Pretty self explanatory really… / Bondi Junction Train station from an ants pov! :)
one early morning when everything was still blue, Paris was waking up…
Sun setting behind an oceanfront marina
As the sun rises on Colorado’s Eastern plains, the clouds and color greet the morning travelers on their way to Denver International Airport…. Thoughts most welcomed! See more on my website at jdebordphoto.com
Boreas Pass, Colorado…..one of my favorite places on the face of the Earth to shoot at….the fact that there is hardly anyone ever up here and the fields of Wildflowers go on forever really make this quite an extraordinary place. Located on the Continental Divide, it reaches an altitude of 11,481 feet high. The pass was formerly known as Breckenridge Pass in the 1860s, when it served as an early route for thousands of prospectors during the Colorado Gold Rush who crossed from South Park to look for gold in the valley of the Blue around Breckenridge. In 1866, it was widened to a wagon road that accommodated stagecoaches. In 1882, under the direction of Sidney Dillon of the Union Pacific Railroad , the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad (by then controlled by the Union Pacific) begun laying narrow gauge tracks up the pass, which Dillon renamed in honor of Boreas, the Ancient Greek god of the North Wind.
Picture taken looking up the tracks towards Cheltenham station. I thought it looked good in color on my camera… but it didn’t on my computer – and was a bit blown out… so made this version instead. /
A picture taken at the metro station Forum in Copenhagen, Denmark. Post processing: / Adjusted the exposure and white balance a bit in camera raw. / Adjusted the levels and made the picture even lighter, added b&w layers set to multiply and soft light, both on 50% opacity. Added two b&w layers with a bluish tint set to overlay and multiply (100% and 20% opacity). Added an unsharp filter and straightened a bit.
Sitting like a lost soul waiting for repair trucks to storm the walls of this compound and free him!
This wonderful auto sits in a garden in a German auto collectors yard collecting rust, dirt, and becoming a home for small animals.
This is a compilation of three images I shot, the car, birds, and sky. Each image was process individually with Fractalius. The floor was created using the flood filter which was also Fractalized. Also used Photoshop’s lighting effects to improve the lighting. All in all quite an interesting effect, I would say. Finally, I processed the final image with the Mr. Contrast filter to get the painted look and deeper blue coloring. Hope you like! Add me to your watch list now / My Bubblesite
The light trails of a passenger train coming out of the tunnel and heading into Dawlish station on the South Devon coast as the sun rises over the sea beyond. View the rest of our portfolio here Or visit our own website here
This triptych of an assembly of classic powder blue coloured Triumph TR3 Sports Cars was photographed during an annual Triumph TR3 Club gathering on Westport Park, Port Macquarie , NSW, Australia, on a beautiful spring afternoon. In the third shot I was going to ask those two TR3 enthusiasts at the end of the line if they would move but decided against that and asked them to keep still for a few seconds instead. An eighth vehicle turned up right after I made the last shot but I wasn’t going to go through all that again as more and more people began milling around and walking through the scene. Fuji S9600: RAW, Manual settings of f/11 @ 1/200sec, ISO80, Auto focus. / Lightroom 1.1 & Photoshop CS3. Visit the Transport collection in my BubbleSite Gallery for more vehicular delights. UPDATE: / 15-11-08 / Someone with impeccable taste has purchased a framed print of these blue beauties. Enjoy! TRAINS, PLANES & AUTOMOBILES / (Click the links!) Powder Blue Triumph TR3 / The Bulldog Breed / Land Rover Series 1 / Old Tow Truck #1 / Yellow Terror / Shell Oil / 1930 Dodge Six DA Roadster / Old Bedford TJ / Matador / Jeff’s Dream / Vauxhall / Fordson / Jackson Thompson Ltd / Thelma & Louise / Corvette Z06 / How Many Photographers Does it Take to Change a Wheel? #1 / How Many Photographers Does it Take to Change a Wheel? #2 / Empty Line / Air Ambulance #3 / The Akuna Comes Home 1/3 /
watercolorpainting / 30cm x 21cm / 300g
These two Fellucca’s on the Nile were among many others which offered transport for locals and also relaxing rides for tourists visiting the Aswan area in Egypt. This image features in my calendar “Scenes From the Middle East”
A tugboat waiting to be called out for duty. / At the breakwater in Patras, Greece / “As is” Canon XTi / Tamron 28-75 mm / FEATURED IN TRANSPORT Many thanks to the judges for featuring this work. / FEATURED in JPG CAST-OFFS (02 11 09) Many thanks for this honour.
Nikon D300 and Nikkor 18-200mm lens
Close up of the infinite railroad.
A mural painted on a downtown building in Ft. Pierce, FL / Night Train (1995) by Blue Sky, (formerly Warren Edward Johnson) of an American painter and sculptor best known for his mural, Tunnelvision. Biography Blue Sky was born on September 18, 1938, in Columbia, South Carolina, as Warren Edward Johnson. In 1954, his first foray into art won him a national poster competition, two years before he graduated from Dreher High School. For the next six years, he served as a jet air craft technician in the Air National Guard, 169th Cameron Squad, while working several different jobs to pay for college – as a parade float builder, a layout artist, and a dance instructor, among others. Sky attended the University of South Carolina from 1958 to 1964. During this time, he received instruction from accomplished Ash Can painter Ed Yaghjian. Meanwhile, he sold original works through USC student art auctions at McMaster College. At the Springs Mills Show in 1964, in which over 700 artists participated, he was judged “best of show” by Henry Geldzahler, then curator of modern art at the Metropolitan Museum. Sky was then invited to study at the Art Students League of New York, where he lived and worked for the next year. Upon moving back to Columbia in 1966, Sky worked as a draftsman and conceptual artist for Wilbur Smith & Associates before returning to USC for graduate school. In 1970, he graduated, earning a Master of Education, because the university had not yet been certified to award a Master of Fine Arts. In 1974, Sky legally changed his name from Warren Edward Johnson to Blue Sky. He signed paintings before this year with the abbreviation “WAR.” In 2000, Sky was awarded the Order of the Palmetto, South Carolina’s highest civilian state honor, for his contributions to the arts – particularly, for painting the state’s first large-scale public mural in 1975. Career Sky has been solely supported by his art since 1970. Although he is perhaps best known for his public art, many of his public projects are self-funded, and his living is earned primarily through the sale of original artwork through the Blue Sky Gallery in Five Points. Blue Sky Gallery opened in 1981, and it has displayed his artwork exclusively since 1989. It is owned and operated by his wife, Lynn Sky. Wikipedia Nikon D70s / 18-50mm / F8, 1/800 / RAW / 3/17/09 – 466/161 Featured in Outsiders – 3/09 / Featured in Dimensions – 3/28/09 / / / / T-Shirt / /
Found this on an old truck in central Texas.
TOP TEN in the challenge Minimalist Blue Nikon D60 / Lens: Nikkor 18-200m / 1/125 f/10.0 ISO100 / shot: as is and was taken / in a small village near Whitby / North Yorkshire, UK
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