England river 

1122 creative works found

  • More from the Lightscapes Set This is another photo taken a few minutes after sun rise

  • London 2006 ! / . Click to view

  • Millennium Bridge and St. Paul Cathedral, London, Uk ! / / - Click to view .

  • Coal drops at Benwell, Newcastle upon Tyne, early Victorian era. / In the Thomas Hair style, 1830’s. HB pencil and watercolour. 140lb paper.

  • Fiery sunset reflected on the River Aire with a swan. Leeds England.

  • / / / / Click to view by category / / Fractal Images Images from Nature HDR Images Flower Portraits Night/Low Light Images Architectural Images Landscape Images Infrared Images / / / Random Images / /

  • Little blue boat – May 2008 Can be seen in my Beautiful England calender

  • VIEW LARGE / Back from my trip with my sweetheart Jim!! New Hampshire’s North Country / taken Crawford Notch / This is one of my Masterpieces!! / I love the view! / Summer can not get any better than this!!! / There are daisy and I am not sure on the other Wild flowers ( if anyone knows ,, please comment

  • Early morning on the Norfolk Broads, England. The glowing sunlight on the mist up ahead, where the river narrows, makes one eager to discover what beauty lies in wait around the next bend. / /

  • I went over to my former home town of Totnes in South Devon UK.,this morning having checked that high tide was at 09,56 and all was still with the River Dart like a mirror and beautiful lateral warm light. A similar scene to my earlier Reflections of the Past image that was taken with my trusty old Nikon D100. Still getting accustomed to all the features on my recently purchased Nikon D300 but was more than pleased with the results of the images I took this morning, this one having little editing, just a slight perspective crop and a little sharpening. Nikon D300 / 18 – 70 @ 29mm / AP F16 for 1/13sec / CP Filter

  • An eerie calm is enjoyed as the sun sinks down and at the end of a beautiful day and casts it’s golden hues on the River Teign in South Devon, UK.

  • Well this one that settled on the bow of a small boat in front of me certainly seemed to be enjoying the peace and beauty of the moment as much as I was. An eerie atmosphere as the sun was setting on the River Teign in Devon UK., I am told that the geography of this part of the river gives most unusual colours during a sunset from yellow to golden bronze.

  • The last mile or so of the mighty River Dart in Devon UK., taken a couple of weeks ago from an elevated viewpoint some 250 feet above the river at the ancient historic port of Dartmouth. As you look towards the estuary as the river narrows the ancient fortified Kingswear and Dartmouth castles sit each side of the river,still armed with the cannon that protected the port back in Elizabethan times during the war against the Spanish. Not sure how much of the detail you can appreciate at this viewing resolution but I was amazed at the detail in that patchwork of farming fields more than a mile away when viewed full size. Nikon D300 / 18 -70 zoom at 31mm / CP and G1 Grad filters / AP F11 1/40sec<br />Manual WB Sunshine

  • Time to try something different and I’d appreciate your honest feedback on this one please. Two highly reflective images taken in the portrait format, slightly cropped and reduced in size to fit on a black mask, total image size is 4500×3000. I took both of these images within minutes of one another from each side of the old bridge over the River Dart in my former home town Totnes, Devon. The PAST image is of the former warehouses and church converted to luxury riverside apartments, the PRESENT being a new block of colourful riverside houses recently built on the site of a former garage business. Nikon D300 / PAST – / F16 for 1/13sec / 25mm / PRESENT- / F16 for 1/20sec / 18mm / CP Filter

  • This well-known English village gets featured on everything from calendars to chocolate box lids! / This location also featured in the film Dr Doolittle which stared Rex Harrison. During this time a certain Ranulph Fiennes became offended by the construction of an ugly concrete dam built to create a harbour scene. Fiennes planned to demolish the dam. He used explosives which he later claimed to have obtained legitimately from the armoury. Using skills from a recently completed training course on evading search dogs by night, he escaped capture, but he and a guilty colleague were both subsequently traced. After a court case, Fiennes had to pay a hefty fine and he and his co-conspirator were discharged from the SAS. Fiennes was initially posted to another cavalry regiment but was then allowed to return to his regiment. I’m fortunate to live only a few miles away, so managed to capture this classic scene in the early morning before the tourist coaches arrived! Please view large Featured in ‘Cottage Style’ group Nikon D80. Nikkor 17-135mm

  • The river and banks approaching the lake at Blagdon in Somerset, England. / FEATURED in: / ‘Canon DSLR’ group, November ‘08 / ‘First Things’ group, April ‘09 / ‘The Beauty of The European Waters’, June ‘09 / ‘Your Magic Place’, June ‘09 / ‘Weekly Theme Challenges’ Oct ‘09 / with many thanks. Canon EOS 400D 18-55mm lens / 3 bracketed exposures at plus and minus 2 / Shutter speed 1/25 / AV range 10, 20 & 5 / Merged in HDR programme and then edited in photoshop (highlights, curves, filters and orton effects)

  • Wain Wath Force is a waterfall situated on the River Swale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, North Yorkshire, England. The falls are located at grid reference NY883015, one kilometre upstream from the hamlet of Keld which has three other waterfalls in its vicinity, namely Kisdon Force, East Gill Force and Catrake Force. The falls in the north of England are often termed “Forces” after the Norse word “Foss” which means waterfall. / Wain Wath Force is not a substantial falls; it has a drop of only around 1.5 metres as the river flows beneath the limestone cliffs of Cotterby Scar. Despite its modest height it is popular with visitors, the Coast to Coast long distance footpath passes the falls on the north bank of the River Swale while the main motor road up Upper Swaledale passes on the south bank. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /

  • In a sleepy hollow below the little Dartmoor village of Walkhampton, the River Walkham makes it way off the high moor ground with the ancient stone Huckworthy Bridge crossing it next to the former Post Office. A little known part of the moors to tourists and so peaceful, I often enjoy a walk down from the village along the riverside to escape the many visitors who at times overcrowd the moors. Nikon D100 / 18 – 70 zoom @ 22mm / F11 for 1/15sec / CP Filter

  • Slaters Bridge in Little Langdale is one of the English Lake District national parks iconic views. It’s an old stone packhorse bridge in a lovely setting which took slate miners over the River Brathay on their return to Langdale after a hard day’s work. / 3 shot HDR tonemapped image. / Shot with a Nikon D200 and 18-70mm lens. /

  • Slaters Bridge in Little Langdale is one of the English Lake District national parks iconic views. It’s an old stone packhorse bridge in a lovely setting which took slate miners over the River Brathay on their return to Langdale after a hard day’s work. / This was shot looking over the bridge. / 3 shot HDR tonemapped image. / Shot with a Nikon D200 and 18-70mm lens. /

  • Slaters Bridge in Little Langdale is one of the English Lake District national parks iconic views. It’s an old stone packhorse bridge in a lovely setting which took slate miners over the River Brathay on their return to Langdale after a hard day’s work. / 3 shot HDR tonemapped image. / Shot with a Nikon D200 and 18-70mm lens. /

  • The Brathay is a river of north-west England. Its name comes from Old Norse and means broad river. It rises at a point 1289 feet (393 m) above sea level near the Three Shire Stone at the highest point of Wrynose Pass (grid reference NY277028) in the Lake District. Its catchment area includes the northern flanks of Wetherlam, Great Carrs and others of the Furness Fells, as well as a substantial area of the Langdale Fells. / The small stream at the top of Wrynose quickly gathers pace as it descends some 930 feet (283 m) in a distance of about two miles (3.2 km), running roughly parallel to, and south of, the Wrynose Pass road. Before flowing into Little Langdale Tarn it subsumes the outflow from Blea Tarn. Little Langdale Tarn is also replenished by the Greenburn Beck. The Brathay drains Little Langdale Tarn at its eastern side. It continues in an easterly direction, over Colwith Force where it falls 40 feet (12 m), before turning north and flowing into the tarn of Elterwater at an elevation of 187 feet (57 m) above sea level. Elterwater is also replenished by the Great Langdale Beck. / The Brathay drains Elterwater and flows for about half a mile (0.8 km) in a south-easterly direction to Skelwith Force where it descends 15 feet (4.6 m). Passing under the A593 road at Skelwith Bridge, and continues in an easterly direction, to the hamlet of Clappersgate. After another quarter of a mile (400 m) it joins the River Rothay close to Croft Lodge south-west of Ambleside before flowing into the northern end of Windermere. / This shot was taken very close to Elterwater. / 3 shot HDR tonemapped image / shot with a Nikon D200 and Sigma 10-20mm lens /

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