This shot was the location I was aiming for when I took ‘Buffalo Dawn’ and ‘Above the clouds’. Unfortunately I missed the predawn light and consequently needed a two or three stop grad (I can’t remember now) to balance the exposure but the result is pleasing. This is the top of a huge cascade that plummets hundreds of meters down the buffalo slabs a magnificient spot I havn’t seen any other images from. For more pictures from this area check out my Mt Buffalo gallery. To check out other mountain photographs see my Mountains gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society
This is the second tier of National Falls, Royal National Park which features in “Liquid Glass” so it gives you a feel for just how much a landscape can change in low light. Getting really hooked on what post-dusk light does to moving water – normally white water gets a distinct blue hue which the camera picks up very effectively. The only treatment here is to tweak curves and levels a bit. / Tv: 30 secs / Av: f/3.5 / ISO: 500 / FL: 10mm
When you come right down to it, all you have is your self. Your self is a sun with a thousand rays in your belly. The rest is nothing. Pablo Picasso (1881 – 1973)
Karijini again in striking beauty and tranquillity. / Sun reflections from red walls of the gorge turn water into liquid copper. / Equipment: CANON 5D, 24-105 F4 L IS SOLD: / Custom framed Lambda Print 20×14inch on FujiFlex Paper, through local art exhibition Framing suggestion: / © aabz-imaging / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Burney creek and undeground volcanic springs meet to form this beautiful 129 foot waterfall within the North Cascade range and the Modoc Plateau natural region of northern California. The water emerges as springs at and above Burney Falls, where it flows at 100 million gallons every day and creates a peaceful mist-filled basin.
SPRING RAINS SWELL ALL THE STREAMS.
Mount Tahoma is the Native American (Puyallup) name for the mountain we call Rainier, the name means Mother of Water. It stands 14,410ft (4,392m) tall and is located in the Cascade Mountain Range of Washington State. The glacier in this image is Emmons Glacier and is the headwater of the White river. The peak at the left of the image is Little Tahoma Peak. This image was captured from Sunrise Ridge 6,400ft (1,950m) at sunrise. / Processed HDR image using Dynamic-Photo HDR and PhotoShop CS2. / /
Late afternoon light pushing through the trees surrounding the waterway heading down alongside Gorge Road in Adelaide. A beautiful place with incredible calmness. Best viewed large…...
AUTUMN CASCADE ALONG NEWFOUND GAP ROAD.
This shot is one half of my accidental collage shot oops . It was taken after one of the worst night sleeps I’ve ever had when we camped next to these redwoods in the Otways. At about 2:30 a huge logging truck drove past on the road about 10 meters from our tent, other trucks followed at intervals just long enough to allow you to dose off again. This continued until about 6:00am when the WMD’s finally ceased. Took this shot not long after that in the first light of the day. Sold two 8”x12” framed prints of this one, not a terribly original composition but popular all the same. For more pictures from this area check out my The Otways gallery.
A waterfall and rocky stream with bridge across the Raveden Brook (a tributary of the River Tonge), which runs through the glen on the northern side of Smithills Hall, forming part of the formal gardens surrounding the Hall. Both the Hall and gardens are open to the public. Nikon D80 – Sigma 10-20mm lens at f/22 – Polarisor Featured in the All Water in Motion group MAY 2009. / Featured in the Stream Crossings group MAY 2009. / Featured in the Wetlands, Ponds, Lakes & Rivers group MAY 2009.
Russell Falls in Mt Field National Park have been shot to death (with good reason as they’re an absolutely gorgeous drop) so I thought I’d post a different perspective on this wonderful spot. Camera: Canon EOS 5D mkII / Lens: EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM @ 65mm / Filter: UV / ISO: 100 / Shutter Speed: 4sec / Aperture: f/16 / WB: Auto / Exposure Compensation: -1/3rd stop / When: 5:10pm on 4/4/09 For more Tassie shots check out my Tasmania gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society
Group of birch trees at Cascade Gardens in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia. Cascade Gardens is a park maintained by the Hobart City Council. Canon 5D MkII, 1/25 sec, f11, ISO 400, 24mm.
Lake Falls with light shining from heaven. Next time I go here, I will take off most of my clothes and let myself get showered by these falls. Camera: Canon 5D (original) 3 1/2 years old / Lens: Canon 24-70 mm L / Filter: Heliopan slim circular polarizing filter / White Ba;ance: Auto / Picture Style: Standard / Colr Space: Adobe RGB This is in color. No desaturation in Photoshop.
© Copyright 2009 Ivana Redwine, All Rights Reserved
A detail shot of the waterfall on Wentcliff Brook, Earby, Lancashire. Nikon D80 – Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens at f/5.6 – polarisor
FEATURED in All Countries ~ Wetlands, Ponds, Lakes and Rivers group on September 21, 2009 / / ================================================ / Treman Falls / Ithaca, NY / / / HDR of 3 shots processed in Photomatix / Minor editing in Photoshop CS3 / / / Canon EOS Rebel T1i / Canon EF 18-55 IS / /
Featured in Light in the Darkness Group Oct. 2009 – Thank you! Futured in Photography Fun Group Oct. 2009 – Thank you! / / (Continued from Crystalline Flow 2) Looking Glass Falls is a 50 foot sheer drop located roadside just north of Brevard NC and though you’ll probably never have it to yourself, it’s still a beautiful site to spend some time. Hind sight is twenty-twenty, they say and looking back I get a sense that I came to that place in life where I took pause to ask myself, “Who are my real friends, anyway.” It was a wise man who once suggested that I figure out the five friends most important to me, because together their influence shapes my life into what it is to me. It’s interesting that as I stood in the foreground taking this image of Looking Glass Falls, I was able to ‘see’ my reflection in the water – not a visual refection but more like a gut impression of who it was looking back at me. I have to ask myself, do I hold precious those friends of mine who care enough to tell me the truth when I don’t seem to want to see it for myself? It can be challenging to sit at a waterfall’s feet and really feel what she has to say. It’s like looking into the eyes of a fawn; there’s nothing but love looking back at me, and that can be strangely disconcerting to bear….at least this is what I’ve found. I’ve found that receiving true love is feeling completely loved and this can contradict a lot of misconceptions hiding away beneath my awareness. I have to confess my surprise at realizing that I wasn’t very comfortable initially with feeling nurtured and supported. It wasn’t what I was accustomed to. The first few times I touched into the feeling of being loved in this way, I couldn’t stay there. I severed the connection like someone jerking a hand out of flames, afraid to feel. But I kept going back to the waterfalls letting them love me harder than I could resent myself. I’m grateful now for the guidance I found there in nature that insisted upon reflecting another view of me until I could bear to see it. Now as I take a moment to peer into these waterfall images; I sometimes let my imagination break free of the guiding force of my mind; I relax into the ebb and flow of my breathing as I listen to the water falling. I can almost feel the cool air bathed in cleansing mist as I breathe it in; I sink deeper into my seat and my spirit takes root deep into the heart of the earth as branches of light extend into the heavens; I focus my awareness within the center of my chest and let it fill and expand with light from the waters of my breath. And I’m there again experiencing myself new and renewed at the feet of waterfalls (continued with Crystalline Flow 4). / __ / ©Miles A Moody LivingEarth-Hearthealing.com. Written and photographic works are the sole property of copyright holder; reproduction in part or in full only with expressed permission or purchase. Nikon F5, f11 @ 4 sec, 75 mm, Fuji Velvia 50, Gitzo tripod, Bogen pistol grip head, Tiffen CP and W filters (continued with Crystalline Flow 4). /
Bridalveil Falls in autumn, captured in the Bushkill Creek Delaware Water Gap region of northeastern Pennsylvania. Gear/Settings : Nikon D300 – Nikkor 12-24 f2.8 ED lens – Circular Polarizer – Manfrotto Tripod and Ballhead with cable release. Settings: Manual Mode : 14mm – f16 at 1/2 second, ISO 100 All content & images © Stephen Vecchiotti. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.
What a breathtaking sight this was – taken from the Hood River Valley in Oregon, a mere 1 hr drive from the city of Portland- Facing into the early morning sun – a heavy fog had just lifted and still slighly blurred the view to the mountain
In a small park, close to the city centre there is this pond with four waterfalls. I am sure many Perth’s residents don’t know about it. Captured with Nikon D300, exposure 15.0 sec at f / 22. /
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 332,500 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.