This is a classic view of the Snowdon massif in Snowdonia, North Wales. Often referred to as the Horseshoe owing to the curved arc of the the four main peaks. I shot this in low light with Llyn Mymbyr (Mymbyr Lake) in the foreground. Scanned at 4000 dpi from black and white film on a Nikon Coolscan V ED.
This is a classic view of Snowdon, North Wales. I shot this in the seting sun and toned it for effect. Scanned at 4000 dpi from black and white film on a Nikon Coolscan V ED.
On a damp and misty April morning in the beautiful Tywi Valley in South Wales, these trees appeared out of the mist. I toned the image for effect. Scanned at 4000 dpi from black and white film on a Nikon Coolscan V ED.
On a damp and misty April morning in the beautiful Tywi Valley in South Wales, these trees appeared out of the mist. I toned the image for effect. Scanned at 4000 dpi from black and white film on a Nikon Coolscan V ED.
I grow Echinacea, and was struck once by seeing the flowers on the plant in the four stages of life at the same time. I photographed against a white background in natural light using my roll film camera. The result was scanned at 4000 ppi on my Nikon Coolscan V ED.
Taken on the streets of York and post-processed. I love the olden architecture of this town. The mis-shapen houses on the verge of crumbling, the faded old colours and the wonderful wrought iron lamps.
A bluebell glade deep in the woods.
A leaf-strewn path leading through the bluebell wood.
The fishing village of Little Haven, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Footprints in the sand at the ocean’s edge.
Beach front property Hastings, UK.
The greylag is the largest and bulkiest of the wild geese native to the UK and Europe. In many parts of the UK it has been reestablished by releasing birds in suitable areas, but the resulting flocks often mixed with Canada geese found around gravel pits, lakes and reservoirs all year round in southern Britain tend to be semitame and uninspiring. They eat grass, roots, cereal leaves and spilled grain
It was fascinating already to see a bloomed flower during the cold of winter. What was even more fascinating was how it glowed in the sunlight. Untouched photo straight from the camera. Taken on December 30th, at Hyde Park (London, UK)
As is, taken on January 11, 2009 with as Olympus FE-340 We’re so close my reflection can be seen in the eye I didn’t use flash, but the sun behind me makes it look like the camera is using flash. This squirrel out of the blue climbed my leg. I looked down at it; it climbs down and looks away as if going “I didn’t do it” as my shadow lurks over it. Then it ran behind me and tried to climb my knapsack. Then it spiraled up a pole in front of me, poped its head to the side going Peek-a-boo! Yes the above pic is the same little guy :) After it climbed down the pole I brought my hand out to it. It grabbed one of my fingers, then took off.
The Black Swan is a large waterbird which breeds mainly in the southeast and southwest regions of Australia. / The Black Swan is also very popular as an ornamental waterbird in Western Europe, especially Britain, and escapes are commonly reported.
© All Rights Reserved – No Usage Allowed in Any Form Without My Written Consent. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Destination Docklands was a concert held by musician Jean Michel Jarre on the Royal Victoria Docks, Docklands, London on Saturday October 8 and Sunday October 9, 1988, to coincide with the release of Jarre’s new album Revolutions.
Since I’ve been mainly uploading scenic stuff from Italy lately, I thought I’d show something different from my Europe experience. I originally thought about converting this to black and white, but turns I like it this way better.
Taken March 14, 2009; London, UK with an Olympus FE-340. This shot, straight from the camera, present 3 icons of London: The London Eye on the left in the the background, the Big Big in the middle, and a portion of the Westminister Hall in the forefground to the right. Maybe it is just me, but this sort of looks like a montage where a cropped image of a building in shadow was layed over the big ben under splended light; but this was really how it appeared. Now in reality of course it doesn’t look “fake” but with the way this image is cropped, I thought the effect was kinda neat.
Taken on December 29, 2008 with an Olympus FE-340. Hyde Park, London, UK Despite the wonderful glow of the sun which shining this little guy, it was in fact a very cold day. On the same day I took Illuminance
As you ride the Eye high above London, England, an image of Parliment.
Taken on January 11, 2009 with an Olympus FE-340 in Hyde Park, London, UK The same day that I took these; although this one is a different squirrel and in a different park
Taken on February 28, 2009 with an Olympus FE-340. I know, there are probably many images of the Gherkin here already. But for myself who is not British, it was really exciting to get close to it. London is rich in history, but meanwhile you can also see a lot of modern architecture being developed and taking over; and we’re also moving towards building up, so our tall skyscrapers over shadow history in place and time. Here the Gherkin already looks much taller than the old buidlings in front. But for a better idea of scale (sound familiar? :P)... As you can see, one glass diamond is already about the height of a person.
Structure reflected in a curatin wall. Taken on March 15, 2009 in London, UK, with an / Olympus Fe-340 and slightly tweaked in PhotoShop. Spring was around the corner and it was time for new things, fresh new perspectives! Also took these on the same day: This work has been featured in Art in Math
Yes I’m jumping back to a London based pic. This was an image I had included in my London calendar which I did not have displayed publically before but now I’ve decided to show it. Despite the blue sky and sunshine this day was in fact VERY cold. Taken with an Olympus FE-340 on January 31, 2009. Tower Bridge; London, UK. This work has been featured in: / 4 Winners Only
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 304,800 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.