Dale yorkshire 

1099 creative works found

  • Not quite what it seems.. I sat by the waterfall for an hour trying to get good shots of the salmon leaping the falls, yet failed to catch a shot with multiple salmon. I achieved this image by using three shots and a bit of photo editing magic. Taken at Stainforth Force, Ribblesdale, in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. MY WATERFALLS SET

  • Another photo of Cauldron Falls, this is at West Burton in the Yorkshire Dales. MY WATERFALLS SET

  • The title speaks for it’s self.. and it’s a beautiful spot, especially on a sunny day… I get a little frustrated when I convert my tiff file to jpeg and notice the photo has lost that edge, a bit of vibrance has left it. Does anyone know how to get round this, or indeed does anyone notice the same problem?

  • I took this shot a few weeks ago while on a photo shoot with Rob Hardy.. I knew he had posted a similar b/w shot so I held off posting this for a while.. / / I’ve decided to add it to the Yorkshire Grit group.. I believe it’s in Yorkshire, it’s definitely in The Yorkshire Dales National Park. Taken with a Canon 350D.. a hdr from 3 raw files. MY WATERFALLS SET

  • The second part of the name Ingleborough is derived from the Old English word burh, meaning “fort on the hill”. On the top of Ingleborough the remains of an old walled enclosure has been discovered inside which foundations of Iron Age huts have been found.Ingleborough is situated in the south-western corner of the Yorkshire Dales, being at the highest point of a large triangle of land with corners at Ingleton, Ribblehead and Settle. HDR / Nikon D80 – 18-135mm lens at 31mm / f29 at 1/30 sec ISO 400 Featured in the Mountains and Mountain Light and your Magic Place groups JAN 2009. / Featured in the Fine Art of Landscape Photography group JULY 2009.

  • This is the main cascade of Scalebar Force near Settle in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, England. The falls are 2 miles from the market town of Settle and are hid away in a narrow gorge just at the side of the road. Its a very popular spot for photographers as someone had kindly left some arranged leaves on the foreground boulder! Nikon D80/Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens, ISO100, 2 sec exposure at f-22. Features / >>>Movement: Motion Blur group NOV 2008 and MAY 2009 / Waterfall Photography NOV 2008 / North West UK DEC 2008 / The Beauty of European Waters MAR 2009 / A Beautiful Blur MAR 2009 / Nikon D80 Users APR 2009 / All Countries ~ Wetlands, Ponds, Rivers & Streams SEP 2009. / Lakes and Inland Waterways OCT 2009. Winner of the All Water in Motion – Soft Touch Challenge DEC 2008. / Winner of the Yorkshire Grit – Moving Water Challenge JAN 2009. / Winner of the All Water in Motion – The Stairway of Water MAR 2009. / Second place in the National Parks of the World – Your Best Feature MAR 2009. / Winner of the All Water in Motion – The Beauty of Cascades MAR 2009. / Winner of the >>>Movement: Motion Blur – Nature in Motion Blur APR 2009. / Second place in the Nikon D80 Users – Water Challenge APR 2009. / Winner of the Waterfalls – April Avatar Challenge APR 2009. / Winner of the >>>Movement: Motion Blur – Long Exposure MAY 2009. / Runner up in the All About Water – Your Favorite Water Photo AUG 2009.

  • Ingleton is a village in the Yorkshire Dales, in North Yorkshire, in England. It is famous for walking, hiking and caving. Favourite walks are The Ingleton Waterfalls Trail and the climb up Ingleborough which is one of the famous Three Peaks. Directly from the village visitors can ascend the 2,373 feet (723 m) of Ingleborough and take in a view of the Yorkshire Dales from its summit. Featured in the Mountains and Light group OCT 2008. / Featured in the Fine Art of Landscape Photography group JULY 2009. / Featured in the Colour and Light and the JPG Cast-Offs groups JULY 2009.

  • Taken with my new Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10 mm, F16, shutter speed 1 seconds, ISO100, edited in Photoshop & Photomatix East Gill Force is a waterfalls in Swaledale, 300 metres to the east of the hamlet of Keld, in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, North Yorkshire, England. The falls are located on East Gill at grid reference NY896012, just before its confluence with the River Swale at the point where the Pennine Way and the Coast to Coast Walk intersect. Please view large

  • Appletreewick, Yorkshire Dales, in winter.

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F16, ISO100, shutter speed 0.25 to .75 seconds, edited in Photomatix tweaked in Photoshop First shot of my trip to Burnsall and Conistone area of the Yorkshire Dales, very, very cold on the tops today…more of which later….brrrrr

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F22, ISO100, shutter speed 0.5 to 1/125 seconds, edited in Photomatix tweaked in Photoshop Sorry about the lack of sharpness, this was hand held in a gale force wind!! Conistone, which it is said means ‘farmstead of cows’ or ‘Kings Manor’ is a charming and quiet village hidden away from the main road to the east of Wharfedale. It was mentioned in the Domesday book as Cunestune. Conistone Dib is a narrow gorge, which was created by post-glacial floodwater, and leads upwards from the village green, through Gurling Trough, to an area of spectacular limestone scenery.

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 17-70 lens at 28mm, F11, ISO100, shutter speed 1/20 to 1/5 second, edited in Photoshop tweaked in Photoshop This was taken on my trip to Greenhow in the Yorkshire Dales this weekend before all the snow disappeared :( Not a sharp as I would like it to be because it was hand held, I was in hurry up mode because my better half was getting cold!!!

  • Ingleborough is the second highest mountain in the Yorkshire Dales. It is one of the Yorkshire Three Peaks, the other two being Whernside and Pen-y-ghent. Nikon D80 Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens ND4 grey-grad Featured in the Your Magic Place and Yorkshire Grit groups APR 2009. / Featured in the Great Outdoors group SEP 2009. / Featured in the Yorkshire Grit group SEP 2009. Runner up in the Northern Landscapes Challenge – Lonely Tree SEP 2009.

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 1/400 ISO400, tweaked in Photoshop Another shot taken from my trip to the Yorkshire Dales over Easter. This was taken on a horeshoe walk from Hadrow falls (the highest falls in England), down towards Hawes and then back around to Hadrow. The village in the distance in Hawes; this is a typical scene of the wonderful countryside in the Yorkshire Dales. I am off to the Highlands of Scotland for our annual weeks holiday north of the border tomorrow morning, happy bubbling and I will catch up on my return. Hawes is a small market town in the Richmondshire district of North Yorkshire, England. Located at the head of Wensleydale in the Yorkshire Dales, the River Ure runs through the town and the dale which is one of the honeypot tourist attractions of the Yorkshire Dales National Park. The parish of Hawes also includes the neighbouring hamlet of Gayle. The hill of Great Shunner Fell stands over the town. The town is famous as being the home of Wensleydale cheese. Please view large

  • Barden Moor, a large expanse of open moorland which is popular with walkers due to it being open access land. There are two reservoirs within the moor called Upper Barden Reservoir and Lower Barden Reservoir. /

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F16, shutter speed 1/60, ISO100, tweaked in Photoshop Just had a quick look through my archive shots. This photo was taken on the 7th February this year during several weeks of cold weather. We went out walking near the wonderful Yorkshire village of Conistone, in the places the snow was over 3 feet deep, great fun but very tiriing to walk in. The shot was taken just before sunset which in February was around 4’ish! I know summer has just started but it will soon be Christmas ;) Please view large!

  • Click Here For Large Framed View The mist had lifted and gone but then by chance more drifted across from the meadow next to this creating this wonderful scene !! Taken in near Malham in the Yorkshire Dales.

  • This is the view looking up the steep sided valley of ‘Dowber Gill Beck’ not far from the village of Kettlewell in the Yorkshire Dales. / The peak in the distance is Great Whernside, I actually made it to the summit but as my camera battery died (as always the spare was in the charger on the kitchen worktop!) on the way up you’ll just have to take my word for it! :) August 22nd 2009 / Nikon D40 – 18-55mm, f/11

  • Click Here For Large Framed View The sun setting on one of Wharfedale’s limestone terraces above Conistone in the Yorkshire Dales !

  • Scaleber Force is convenienly situated by the road side (Settle to Airton) so nobody needs walk more than a few yards to view the waterfall. As with many waterfalls in the Yorkshire Dales its a surrounded by a small copse. The drop on the waterfall is around 20 feet. Nikon D80 – Sigma 10-20 – polarisor Featured in the Live, Love, Dream group SEP 2009. / Featured in the All Wetlands ~ Ponds, Lake, Rivers & Streams group SEP 2009. / Featured in the All Water in Motion SEP 2009. / Featured in the Happy Haven Photography group SEP 2009. Runner up in the All That is Nature Challenge – Wonderful Waterfalls OCT 2009.

  • Please View Large This was also one of my all time most viewed images from my previous account here, and it is actually an image of the very very top of Cotter Force. It was so early in the morning and very very cold hence the blue cold tones. Cotter Force is located some 6 miles west of Hawes in Wensleydale in the North Yorkshire Dales National Park. Featured in – Mood And Ambience – 29th September 2009 / Featured in – Dimensions – 30th September 2009 / Featured in – JPG Cast-Offs – 30th September 2009 / Featured in – All Water In Motion – 2nd October 2009 / Featured in – All Countries Wetlands – 3rd October 2009 / Featured in – Victorian Viewfinders – 3rd October 2009 / Featured in – The Great Outdoors – 11th October 2009 / Featured in – Technical Photography – 17th October 2009 Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm Multimap Reference

  • A dawn in Ribblesdale, Yorkshire. No graduated filters used in this; this is the way it was, with shifting layers of fog… a beautiful sight (taken minutes after emerging from a tent!)

  • Taken in the North Yorkshire Dales, heading out of the village of Grinton and heading towards Redmire Moor. you climb up a nice gentle slope and then a few bends with wide open roads and hit an area that looks like it has been blasted by nature and man a few times and you came across some open views and then vistas like this one. Best viewed large. Featured by the kind hosts of The Northern Landscapes Group Converted into pinhole black and white

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 306,000 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Dale Yorkshire T-Shirts

Dale Yorkshire Wall Art

Dale Yorkshire Journal Entries

Dale Yorkshire Writing

Dale Yorkshire Calendars