Haverdale beck flowing away from Crackpot Falls, which you can just see in the background.. the beck flows into the river Swale. MY WATERFALLS SET
I am not religious, at all, but i do find religious things interesting. / This is the city of Leeds Cathedral (well a small part of it!)
This building is opposite the Yorkshire evening post building, wellington Street, Leeds City Centre. Homepage Featured 2009
Whitby pier, North Yorkshire
Rival falls which is part of the river Doe was shot on the Ingleton waterfalls trail in the Yorkshire dales national park England. / HDR 3 shot / Nikon D70 s and a 18-70mm lens..
Shot along my walk along the Ingleton waterfalls trail in the Yorkshire dales national park, this was shot between Raven ray and Scar end farm, a very barren landscape but very easy to stop, sit, relax and take in the views and fresh air while you are there… / HDR’d and tonemapped / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /
COTTER FORCE, WENSLEYDALE, Yorkshire dales national park / Grid Reference: SD848920….LOL for Steve. / Shot at Dawn this morning along with my Redbubble pal Steve Smith. / Cotter Force is a lovely secluded waterfall which is a part of the river Ure. It is a step series of about half a dozen waterfalls with the largest single drop being about 5 feet. The force widens as it descends being only a couple of feet wide at the top and about 15 feet wide at the bottom. The waterfalls are easily reached via a purpose designed path from the side of the A684 at Holme Heads Bridge situated two miles west by road travelling from Hawes. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /
Shot along the river Swale in the Yorkshire dales national park. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70 mm lens. /
Shot in the area of Swale dale in the Yorkshire dales national park England. / This old barn attracted my eye against the beautiful Yorkshire landscape behind.. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /
Abstract Macro Photography – Spacescape This is a small part of a school railing in Armley, Leeds. / Rust, enamal, and random graffiti courtsey of our neighbourhood youths, bless the little B$@`ds
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. The falls are a popular spot for visitors, not just long distance walkers but also families and picnickers because of the close proximity of the road. East Gill Force has two main torrents: the upper falls have an impressive 4.5 metre drop while the lower section is a series of stepped cascades that fall three metres as East Gill enters the River Swale. / East Gill Force is one of four waterfalls in the Keld area, the others being Kisdon Force, Catrake Force and Wain Wath Force and occur where the river cuts a gorge through the carboniferous limestone between the hills of Kisdon and Rogan’s Seat. The falls in this area are called “forces” after the Norse word “Foss” which means waterfall. The falls are surrounded by deciduous broad leaved woodland. / Coordinates: 54.40615°N 2.16172°W / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /
Texture Series
This is a Very modern, new, contempary part of the Leeds City Centre, but seeing this flaky wall, you wouldnt think so. / It is a little stair-well connecting the back of the train station, ‘Princes Exchange’ with the new River Aire Water front, running parrallel with Whitehall road. / /
My wife’s and my visit to the Yorkshire coastal village of Staithes coincided with the arrival of a bank of menacing sea fog that would not have looked out of place in a John Carpenter film. Out hearts sank : we had hoped to capture a view of the village from the high vantage point made famous by the landscape photographer, Joe Cornish. There was little chance of that when the fog threatened to prevent us from seeing the noses in front of our faces. However, we soon realised that the misty conditions were presenting us with the opportunity – which bright, clear conditions would not have allowed us – to photograph Staithes in a subdued, painterly and atmospheric light which helped to emphasize the mood of the place on that cold, fog-filled day. Canon EOS 20D and EFS 17-85mm lens. Exposure of 1/4 second at f/18.
Abstract Macro Photography – Spacescape This is very close up of some plastic cement (?) between bricks of a building. / The building is British Gas on Armley Gyratory, Leeds.
Bardern Bridge over the river Wharfe near Bolton Abbey Yorkshire England
Shot this on a waterfalls walk with Steve Smith in the Yorkshire dales national park, shot at one of the pretty villages called Askrigg that we parked at en-route. / Was shot with a Nikon D300 and 18-70mm lens. / shot in Raw and converted to jpeg via ARC (Adobe Raw converter) / all extra processing and SC and extra textured layers done in photoshop. /
A place I really, really love. Fountains Abbey is near to Aldfield, approximately two miles southwest of Ripon in North Yorkshire, England. / It is a Grade I listed building and owned by the National Trust. Along with the adjacent Studley Royal Water Garden, it is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Fountains Abbey was founded in 1132 following a dispute and riot at St Mary’s Abbey in York. Following the riot, thirteen monks were exiled and after unsuccessfully attempting to return to the early 6th century Rule of St Benedict, were taken into the protection of Thurstan, Archbishop of York. He provided them with a site in the valley of the River Skell. / The enclosed valley had all the required materials for the creation of a monastery, providing shelter from the weather, stone and timber for building, and a running supply of water. The monks applied to join the Cistercian order in 1132. The abbey operated for over 400 years, until 1539, when Henry VIII. ordered the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The Abbey buildings and over 500 acres of land were then sold by the Crown, on 1 October 1540, to Sir Richard Gresham, the London merchant, father of the founder of the Royal Exchange, Sir Thomas Gresham. / From Wikipedia From film
Graffiti on the facade of speedy hire / Armley Road / Leeds
Abstract Macro Photography its stuff like this shot that makes me really excited about my chosen style of photography. fookin love it! / i sometimes cannot believe the abstract macro shots that i come across on my travels, and this one it one of my new found favorites Image was approx 4inch X 2inch on a wall a good 50 foot tall by around 400 meters long and running the whole length of a old disused work site. / So it wasnt what you would call a small wall. Its HUGE / I have shot here before and studied the wall close up. / There is so much for my eyes to look at that my eyes couldnt focus on anything, probably too over excited with my find, but i came away with very little. / This time i took a few steps back from the wall and i could see and capture, so much more than when i was close up.
Abstract Macro Photography – Urban Art
Those last few minutes as the sun was going down at York Abbey in York, Yorkshire, during Donna and my meet up with Richard, Steve S and Lesley G, what a memorable day it was too… / Info on the Abbey from Wikipedia : / The Abbey of St Mary in York, England, is a ruined Benedictine abbey that lies in what are now the Yorkshire Museum Gardens, to the west of York Minster. The original abbey on the site was founded in 1055 and dedicated to Saint Olave. It was refounded by William II in 1088 who laid the foundation stone of the Norman church, although this church no longer remains. Following a dispute and riot in 1132, a party of reform-minded monks left to establish the Cistercian monastery of Fountains Abbey. The surviving ruins date back to the rebuilding programme begun in 1271 and finished by 1294. / The abbots of St Mary’s were said to be very worldly and the abbey featured heavily in the early medieval ballads of Robin Hood (with the abbot usually as Robin Hood’s nemesis). / St Mary’s was once the largest and richest Benedictine establishment in the north of England and the abbey was one of the largest landholders in Yorkshire. However, in 1539, during the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII, it was closed and subsequently substantially destroyed. All that remains today are the north and west walls, plus a few other remnants: the Pilgrims’ Hospitium, the West Gate and the 14th-century timber-framed Abbot’s House (now called the King’s Manor). The walls include interval towers along the north and west stretches, St Mary’s Tower at the northwest corner and a polygonal water tower by the river. Excavated finds and architectural features, particularly relating to the warming house and late twelfth century chapter house, are displayed in the nearby Yorkshire Museum. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and 18-70mm lens /
Abstract Macro Photography – Urban Art Very close up / Dustbin/ Dumpster / Burnt, battered and left to rot on waste ground / Wortley / Leeds To me, it looks like the remanence of an old castle ruin, with part of the structure reflecting on the river that runs along side it.
Clifford, West Yorkshire, UK / Nikon D3x / Lens 24-70 mm / ISO 100 1/250 / f/5.6
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