Black parking Wall Art

2140 creative works found

  • Location: Two blocks from my Adelaide CBD office, there is a whole lane of these. The moment was right, the day was cloudy, and a Porsche just came out of this hole in the wall… 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. / (c) Stephen Mitchell : Using this image for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action.

  • “It was a cold and rainy day. The sky was grey and gloomy, tickled by bare tree branches. Driving past a park, a murder (group) of crows caught my eye. They were turning maple leaves looking for a meal. Their sharp blackness stood in stark contrast against the golden leaves on the ground. / / Always interested in these intelligent yet elusive creatures, I stopped by to observe them. Keeping my distance not to disturb them, I started to capture frames. The crows took short flights cawing in their search for food. The dull sky colour became suddenly a pretty canvas by offering a light grey background to the flying crows. Their black silhouettes graced and otherwise dull sky. / / One individual flew closer to me and perched on a branch. Glancing downwards, she offered me her beautiful profile. She seemed to be still pondering about a prospective meal.” / / / / Image © Carmen Mandel-Cesáreo / / / —-—-—-—-— / Artist statement / My photographs are not enhanced; they represent the true nature and colours of the subjects as captured by the lens. I never lure my animated subjects to come close to me: spontaneity is the key. / / This is an original uncropped image. / / =============================================================== / Proceeds from the sales of all my Crow images will be donated to Crows.net / / Crows.net / The Language and Culture of Crows A site for cooperative research on the language and culture of the American crow, Corvus brachyrhynchos. / / Facts about the American Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos): / ..Crows are the most social and intelligent species of birds / ..Crows mate for life / ..The young stay with the family unit for up to five years and help the parents raise siblings / ..Crows show tool-making and tool-using behaviour / ..Crows are not a health threat / ..They will not attack you as portrayed in the movie The Birds / / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / / Carmen, creator of Art for Conservation

  • Enduring Aspens Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado

  • Washington Square Park, NYC

  • Original painting acrylic 12×16” stretched canvas. Sold

  • Original acrylic on 8×8 inch canvas. Sold

  • I wanted an “old time” feel to this photo. I changed the colour in photoshop and added a splash to go with it. / galleria mancuso / new book – galleria mancuso – images of mine / my calendar series

  • My son… his first time in the swing at the park. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography

  • The Tipton-Oliver Place – Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountain National Park USA “The Tipton Place” has been featured by the group “Smoky Mountain Masterpieces” 7/08. This grand old cabin belonged to Johnathan Wade Hampton Tipton. Colonel “Hamp” had a carpenter build this home after the Cival War. Hamp was a veteran of the revolutionary war. The land came from Tennessee Land Grants in 1821 aquired by his grandfather, William Tipton, better known as “Fighting Billy” for his heroism in the Revolutionary War. President Andrew Jackson was his friend and said that if he had a company of Tiptons, he could “lick the whole British Army”. Although Hamp never lived in the house, his two daughters did. Miss Lucy and Miss Lizzie were schoolmarms in the cove in the late 1870’s. The homestead eventually included a smokehouse, a woodshed, corn crib, blacksmith shop, cantilever barn, and an apiary for bees. William Tipton owned a great deal of the cove by 1836. He deeded much of the land to friends and family, including John Oliver and Peter Cable. The three of them established the Primitive Baptist Church. The home went on to be owned by Jim McCauley in 1879, and then by John Oliver’s grandson William Howell Oliver in 1887. William served as an ordained minister of the Primitive Baptist Church from 1882 until the time of his death in 1940. His family lived in the home until the land was aquired for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Other works in the Cade’s Cove Collection: Companion Piece

  • Central Park, NYC Featured / In The Shadows Copyright

  • This photograph was taken using the TtV technique and is part of my TtV: Through the Viewfinder Series Photographed using a 50 year old vintage Argoflex Seventy-five and a Canon.

  • A young bear with mom looking at all the tourist piled up in the middle of Laurel Creek Road…. one of the biggest problems in the park and especially Cades Cove is people stopping in the middle of the road to take pictures. Due to low light and being hand held I had to use an ISO of 800 to get this shot…imagine the results from the many cell phone shots that were in use also….Black Bear, ursus americanus…Mama’s ear tags were digitally removed if anyone wants the shot with them in, please let me know….Shot was taken in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park…noise may be visible on larger prints……Black bears in the park are wild animals, caution should be use in approaching them…The bear in Cades Cove are a little more tolerable to people than these would be. Those in the cove see 1000’s of people daily. People thinking that because they got close to one in the cove, they could anywhere in the park. Mama bear did a false charge to some that were trying to approach them a few minutes after this shot….Those in the cove and elsewhere can kill you. A young child was mauled in the park this year as he bent over to play in the water..To the bear he probably looked like a small deer…

  • Parking Meter

  • Welsh National Park, Snowdonia /

  • Nikon D90

  • Hanuman (or common) langur in Bandipur National Park, India.

  • Joshua Tree, California

  • Model – Indigo This is part of my new series Fields of Joy. Multiple models took part in this series and I appreciate them all. These are to represent the joys of freedom and peace.

  • This is the boathouse at Dove Lake and Cradle Mountain, in the Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park, in Tasmania, Australia. This was taken in summer and I have changed the image to monochrome. I used a Canon DSLR EOS 35OD camera and 18-55mm lens.

  • This is the delightfully named Beggar’s Bridge on the outskirts of Glaisdale in North Yorkshire in the North York Moors National Park, crossing the River Esk. Built for love, the contrasting shadow and light across the bridge, provides a wonderful metaphor for the path of life and love. Converted into pinhole black and white

  • Taken on the Glaisdale to Egton road in North Yorkshire in the North York Moors National Park, looking back towards the Moors above Goathland and the valley of the River Esk. A land settled by each passing generation of immigrant nations, the names and history of the land is now a reflection of the Norse people who settled the land with their place names. Converted into pinhole black and white and best viewed large

  • Barcelona, park Guell…

  • Pleasanton, CA

  • Just on dusk at Mungo National park, New South Wales, Australia.

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