Photograph / My film Copenhagen / featuring music by good friend Kim Wagner
wind swept beach,greens pool, Denmark west aust
photograph. / Dec 1st is world AIDS day. / This is the commemoration in Copenhagen / Each candle represents a death.
message in a bottle that actually arrives at the beach / / please also have a look at my little series … / ▪ denmark / ▪ france / ▪ italy / / ▪ fireworks / ▪ leafes / ▪ message in a bottle / / thanks /
please also have a look at my little series … / ▪ denmark / ▪ france / ▪ italy / / ▪ fireworks / ▪ leafes / ▪ message in a bottle / / thanks /
A picture taken at the metro station Forum in Copenhagen, Denmark. Post processing: / Adjusted the exposure and white balance a bit in camera raw. / Adjusted the levels and made the picture even lighter, added b&w layers set to multiply and soft light, both on 50% opacity. Added two b&w layers with a bluish tint set to overlay and multiply (100% and 20% opacity). Added an unsharp filter and straightened a bit.
This picture was made in Ribe, Denmark during the annual Viking market there at the beginning of May. (2006) The sculpture shows Odin.
In older days, any little village had at least two smokeries. Smoked fish was a trademark of this island, and it still is a little. / This pair of funnens I found in a tiny little village on the west coast. There is, of course, a tiny little harbour to hold the various small crafts, which brought their catch, mostly herrings, to the smokeries. These were then hung in pairs, one head locked by the other’s head, across iron bars above a prepared pile of alderwood. The wood was set ablaze and then wetted with water to generate the smoke. / The title also refers to the way the bricks were laid. I’m glad I wasn’t a bricklayer then. RAW capture, f/10, 1/80, spot metering, ISO 100, manual WB.
Nyhaven in Copenhagen, Denmark.
We are being blessed by some very nice weather here. A staple high-pressure area has settled right over this little country, giving the nicest, calm and warm weater imaginable. / I like to go to the beach in conditions like these, and the other evening I caught this close before sunset. / / / / Water / Beach Art / Architecture / Stones / Forests / Landscapes / / / / / /
This is our usually calm, beautiful, cosy and nice azure-blue waters. I very much like to take a swim here. But not this day, August 4th. Though the Baltic Sea may be considered as a lake, the waves can be quite rough. It was blowing very hard and the light was very unusual. Inspired by Gilberte’s “North Sea” upload. Water / Beach Art / Architecture / Stones / Forests / Landscapes
This was accepted to the cencored exhibition later this month. I had 6 entries, but this was the only one accepted. These exhibitions are for all kinds of art, and photography isn’t that popular. / Still, they only took 35 works out of 500. So I’m rather proud. / It’s generally considered, that you are an artist if you have works accepted to cencored exhibitions here, so I can call myself an artist. Well, i’ve now tried three times, and I have had work accepted each time, so I have been able to call myself that for some years now. This was taken at a small, stony beach at a summer-house area some 5km south-east of Rønne on the Danish island of Bornholm. / / / Bornholm / Beach Art / Stones / Forests / Seascapes / Landscapes / Black’n’whites / /
Here is my submission for the DECEMBER Feature Image in the Stillness Speaks Group. Wish me luck. ;p / There was a group of Santa’s that paraded along in Copenhagen, Denmark in July 2008. This is one of the two that I captured. :)
Infrared
The garden where i live. / http://www.appaz.dk
Another shot from the foggy day, December 26th. This time of a fence. Can’t say how long it is – it disappeared in the fog. / Foggy Day Collection: / / / / / Black’n’whites / /
“Blue Stairs” was / Featured in the group First Things, May 2009. / A Top Ten Winner of the “Stairs and More Stairs” challenge in the group Which Ways, October 2009. An old lighthouse in Hvide Sande, Denmark.
The pain of war cannot exceed the woe of aftermath, / The drums will shake the castle wall, the ring wraiths ride in black, Ride on. Sing as you raise your bow, shoot straighter than before. / No comfort has the fire at night that lights the face so cold. Oh dance in the dark of night, Sing to the morning light. / The magic runes are writ in gold to bring the balance back. Bring it back. At last the sun is shining, The clouds of blue roll by, / With flames from the dragon of darkness, the sunlight blinds his eyes. – Robert Plant / / / The Battle of Evermore is the everlasting battle between night and day, and it may also be interpreted as the battle between good and evil. / This has inspired me to also interpret it as the everlasting battle between winter and summer. This battle takes place, as you know, twice a year. Here you see white frost on the sand while warm air is entering, resulting in a hazy fog. The Battle of Evermore is also a wonderful song by the great rock band Led Zeppelin. Taken on a beach on the Danish island of Bornholm in the Baltic Sea.
Taken on a trip to Denmark in the spring 2007. / Taken with my Canon 350D and with a touch of Orton´s. /
acrylic painting,original size 61×76 cm / Hans Christian Andersen fairytale
“The Little Mermaid” in Copenhagen, Denmark. A glamorous fairy-tale beauty of a bygone era, lost in the context of 20th century industrial reality. It’s one of the key city landmarks, and one of the most photographed. But not from this angle… I just love the contrast between the two worlds and the pure resignation in her posture! An old photo of mine (2000) which I always wanted to go back and tidy up. I came across the film the other day and finally scanned it in.
Part of the sea windmill farm of 20 windmills just outside Copenhagen Harbor
On the King’s Bastion, in the southwestern corner of Kastellet, stands a windmill. Built in 1847, it replaced another mill from 1718 which was destroyed by a storm the year before. The original mill was a post mill while the new mill was of the Dutch type. Since a fortified city needed secure supplies, including supplies of flour and rolled groats, in the event of siege, numerous windmills were constructed on the bastions.[4] In 1800, a total of 16 windmills were found on the ramparts of Copenhagen. The mill in Kastellet is the last which is still working, while another one, Lille Mølle on the ramparts of Christianshavn, was transformed into a private home in 1915 and now survives as a historic house museum. Wikipedia – Kastellet, Copenhagen
A child waiting for the changing of the guard in Copenhagen.
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