Canterbury 

306 creative works found

  • Location: / Boughton, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 12 April 2008, 11.25 a.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/9 : 1/250 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / This field caught my eye as i’d just pulled off the M2 motorway for Canterbury. Fortunately there was a bus stop in the layby (see map above) that I could pull in to and stood up on the door frame of the car to see over the fence. Fortunately the clouds were just right as I was driving past.

  • Location: / Littlebourne, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 21 December 2007, 3.15 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/22 : 0.62 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / Taken on the shortest day, the light was disappearing quickly and a mist started to rise from the river.

  • Location: / King’s Wood, Challock, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 11 May 2008, 4.04 p.m. Camera Details: / ISO200: f/3.5 : 1/40 seconds : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / I had to get the obligitory bluebell in the woods shot before they disappear for another year.

  • Canterbury Plains, NZ as viewed from the Port Hills, Christchurch. June 2008. / Best viewed Larger.

  • Location: / Barham, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 17 June 2008, 7.59 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/10 : 1/40 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / I had driven past this eye catching field a few times, before going out one summer’s evening with the camera to capture it in a lovely light.

  • Location: / Barham, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 17 June 2008, 7.53 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/5.6 : 1/125 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / Devoid of rocks to clamber across, I was feeling just far too sensible, so I decided to climb a tree with one hand (the other holding the camera of course – so Mr Oubridge – no tripod used!) so that I could get it from a different angle.

  • Location: / Barham, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 17 June 2008, 7.57 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/5.6 : 1/100 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / After passing these red fields a couple of times whilst working I knew I had to come back with my camera on a perfectly lit summer’s evening.

  • Location: / Barham, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 17 June 2008, 7.44 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/22 : 1/5 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / After passing these red fields a couple of times whilst working I knew I had to come back with my camera on a perfectly lit summer’s evening.

  • Location: / Canterbury, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 29 July 2008, 8.05 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/3.5 : 1/250 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / Another scorching day today and the English Countryside is a lovely place to be right now. The title comes from Deb Parkin laughing at me everytime I comment on a lazy sunny shot with “I could sit here and have a lemonade”. Apparently I do that a lot.

  • California’s wildflower season was somewhat shortlived in 2008, but it was much better than in recent years. Bill and I drove about 3 hours from our home to Lake Elsinore to explore the hills there. That is where we found this incredible Wildflower Jackpot of California poppies, canterbury bells and many others! – March 2008 Nikon D200, Nikkor 18-200mm VR lens / Featured Photo in California Sound on Oct. 12, 2008 / Featured Photo in Spring Blooms on Oct. 17, 2008 / Featured Photo in A Place to Call Home on Aug. 27, 2009 / Featured Photo in Rural Around the Globe on Aug. 28, 2009

  • Location: / West Wood, Rhodes Minnis, Kent, England Map: / Multimap Date and Time: / 12 October 2008, 10.17 a.m. Camera Details: / ISO200: f/22 : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / I had the good fortune of being able to share time when out the camera this morning with my old friend Nick and we not only managed a beach sunrise at Folkestone, but also caught the autumn fog in a wood somewhere in Kent after driving around country lanes for the best part of an hour.

  • One of many shots taken from my wonderful balloon trip from Methven above the Canterbury Plains, South Island, New Zealand. This is the third in the set following on from preparing for liftoff and inflation I chose this photo because it shows the beautiful patchwork fields that spread as far as the eye can see; the beautiful Southern Alps; the unique and typical braided rivers of the area; and the irrigation canal that siphons underneath the river. I know you won’t be able to feel the exhilleration that I fellt, but hope this image gives you some idea. For those of you who have already seen this image, my apologies – I uploaded it again because it appears there was a problem with the original upload.

  • Location: / Canterbury, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 12 December 2008, 9.27 a.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/8 : 1/160 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / A temperature of 4 below zero gives the impression of light snow as a heavy frost took control over the winters morning.

  • Location: / Canterbury, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 2 January 2009, 7.58 p.m. to 8.58 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 400 : f/5.6 : 117×30 seconds : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / This is a combination of 117×30 second images all shot in RAW and then individually tweaked before assembling together in Paint Shop Pro through layers which took just over 3 hours in total. It is my 1st attempt at this kind of shot and the floodlit glow over the trees is from Canterbury Rugby Club a mile up the road.

  • Location: / Canterbury, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 2 January 2009, 7.23 p.m. to 7.43 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 400 : f/5.6 : 36×30 seconds : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / This is a combination of 36×30 second images (before the onset of clouds obscured all the stars) all shot in RAW and then individually tweaked before assembling together in Paint Shop Pro through layers.

  • Location: / Canterbury, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 6 January 2009, 8.34 p.m. to 8.59 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 400 : f/5.6 : 45×30 seconds : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / This is a combination of 45×30 second images all shot in RAW and then individually tweaked before assembling together in Paint Shop Pro through layers.

  • You know where, and I’ll tell you when … we will meet again.

  • “Live Life For Today And Save A Smile For Somebody Tomorrow” – David Photograph was taken in March 2009 at Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, UK / One of the entrance’s to the Cathedral down this narrow road. Canterbury Cathedral / Please see Video Equipment used:- Praktica luxmedia 4008 “Long View To Canterbury” © Copyright – 2009 / All Rights Reserved – MCN: C0BE7-B400E-C8DF6 /

  • Poppies in the Kent Countryside. The title is for Graeme who insists I ought to try and keep away from the water! Photographs from Chartham, Kent

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 5 seconds, ISO100, tweaked in Photoshop Whilst down in Kent we visited Canterbury Cathedral. It is an amazing building, the archictecture is just jaw dropping, a place well worth a visit. The Cathedral’s history goes back to 597AD when St Augustine, sent by Pope Gregory the Great as a missionary, established his seat (or ‘Cathedra’) in Canterbury. In 1170 Archbishop Thomas Becket was murdered in the Cathedral and ever since, the Cathedral has attracted thousands of pilgrims, as told famously in Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, Kent, is one of the oldest and most famous Christian structures in England and forms part of a World Heritage Site as of 9th December 1988. Please view large

  • Taken in Canterbury Kent… Also Seen on Flickr

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 5 seconds, ISO100, tweaked in Photoshop Whilst down in Kent a few months ago we visited Canterbury Cathedral. It is an amazing building, the archictecture is just jaw dropping, a place well worth a visit. A while back I tried to get rid of the converging verticals on the shot but ended up with several wobbly walls (lol) because each pillar converged differently so the converging verticals version it is. The Cathedral’s history goes back to 597AD when St Augustine, sent by Pope Gregory the Great as a missionary, established his seat (or ‘Cathedra’) in Canterbury. In 1170 Archbishop Thomas Becket was murdered in the Cathedral and ever since, the Cathedral has attracted thousands of pilgrims, as told famously in Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, Kent, is one of the oldest and most famous Christian structures in England and forms part of a World Heritage Site as of 9th December 1988. Please view large

  • Three Exposures -1, 0, +1

  • This is a 28 frame panorama of the Choir at Canterbury Cathedral, Kent, England. It is an HDR image which involved bracketing each frame +2,0,+2 EV’s making 84 images to process. The final image is 43 inches wide x 34 inches high at 240 ppi. Canon 400D, Canon EF-S 17-85mm IS USM lens at 17mm, ISO100, f8. Tripod used with a Nodal Ninja NN3 MK II Panoramic VR Tripod Head Kit, Processed in Photomatix Pro 3.2.6, stitched in Autopano Pro and finished in CS4. PLEASE VIEW LARGER Canterbury Cathedral is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and has an incredible history:- Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, Kent, is one of the oldest and most famous Christian structures in England and forms part of a World Heritage Site. It is the cathedral of the Archbishop of Canterbury, leader of the Church of England and symbolic leader of the worldwide Anglican Communion. Its formal title is the Cathedral and Metropolitical Church of Christ at Canterbury. / Following a disastrous fire of 1174 which destroyed the entire eastern end, William of Sens rebuilt the choir with an important early example of the Early English Gothic design, including high pointed arches, flying buttresses, and rib vaulting. (Source: Wikipedia) : CWML1-JKMK9-9CCP1

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