United States
Watsons Crags are in Kosciuszko National Park and in my opinion is the most spectacular alpine ridge line in Australia. On this particular occassion I had spent the day skiing out from Thredbo to camp at the frozen Lake Albina on a spectacular little knoll overlooking the Crags. This shot was taken halfway through dinner at my personal restaurant. The heater at the restaurant was pathetic, but the view… For other shots from this area check out my Kosciuszko gallery. To check out other mountain photographs see my Mountains gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society
The summit of Bla Bheinn (Blaven) one of the Black Cuillin on the Isle of Skye
Hind Crag at Sunrise
5 image pan(veiw larger).
The view from the top of Castle Crag in the Borrowdale valley, nr Keswick. A frosty day …. Some tech details for the landscape group: / Canon 400D, 1/30sec, f11, iso100, 18-55 kit lens (gonna upgrade in the January sales!) at 24mm. Then single shot hdr’d in photomatix followed by further tweaking in CS2
“I feel mystic when I receive my Agro Crag from Mike O’Malley and Mo.”
My seond attempt at this place, the first time was a sunrise session with a lovley cloud inversion. I thought that it might work better at sunset with the sun setting in the West.
Hebden Water is a tributary of the River Calder. It starts form Widdop Moor, flowing through Hardcastle Crags and past Gibson Mill. Eventually joining the Calder in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire. Nikon D80 – Sigma 10-20mm lens – Polarisor
This is a shot overlooking part of a crag off Snowdon in Snowdonia national park in Wales. / Shot with a Nikon d300 and 18-70mm lens. /
Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 1/60 second, ISO200, tweaked in Photoshop The peak in the distance is the Old Man of Coniston, the walk we did yesterday was just short of 11 miles with around 3000 feet of ascent, amazing views from the tops yesterday (Sunday 28th June)!! The Old Man of Coniston is a fell in the Furness Fells in the English Lake District. It is 803 m (2,635 ft) high, and lies to the west of the village of Coniston and the lake of the same name, Coniston Water. The fell is sometimes known by the alternate name of Coniston Old Man, or simply The Old Man. Please view large
Gibson Cotton Mill Now owned by the National Trust.and is a Heritage site. History Lord Holme Mill – to give it its official title – was erected in the early 1800s by Abraham Gibson, a Heptonstall farmer and cotton spinner, of Greenwood Lee. Following his death in 1790, it was his son, another Abraham, who set in motion the changes which were to transform the family’s cottage industry into a much more ambitious concern; a factory was erected in the heart of Hardcastle Crags and manufacturing began in earnest. Gibson Mill was one of the first generation mills of the Industrial Revolution. The Mill was driven by a water wheel inside and produced cotton cloth up until 1890. In 1833, 21 workers were employed in the building, each working an average 72 hours per week. After it shut down as a working mill, the building became a mini holiday centre or “entertainment emporium” with a cafe, dance hall and skating rink catering mainly for day trippers who visited what became known as “Little Switzerland” until what seemed like its final closure in 1945. “The family line was to survive for only four generations, however. Abraham the second was succeeded by his younger son, William, who in turn produced yet another Abraham, nicknamed “Young Ab,” whose death, in 1956, brought the Gibson dynasty to an end.” “But his legacy was to have far-reaching effects on the area, for it was Young Ab, who not only left a considerable sum of money to local good causes, but, perhaps more significantly, willed his Hardcastle Crags acres to the National Trust.” (Milltown Memories, summer 2003) Since then the mill and its surrounding cottages, in spite of their setting in some of the loveliest countryside in Yorkshire, have fallen into disrepair although they have proved to be useful venues for promenade plays and in recent years as the set for Dotheboys Hall in a film of Charles Dickens’s novel “Nicholas Nickleby
Taken at Hawks Bill Crag, Ozark National Forest / Oct 3 2005 / / /
Hebden Water flows through Hebden Dale. / It flows into the River Calder at Hebden Bridge. / West Yorkshire This photograph was taken upstream from Gibson Mill / at Hardcastle Crags Panasonic G1
Goats water is below Dow Crag in the Coniston Fells in the English Lake District and I took this shot on a day hike up Dow Crag and back to Walna Scar car park on 11th Sept 2009 / Sony Alpha 350 DSLR 18-70 lens single RAW tonemapped in Photomatix / Featured ina Europa ,Art North West , The Beauty of European Waters , European Everyday Life Sept 2009 & Lakes & Inland Waterways November 2009 /
Black Cullins, Skye, Hebrides, Scotland / /
Tarn the Patterdale Terrier enjoys the rather hazy views from the summit of Allen Crags in the English Lake District. / Sony Alpha 350 DSLR 18-70 Lens, single RAW tonemapped in Photomatix / Featured in Paws & Claws and Cats & Dogs Sept 2009 and APBT… October 2009 /
Views fom the descent of Glaramara above Borrowdale in the English Lake District.I was captivated by the rowan tree growing out of the rock.. / About six in the evening, we had been walking since ten thirty am and stopped here to catch the light on the distant mountain of Skiddaw across Derwentwater. / The little summit in the middle of the valley is Castle Crags and although only 1000 feet in height, it is a delightful climb.It is in the “Jaws ” of Borrowdale / Sony Alpha 350 DSLR Single RAW tonemapped in Photomatix / Featured in HDR Photography , Beautiful And A View Somewhere Sept 2009 / Here is the view in this direction from across Derwentwater / /
Taken within the Golden Hour which seemed to continue for much more than an hour on Sunday due to a hazy cloud bank to the East. Whilst the sky wasn’t overly dramatic the light and colours were superb. EOS 1D MkIII Canon 24-105mm (L) www.davidlewins.co.uk
Tarn has had a very busy week, climbing high fells and going terrier racing at some of the Lakeland shows, and was feeling a bit tired on our recent walk up Castle Crag above the Borrowdale Valley. (By the way, it was her birthday today, 27th Sept..) She was hoping this was the summit, in fact it was a bit further up, but this was the best view. / Looking down across the fields of the upper valley to the hamlet of Rosthwaite. / A fell terrier in her home habitat, on the fells. / Sony Alpha 350 DSLR 18-70 Lens,Single RAW tonemapped in Photomatix
A view of Deepdale, showing Hart Crag, Fairfield, The Step, Cofa Pike and St Sunday Crag on the far right. EOS 1D MkIII, 17-40mm (L) www.davidlewins.co.uk
A view of Rydal Fell from Hart Crag with Fairfield and Great Rigg to the right of the image. Rydal Water and Grasmere are visable to the centre of the horizon and Windermere to the left. EOS 1D MkIII, 17-40mm (L) www.davidlewins.co.uk
Click Here For Large Framed View The dramatic Kilnsey Crag is testament to the power of the Ice Age glaciers which did so much to form the landscape of the Dales.
Taken on my recent ascent of the High Stile range above Buttermere in the English Lake District. The more common view of the lovely Fleetwith Pike is from the lakeshore of Buttermere, as seen below in my work, Buttermere Dubs. / The pass to the left is Honister Pass and you can see the road that goes over Honister Hause to Borrowdale, with the mass of Dale Head rising to the left of the road.The distant fells are the Helvellyn range and Fairfield. Sony Alpha 350 DSLR 18-70 lens, single RAW tonemapped in Photomatix /
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 328,900 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.