturdy tripod. / Cable Remote shutter release. / Set the manual focus with the berry floating on the surface of the water. / Then just drop the berry into the water (from about head height) and try to sync pressing the remote button, having the camera on Continuous Shooting seemed to help….... Camera Model Name / Canon EOS 400D DIGITAL / Shooting Date/Time / 15/03/2008 13:34:26 / Tv(Shutter Speed) / 1/4000Sec. / Av(Aperture Value) / F5.6 / Metering Modes / Evaluative metering / Exposure Compensation / +2 / ISO Speed / 400 / Lens / EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 / Focal Length / 54.0 mm / Image size / 3888×2592 / Image Quality / RAW / Flash / Off / White Balance / Auto / AF mode / Manual (MF) / Picture Style / Standard / Parameters / Tone Curve : Standard / Sharpness level : - / Pattern Sharpness : - / Contrast : 0 / Sharpness : 3 / Color saturation : 0 / Color tone : 0 / Highlight tone priority : - / Color matrix / - / Color Space / sRGB / File Size / 8446 KB / Dust Delete Data / No / Drive Mode / Continuous Shooting
close up of strawberry dive bombing into a glass of water from a really really tall height…. :-) Thank you everyone for your kind comments with regards to these 3 images. I have been requested to supply so more technical information on how I took these…. Tall vase about half filled with water. / Lighting – just the unshaded Aussie direct sunlight (no reflectors) / Good sturdy tripod. / Cable Remote shutter release. / Set the manual focus with the berry floating on the surface of the water. / Then just drop the berry into the water (from about head height) and try to sync pressing the remote button, having the camera on Continuous Shooting seemed to help….... Camera Model Name / Canon EOS 400D DIGITAL / Shooting Date/Time / 15/03/2008 13:34:26 / Tv(Shutter Speed) / 1/4000Sec. / Av(Aperture Value) / F5.6 / Metering Modes / Evaluative metering / Exposure Compensation / +2 / ISO Speed / 400 / Lens / EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 / Focal Length / 54.0 mm / Image size / 3888×2592 / Image Quality / RAW / Flash / Off / White Balance / Auto / AF mode / Manual (MF) / Picture Style / Standard / Parameters / Tone Curve : Standard / Sharpness level : - / Pattern Sharpness : - / Contrast : 0 / Sharpness : 3 / Color saturation : 0 / Color tone : 0 / Highlight tone priority : - / Color matrix / - / Color Space / sRGB / File Size / 8446 KB / Dust Delete Data / No / Drive Mode / Continuous Shooting
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This photograph was taken using the TtV technique and is part of my TtV: Through the Viewfinder Series / Best viewed LARGE
Berri, South Australia
Macro shot of red Currant. / #12 Great Features shot with camera Canon EOS 400D – 100mm 2.8 Macro Lens, Manual Mode,ISO-200, Shutter Speed: 1/125, F/5, White balance – Auto Featured in the group Photography 101 December 30, 2008 / Featured in the group MacroPhotography February 7, 2009 / Top 10 in the Challenge Red, Red, Red of the Group Berries, Fruits & Seeds and featured in the same Group May 18, 2009 / Featured on the Red Bubble Home Page May 22, 2009 / More photos: / /
This calender consists of a series of ongoing portraits created through the process of stepping out of my own way and allowing collected imagery symbols mixed media and intuition to BECOME! Once upon a time…... I planned my art by doing a sketch or having an idea….at least a place to start. And once upon a time I realized there was more that needed expressing than my underused brain could imagine….and I have a GOOD imagination. This intuitive way of working was a necessary step in my own evolution as artist and being….to relinquish control….to learn to listen to my inner guide or higher self. I came to find during this exercise that ‘what I was asked to put on canvas’ seemed to make no sense at all …...just strange little pieces from nowhere…or so I thought yet as I was living my life I realized that it made no sense either. I concluded that this no sense or nonsense I was creating through my judgment actually reflects the innate sense we come from and all have,,,,THE BIG SENSE….....a sense beyond …....and so I trust this way of working more than I trust my way of working! LOL Enjoy IN JOY in whatever sense you can.
Don’t eat them… haha…. This is growing in my front yard, but I have no idea what kind of tree it is. It has pretty blossoms in the spring though. Enjoy!
When I showed him this picture, a friend noticed that the ice drip looks like it’s trying to imitate the frozen berries… What an interesting observation! Isn’t nature neat?! © Cadence Gamache
This lovely shot brought to you by my keen eye :) / (I don’t miss much)
This untouched macro image of tiny icicles forming on a rosehip was taken with a Pentax K10D. The edges of the icicles had begun to melt in the afternoon sunshine but were soon to freeze up again, as the warmth of the sun hasn´t got a lot of strength here yet and frost was already rising when this shot was taken. / The fact that water can take on so many beautiful, fragile and delicate forms and can adorn whole landscapes, transforming them into works of natural magic, never ceases to amaze us. This is the main wondrous fact that makes our long, often very rainy and grey, winter bearable. Eifel region, January 2009, on a beautiful winter sunset. / As is, untouched work! / / /
The sad part of my recent visit to the Riverland of South Australia. A backwater area, normally with substantial water, slowly drying out in the drought with salt and acidification of the soil. The drought and inaction on the river levels is certainly causing irreversible damage. However it needs to be said that there is still plenty of water in the River Murray itself for activities and visits. We need to continue to support the tourism and other businesses along the river as they battle through hard times. So that said, go visit the river and its people and maybe drop back away from the river itself and see what is slowly happening to the backwaters. Canon 400D 18-55 lens with CIR Polarising filter. (Dirty boots and clothes from standing in the mud!!!!!) Thanks to Emjay01 for visiting with me, go and have a look at his site for images of the River in its beauty. seehere
Bohemian waxwings (Bombycilla garrulus, notice rufous tinged face) visit our butte from time to time scavenging for late season fruit left on the bushes and trees. They sweep in as a horde, raid the fruit, and are gone. Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Canon 40D, Canon 600mm lens, Gitzo tripod w/ Wimberly II head. Featured in: / - Photography 101, April 2009; thanks so much! / - For the love of Canon group, December 2009, thank you so much!
Another week in the Riverland and visited the Noora Salt Interception basin three mornings in a row. Joined by Smarti77 and Dave Hartley and it was only on the last morning that the clouds and rising sun created the beautiful soft colours and shapes in this shot. Noora is a back water off the River Murray main where the water is heavily salty and dead gum trees from a distant past stand in silent vigil. This area is located between Berri and Renmark in the Riverland of South Australia. Canon 400D 17-85 lens with Pro Polarising filter. My apologies to those of you who I have not been able to visit lately, time now back home will see me catch up I hope!
Rome, Georgia Featured in: Berry School`s Old Mill From the mill`s construction in 1930, students under the supervision of a miller used the Old Mill to produce corn meal and food stuffs for the Berry Schools. The Republic Mining and Manufacturing Company donated the iron hub, while students built the water wheel. At 42 feet in diameter, this is one of the nation`s largest overshot waterwheels. Berry`s reservoir lake supplies water to the wheel. Gravity pushes water up the stone column and over the wheel, turning it. The old Mill has been preserved as a testament to the practical training Martha Berry incorporated into her schools. [2002.6 Erected by The Georgia Historical Society and Berry College 57-3] Constructed in 1930, the Old Mill boasts an iron hub which had originally been of service at Hermitage, an early manufacturing community near the Shannon village between Rome and Calhoun, Georgia, and was a gift to Berry from The Republic Mining (bauxite) and Manufacturing Company. Henry Ford had the hub moved to Berry where the wheel was rebuilt. The wooden overshot waterwheel, considered one of the largest in the world at 42 feet in diameter, was constructed by student workers. For many years, the mill was operated by Mr. Green Berry Goodson, a white-bearded miller who ground Berry-grown corn into meal and grits. Water is piped directly from Berry’s reservoir lake to the wheel. Once primed, the force of gravity is strong enough to push the water up the stone column, and over the wheel, causing it to turn. During 1977 the wheel was completely rebuilt as a cooperative project involving Berry students, staff, alumni, and friends, and was dedicated to the memory of Mr. Gordon Keown on June 3, 1978. Mr. Keown was an alumnus of Berry, a long-time staff member and acting director of the Berry Schools from 1942-1944. During 1985, physical plant staff and student volunteers restored the mechanism and made grinding of corn meal once again possible.
“Beautyberry” is part of the Winter collection…”Callicarpa bodinieri var. giraldii, Beautyberry is a gorgeous shrub that can grow to 10 ft. tall…it’s has lovely flowers in late summer, but in the autumn incredible jewel like amethyst coloured berries appear, that stay on till winter finally sets in…I plant lots of dfferent shrubs with berries in my garden so there is always a show even when the all the leaves are gone.. / I added touches of frost to the leaves, which often happens in late fall Watercolour on Fabriano Not Paper See more of the Winter/Christmas Collection / HERE
Taken in the Como gardens, Melbourne
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