Above the thick overcast London sky, lay a city of clouds.
A fantastic moody shot of London’s famous Tower Bridge. While it appears ancient, it is actually a product off Victorian engineering, a drawbridge with a pedestrian walkway across the top. It was built to compliment nearby Tower of London. This photo captures London’s moody skies with a splash of sunlight hitting the bridge itself.
Statue in front of Buckingham Palace in London, August 2007
One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)
One of my favorite photos that I have framed in my living room featuring a view from the south bank of the Thames River in London. This shows one of London’s most well known bridges, Tower Bridge. Although it appears ancient, this bridge is artwork itself. Built in the Victorian era, it is a drawbridge and pedestrian walkway that is a miracle of engineering. The stone facade mimics the nearby Tower of London.
Taken in Chiswick, London, UK
Taken in Clapham, London
Another view of St Paul’s Cathedral, from the Southbank, in front of the Tate Modern. Nikon D200, Lensbaby 3G
Featured in the group London Architecture.
All the fun of the fair! Memories of childhood, having fun, being excited, eating wonderfully strange foods, feeling desperately ill and wanting more! The yearly fair at Barham Park, Sudbury Town, Wembley. / /
Location: London UK
STREETS OF LONDON /
I managed to snap this wonderful photogrpah on my last in London. This was shot from the exit of the Westminster tube station. This was shot was taken exactly next to the the underground sign, and shooting up so I can also include the Big Ben tower. I had to shoot this a couple of times…since it is not extremely easy taking a photo from there; double deckers kept passing by, people existing from the tube bumping into you…etc. But I am quite happy with photo. The only thing that I wanted is a plane passing by….but… Big Ben is part of the Westminster Palace and a UNESCO World Heritage site CANON EOS 400D This / work / has / been / produced / by / Christian / Zammit / Kindly / click / on / photo / below. / Visit my gallery Calendars 2010 /
Photo shot at Windsor. As one easiy notes, the subject in this photo is Windsor Castle. It is a very vey big and nice Castle. It was a cold, windy and cloudy day when I went to visit this photo. I opted for a B&W as it gives the photo a more drammatic contest. CANON EOS 400D This / work / has / been / produced / by / Christian / Zammit / Kindly / click / on / photo / below. / Visit my gallery / Monthly Journals
The doorway of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Canon 400D, Sigma 10-20mm, f7.1, 1/50, ISO100, 11mm. One shot pseudo HDR, various curves / levels / dodging / burning adjustments, sharpened, cropped. See more of my work at Dan Biggins Photography.
I don’t often do scenery alone – but here’s a piece for you… ;-) Love, Claudia
When my film came back from the lab and I pulled this photo out of the bag I nearly dropped my hat. A triple twist of champion arcitecture, HolgaMadness and (accidently) Magritte. I don’t think I can top this. So I am going to stop. You can relax now Danny. Battersea Powerstation, London Untouched Medium Format scan. Cross processed. Part 1 in a series
This shot was taken on my visit to London in March 2009. It was a overcast day which made for better photos. i waited for the cars to spin round far enough for me to take this shot and to get a symmetrical composition. i have great feedback from this photo and i hope you all will enjoy it as much as i enjoyed taking it. Thanks for looking, / Chris
I was in London meeting a friend who was quite late and then eventually decided to stay in the pub. I took the opportunity to take some London scenes, this was one of them. Canon 5D, 24-70mm at 32mm, f/22, 20 sec, ISO 100. No filters used. My new fancy tripod held steady, thank god. This shot is also available from a photobook collection called Urban Mementos by redtree.me © Copyright 2009 David Reid – redtree.me – All rights reserved.
A wave crashes the London Arch, on the Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia, at sunrise. This was taken at the end of autumn on a very cloudy morning. I used a Canon DSLR EOS 350D camera, 18-55mm lens and a tripod. I sold a large framed print (walnut and on red bubble) to my kind sister, Nadia, that she bought as a house warming and birthday present for a lucky friend. Thanks so much Nadia.
London, November 20003 ! taken originally with F75 28-100mm
Westminster Bridge Lamp with V & A Victoria and Albert Monograph. and The London Eye. / Matthew 6:21-23 (New International Version) / For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. “The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are good, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness! Camera Nikon D700 with 24-120mm Lense. Photo manipulation. Levels adjustment, vignette, dodging and burning, texture layer, HDR of original photo in photomatirx pro, with 6 different exposures of the same image from a RAW file. / / You may also like to visit Just click the pictures:-) / The Houses of Parliament at Night / The London Eye The world’s largest observation wheel is 135 metres high. It provides a 30-minute, slow-moving ‘flight’ over London. Designed to reflect the elements of air, water, earth and time – the central theme is a circle of white light from within the rim which sweeps the skyline at 135 metres. The passenger capsules signifying ‘time’, is lit internally at the point of embarcation. Each high-tech capsule accommodating up to 25 people. The attraction has the capacity to handle 1,500 visitors every hour. The British Airways London Eye is a privately funded venture between British Airways, the Tussauds Group and London architects David Marks and Julia Barfield. /
Bridge The legend of these Ravens in the Tower of London is so important to the people of England that ten ravens (6 on duty and 4 young spares) are actually employed by the Tower of London at the expense of the British government, in return for their service. It was said that Charles II ordered their removal following complaints from John Flamsteed, the Royal Astronomer However, they were not removed because Charles was then told of the legend that if the ravens ever leave the Tower of London, the White Tower, the monarchy, and the entire kingdom would fall (the London Stone has a similar legend). / Info Here
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