The Caven Club in Liverpool / The Cavern Club is a rock and roll club at 10 Mathew Street, Liverpool, England, where Brian Epstein was introduced to the Beatles on 9 November 1961. / The Beatles performed here no less than 292 times in the early 1960s. Today’s Cavern, reconstructed using the original bricks and built on the same / site, opened in 1984. / It is a ‘must-see’ for Beatles fans and it’s still one the best venues in Liverpool to watch live music. The live music programme offers a wide range from tribute to contemporary – catch a performance most nights at the club and on Friday, Saturday and Sunday afternoons.
Smudge Art TM. / Photography / By: Madeline M. Allen Thank you for viewing my work. Image copyright © 2008, Madeline M. Allen Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited
*Ooh, looks like there may be someone left alive on the ship. When I looked earlier it appeared ghostly and void of life. There seems to be lights in the Captain’s Cabin. What to do, what to do… The treasure here in the Golden Cavern is mine, all mine. I really don’t want to share. What to do, what to do… * / A politician’s thought process. / Watercolor: 12”x09” on paper. Original is available at / “http://www.jamespeele.com”
This photo was also taken at Blackhall Rocks in County Durham. A lovely stretch of coastline. There are lots of caves to explore and we just happen to be in the right place at the right time to get this shot. ..... Again using a Canon powershot S5IS. Must have taken loads of this one just slightly changing the exposure to see what effects i could get..
The amazing echo of the Cueva de los Verdes in Lanzarote.
silver cavern / deep in the soul / of immortality / echoing the thoughts / that ring / from ceiling to wall / from floor to infinity
Bricks with name of bands who have played at the Cavern Club,Liverpool. The venue famous for the Beatles playing there.
The twist’s and turns of the corkscrew canyon’s walls, the endless hues of red and purple. The cathedral like expanses to the twisted narrows, the radiant shafts of light. All of these go on to make Antelope Canyon a special place for photography. Also known as the “Crack”, Antelope Canyon is several hundred feet deep, the result of rainfall and flash floods forcing their way through the sandstone. Come certain times of the day, and light beams come straming in through the top of the canyon bathing the walls in radiant light.
Luray Caverns
This was taken at Watkins Glen State Park, in Watkins Glen, NY on 10/31/2008. The bottom waterfalls to the right is a whirlpool shaped as a heart. A Canon Rebel XTi camera and F-22. Best viewed larger. / /
This natural rock cavern is just one of a number of stunning rock formations along the Wonderland Walk in the Grampians. It is found in a mid section of the walk on an uphill climb between the “Grand Canyon” and Silent Street” The Wonderland Walk is a popular rock climb and walk that weaves among a number of natural rugged cliffs and craggy escarpments leading to a feature called the Pinnacle of the Grampians. The high-walled “Grand Canyon” is series of rock formations and one of the most intriguing sections of the walk. The walk through this magnificent gorge involves some rock hopping and steep steps and then a steady ascent winds through rocky woodland, which is closely followed by “Silent Street” which is a long walking section that drops from on top of a range into a narrow and quite sheltered canyon and rocky valley. The Wonderland Walk finishes with the awe-inspiring “Pinnacle Lookout” and from here you gain some magnificent views of the whole Halls Gap region and it’s surrounding pastoral landscape. There are some images of our last walk here: / http://picasaweb.google.com/dncraker
For your valentine, a dead rose painted with fading torch light. / Available for sale as: / Laminated Prints, Cards, Posters, Mounted Prints, Canvas Prints and Framed Prints
Colorful stalactites and stalagmites captured in Luray Caverns, located deep beneath the Shenandoah Valley of Western Virginia. These caverns are a US Registered National Landmark and it is no wonder as this place is simply amazing! Equipment : Nikon D300 – Nikkor 24-85 F2.8 ED lens – Circular Polarizer – Manfrotto Tripod. All content & images © Stephen Vecchiotti. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.
This was an Museum that sat at the bottem of the Mountains that lead up to the Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico. It has long been abandon due to the back of the building falling down . / I also really loved the play of light and shadow on this one !! This was taken in Carlsbad, New Mexico with a Panasonic FZ50 Old Abandon Museum /
Reflections in a small shallow pool in Luray Caverns, West Virginia
featured in Live, Love, Dream straight from the box:Nikon P80;10mm;f/3.5;1/20 second;ISO 400 This is one of the large columns within the Luray Cavern complex in Virginia, named for the Roman god of the underworld. Luray Caverns are the largest caverns in the eastern USA and a National Landmark. Some of the most spectacular creations were formed just one drip at at time, such as Giant’s Hall, vast expansive chambers decorated by predominately golden columns, 10-stories tall. The gold colors come from iron and clay soils seeping from the ground along with the calcium carbonate “drips.” Just some of Luray’s other impressive formations include: Titania’s Veil — primarily all white, and formed by pure crystalline drips / Frozen Fountain — a massive, somewhat rounded white flowstone / Empress Column — a golden column is formed when a stalactite and stalagmite meet. This one is huge! See the world’s largest musical instrument at Luray Caverns, too! The Stalacpipe Organ is played from a regular-size organ, but its organ pipes are the stalactites themselves, spreading over 3.5 underground acres, and wired with little rubber mallets.
The Nam Lang flows through the massive main tunnel of Tham Lod, a famous cave in Mae Hong Son province, Thailand. I live a few hundred metres upstream from this cave and have taken many photographs over the years. This image was taken on 400 ASA negative film, with a Nikon FM2, Nikkor 28mm lense set on a tripod with the shutter locked open with a shutter release cable. The model sat very still as I used a large off-camera flash to ‘paint’ the cavern with around 20 flashes. The lense was open for several minutes. I scanned the negative and adjusted the levels in photoshop. Although the resolution is not particularly high, I like the ‘painted’ texture of this photograph.
Within the caverns of Luray are some areas of collected water, trickled through layer upon layer of rock and filtered by the action to a degree of clarity that can only be appreciated by the mirror-like images presented in the pools- some only a few inches deep but giving the impression of unlimited depths. It is a sight that mesmerizes as one listens in the quiet to the sound of one’s heart beating, the tidal sounds of one’s breathing and the slow, echoing sounds of the waters’ dripping… the life-blood of the living cave’s slow but steady growth. / The lighting within the caverns adds a degree of challenge to capturing images with the existing light, washing out some details that are better appreciated in the mirrored reflections. Straight from the box:Nikon P80;6mm;f/3.2;1/5 second(hand held); ISO 400
One of the largest chambers within the cavern system of Luray, Virginia this chamber is called ‘Giants Hall’ / Shot with the existing lights within the cavern, hand-held and straight from the box:Nikon P80;5mm;f2.8;1/6 second;ISO 400 / The lighting within the caverns adds a degree of challenge to capturing images with the existing light, washing out some details but adding interesting shadows. Luray Caverns are the largest caverns in the eastern USA and a National Landmark. Some of the most spectacular creations were formed just one drip at at time, such as Giant’s Hall, vast expansive chambers decorated by predominately golden columns, 10-stories tall. The gold colors come from iron and clay soils seeping from the ground along with the calcium carbonate “drips.” Just some of Luray’s other impressive formations include: / Titania’s Veil — primarily all white, and formed by pure crystalline drips / Frozen Fountain — a massive, somewhat rounded white flowstone / Empress Column — a golden column is formed when a stalactite and stalagmite meet. This one is huge!
taken with a Nikon d700 and a 70-200mm 2.8 lens: ISO 500 F2.8 1/20 sec
Watercolor painting using saran wrap for the effect of different shapes.
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