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Another long-exposure sunrise! Taken last weekend (10/02/08) at Cromer on the East Coast of England. / Particularly like the ethereal quality of the water :)
Another shot taken last weekend (10/02/08) of a sunrise at Cromer on the East Coast of England – such a firey sky :)
The symmetrical Pier at Cromer, a storm in the making, and crabs escaping. All thats left is an ice cream and a run for shelter. Acrylics on Canvas best viewed larger SOLD AT EXHIBITION MARCH 2009
A little baby seal off Blakeney near Cromer / Shot with a Canon EOS 400D.
- The View From Cromer Pier / - At Cromer, North Norfolk / - Mid/Late Afternoon / - August 2008
Two benches, back to back on Cromer Pier, Norfolk (UK). Taken with a Canon EOS 450D. Featured in European Everyday Life and Faded Seaside Glamour, March 2009.
Here is a view of some of the stonework that North Norfolk District Council have placed along the promenade and the pier at Cromer. This is an HDR shot using AEB +-2 stops and processed in Photomatix Basic. Then CS3 desaturated it and made it more contrasty and grainy. Canon EOS400D / f5.6 / 1/160sec (+2) f5.6 / 1/640sec (0) f/5.6 / 1/2500sec (-2)
Cromer Pier, Norfolk, UK – overlaid on texture fof plaster board for vintage postcard feel
Cromer Pier, from the town. Sony A700, 42 second exposure. This is a blend of 3 images, all of around the same exposure time, but with a variety of graduated filters fitted for each. The area on the forecourt of the pier has been desaturated slightly to reduce the sodium light effect from the clifftop lights
Please View Large Sitting having a cold beer on Cromer Pier after a scorching hot day, the lights suddenly came on in the town hence the title ‘The Colours Of Cromer’ Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm Google Maps
Please View Large As the sun was going down in the west the glow started to appear on the golden sands at cromer in Norfolk. This is a view standing to the south of the pier looking towards the sun and almost instantly this amazing sky started to appear. I knew we were in for a very special sunset in about 40 mins time. Featured in – Beauty Of European Waters – 14th Sept. 2009 / Featured in – Northern Landscape – 18th September 2009 Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70m Google Maps
Please View Large This has to be one of the most amazing skies I have ever seen in my life. The sun was setting after a scorching hot day and without a cloud in the sky and then within minutes these amazing clouds appeared. Cromer is one of the few places in the UK where by standing on the pier (where this image was taken from) you can see the sunrise and the sunset across the sea. Featured in – Northern Landscape – 15th September 2009 / Featured in – Going Coastal – 16th September 2009 Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm This image was taken handheld. Google Maps
Please View Large Cromer Pier is Part Of The English Heritage Wikipedia © There are records of a Pier in Cromer back as far as 1391 although then it was more of a jetty. In the year 1582, Queen Elizabeth I , in a letter to the inhabitants of Cromer granted rights to export wheat, barley and malt with the proceeds to be used for the maintenance and well-being of the pier and the town of Cromer. / In 1822 a 210-foot (64 m) long jetty was built (of cast iron, made by Hase of Saxthorpe) but this structure lasted just 24 years before it was totally destroyed in a storm. This jetty was replaced by another wooden structure but this time it was a little longer being 240 feet (73 m). This jetty soon be came very popular for promenading. A keeper was employed to keep order and there were strict rules applied including no smoking and by 9 pm ladies were required to retire from the jetty. The last wooden jetty survived until 1897 when it was damaged beyond repair after a coal boat had smashed into the jetty and so was dismantled and the timber sold for £40. / For a period of time from this date Cromer was without a pier but to end this situation the ‘Pier Commissioners’ planned to replace the old wood structure with a more fashionable structure. In the year of 1901 the new pier was completed and opened to the public. This new pier was designed by Douglass and Arnott and the construction was carried out by Alfred Thorne. The new pier was 450 feet (140 m) long and had cost £17,000 to build. In the early years the pier consisted of glass-screened shelters and a bandstand on the end of the pier. The shelters were roofed over in 1905 to form a pavilion; the bandstand was later replaced with a stage and proscenium arch. From 1907 this was used to accommodate the latest craze of roller-skating. Featured in – Northern Landscape – 18th September 2009 / Featured in – Artists Of Norfolk & Suffolk – 23rd September 2009 Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm Google Maps
Please View Large Wikipedia © There are records of a Pier in Cromer back as far as 1391 although then it was more of a jetty. In the year 1582, Queen Elizabeth I , in a letter to the inhabitants of Cromer granted rights to export wheat, barley and malt with the proceeds to be used for the maintenance and well-being of the pier and the town of Cromer. In 1822 a 210-foot (64 m) long jetty was built (of cast iron, made by Hase of Saxthorpe) but this structure lasted just 24 years before it was totally destroyed in a storm. This jetty was replaced by another wooden structure but this time it was a little longer being 240 feet (73 m). This jetty soon be came very popular for promenading. A keeper was employed to keep order and there were strict rules applied including no smoking and by 9 pm ladies were required to retire from the jetty. The last wooden jetty survived until 1897 when it was damaged beyond repair after a coal boat had smashed into the jetty and so was dismantled and the timber sold for £40. For a period of time from this date Cromer was without a pier but to end this situation the ‘Pier Commissioners’ planned to replace the old wood structure with a more fashionable structure. In the year of 1901 the new pier was completed and opened to the public. This new pier was designed by Douglass and Arnott and the construction was carried out by Alfred Thorne. The new pier was 450 feet (140 m) long and had cost £17,000 to build. In the early years the pier consisted of glass-screened shelters and a bandstand on the end of the pier. The shelters were roofed over in 1905 to form a pavilion; the bandstand was later replaced with a stage and proscenium arch. From 1907 this was used to accommodate the latest craze of roller-skating. Featured in – Australia vs England – 29th October 2009 Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm
I’ve used TTV textures on a couple of my works, but decided I’d much prefer to try out some real TTV shots. I won a Kodak Duaflex a couple of weeks ago on an E-bay auction, and finally made me a light-excluding contraption thingy yesterday, then finally got out to take some pictures with it today! This shot is the first of a few taken on Cromer Pier, Norfolk, UK. Canon EOS 450D, Sigma 50 mm 1:2.8 DG Macro lens and Kodak Duaflex. Digitally cross-processed using curves adjustments. Featured in TTV: Through the Viewfinder, November 2009. 159 views so far :)
Last TTV shot for today! There was some kind of strange double-vision effect going on with the cups on the table…! I still like it though :) The little girl just ran in at the last minute… Cromer Pier, Norfolk. Canon EOS 450D, Sigma 50 mm 1:2.8 DG Macro lens and Kodak Duaflex. Digitally cross-processed using curves adjustments.
Cromer Pier with a faux “through the viewfinder” look.
I’m sure this composition has been done before, but I was just messing about, trying to get the bench in focus, when a man appeared in frame, standing at the opposite end of the bench. He made the shot more interesting for me! Canon EOS 450D, Sigma 50 mm 1:2.8 DG Macro lens and Kodak Duaflex. Digitally cross-processed using curves adjustments.
Norfolk, UK Canon EOS 450D. 18 – 55 mm EFS lens. Digitally cross-processed, using curves adjustments.
My partner Paul contemplating his first shot for the day last weekend in Cromer, Norfolk, UK. Canon EOS 450D, 18 – 55 mm EFS lens. Featured in No More Color, November 2009. 112 views.
Please View Large Cromer Pier is to be located on the Norfolk Coast. I took this image on a two day outing with Lesley when we travelled down and explored this part of the English Coastline. The sky was just awesome on this night. The pier here at Cromer forms part of the English Heritage. Featured in – Beautiful – 1st December 2009 / Featured in – Historic Places – 1st December 2009 / Featured in – Beauty European Waters – 1st December 2009 / Featured in – Dimensions – 1st December 2009 Nikon D300 (S) / Sigma 24-70mm
Please View Large On a two day trip to North Norfolk sleeping in the car overnight we spent an evening at Cromer. This is one of a few places in the UK where you can experience both sunset and sunrise. The sky was surreal and just had to be captured. Nikon D300 (S) / Sigma 24-70mm
Please View Large Another image from our two day trip to the North Norfolk Coast. This one is from Cromer where I have never ever seen a sky quite like this. Nikon D300 (S) / Sigma 24-70mm
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