taken at the Reed Flute Caves in Guilin, China
Taken in Main Street in Yangshou China and give a traetment to simplify the background.
The rice terraces of Long Ji. This shot was taken from the tracks between the lookouts above Pingan. The rice was just getting ripe so there are touches of gold in the fields.
i have this in colour too.. not sure which i like better / taken in china
I’m so tired, my mind is on the blink. / This scene stopped me in my tracks. Were they homless? Were they dead? They couldn’t be dead. They weren’t moving. It was so touching, they’d obviously biked in from out of town and feel asleep where they sat, son on his fathers lap.
Those are some of my collection of front doors from different countries.
shanghai…..
While my scanner is on the blink I’ve been going through some of my photos taken while in Shanghai, China in 2006 and found a few with potential. I don’t think I’ll upload too many as photography isn’t one of my strong points, but it is fun to see what you can do with an image in photoshop. This one was taken while in a river traffic jam, our driver was a real character!
While my scanner is on the blink I’ve been going through some of my photos taken while in Shanghai, China in 2006 and found a few with potential. I don’t think I’ll upload too many as photography isn’t one of my strong points, but it is fun to see what you can do with an image and photoshop. This one was taken on the poorer streets of Shanghai, all those bikes just caught my eye!
I wished my 350D had see-through capability. Now the mountains that beseige this spectacular city make this shot look like it’s in a bowl. It costed us HKD15 to get on the platform to get this view. Whatever happened to the free stuff in this world nowadays? / - – - / Taken at the Peak, Hong Kong. It felt like 5C up there, I swear. / / MORE WORKS FROM MY PORTFOLIO /
Enjoy!! _
A difficult dichotomy.This image is about the search and struggle for identity of the individual, and of the Chinese Nation as a whole. Having (relatively recently) opened their doors to the world, and seemingly having embraced western notions of capitalism and individualism in an attempt to ‘modernise’, still maintain a staunch communist political idealism, with demanding expectations placed upon those living under it’s rule.
Image by photographer Glennis Siverson, www.glennisphotos.com This beautiful water reflection scene is at the end of the trail in Reed Flute Cave, located near the city of Guilin, China. I shot this on 35mm film, then had it converted to a high res tiff file. There was no editing done to this….. it is really that lovely! This is one of the last images I shot on film before making a complete transition to digital.
Shot through a Transit van window on the way to Guangzhou International Airport, China.
Detail from the night performance named the Folk Song Festival of Liu Sanjie, which is presented outdoors in the Shanshui Theatre near Yangshuo, China. It’s a performance like you’ve never experienced, staged along the Lijiang River and 12 Peaks. Breathtakingly beautiful show. This photograph was not enhanced – shot with 300 mm lens length. “Liu Sanjie Blue” won an honorable mention award in WIPI’s 2008 international juried photography competition. Jurors for the competition: / -Karen Sinsheimer, Curator of Photography, Santa Barbara Museum of Art / -Stephen Perloff, Founder and Editor, The Photo Review / -Steve Zeifman, Owner, Rush Creek Editions / -Jessica Johnston, Curatorial Associate, Department of Photographs,George Eastman House/International Museum of Photography and Film Image has been sold as mounted prints and greeting cards.
This is the Atlanta Zoo’s baby panda Mei Lan. Isnt she the cutest. I converted to Black and White and then used and old style filter for texture. Nikon D80 / 55-200mm Tamron Lens / Focal length 75mm / 1/80 / ISO 100 / F/8 Sold as Card 50% of the proceeds from this sale will go to www.worldwildlife.org/pandas Facts: / Giant Panda / Ailuropoda melanoleuca / The giant panda is a National Treasure of China and a symbol of the world’s endangered wildlife. About 2,000 giant pandas survive in the wild, primarily on government-protected reserves in the mountains of central and western China. Pandas have the most specialized diet of all bears; they rely almost completely on two species of bamboo that grow in the mixed forests of these regions. This scene is set in the Wolong Reserve, which covers about 800 square miles (2,000 square km) in the Wolong Mountains, in the province of Sichuan. On the mountainsides behind the two giant pandas, brown-colored stands of arrow bamboo have flowered and died. The pandas have come down to feed on a different species of bamboo, called umbrella bamboo, that grows at lower elevations. Bamboo species go through periodic die-offs after they flower. Usually, most (but not all) plants in an area are affected at the same time. In the past, pandas coped with bamboo die-offs by simply moving to a new area, as these two have. Today, their options are far more limited. Pandas Then and Now Tens of thousands of years ago, giant pandas ranged over much of China south of the Huang Ho (Yellow River), feeding on their staple diet of arrow and umbrella bamboo. In the last several centuries, environmental changes and expanding human populations have seriously reduced the area in which these two bamboo species - and therefore pandas - can live. The panda’s range now consists of discontinuous islands of forest habitat, surrounded by seas of humanity and inhospitable terrain. China has established reserves to help protect the giant panda, but without skilled environmental management, this unusual mammal - a bear that only eats bamboo - may be extinct in the wild by the turn of the century. / /
Lord of the Indian Jungles, The Royal Bengal Tiger, Portrait The Bengal Tiger, or Royal Bengal is a subspecies of tiger primarily found in Bangladesh, India, and also Nepal, Pakistan, Bhutan, Myanmar and southern Tibet. It is the most common tiger subspecies, living in a variety of habitats, including grasslands, subtropical and tropical rain forests, scrub forests, wet and dry deciduous forests, and mangroves. Since the early 1990s the tiger population has begun to decline again, due to habitat destruction and large-scale poaching for tiger skins and bones. The Bangladeshi government is trying hard to show the world that the tiger is thriving in Bangladesh, often using controversial techniques like taking molds of paw prints to track tiger populations. It was recently discovered that tigers have been wiped out from one of Project Tiger’s leading sanctuaries, Sariska. The current population of wild Bengal tigers in the Indian subcontinent is now estimated to be between 1,300 and 1,500 which is less than half of the previous estimate of 3,000-4,500 tigers. This estimate is based on a state-by-state census conducted in India in 2001. Today’s reports show there are fewer than 200 tigers left in the wild. Habitat losses and the extremely large scale incidences of poaching are serious threats to species survival. Poachers kill tigers not only for their pelts, but also for body parts used to make various traditional East Asian medicines. Other factors contributing to their loss are urbanization and revenge killing. Farmers blame tigers for killing cattle and will shoot them. Poachers also kill tigers for their bones and teeth to make medicines that are alleged to provide the tiger’s strength. The hunting for Chinese medicine and fur is the biggest cause of decline of the tigers. In India, retired Indian Army personnel are being recruited to save the Bengal tiger from poaching gangs.
was taken at Tianjin, China. April 2009.
by the window at 16 floor Beijing, China. you can own the city best viewed large also avaliable as a tee shirt print.
Something a little different. / Got the best china out to do this. A nice refreshing cup of Green Tea with a hint of Lemon. / Taken in my back yard with a Pentax K200D, with a Sigma 28-300mm and a +4 Omax Close Up Lens attached. Hope you like it. / Thanks for looking. Best Viewed Large.
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