Fall mist 

527 creative works found

  • Elowah falls tumbles some 200+ feet to the floor of the Columbia River Gorge. Taken on a rainy misty day in January. I never seen that much water coming over the falls.

  • Foggy October morning. Norway. Canon EOS 5D with Canon EF 50mm f/1.4

  • Mystical moods from the Norwegian tall pine forest. October 2007.

  • Long exposure by a local pier. Jevnaker, Norway. October 2007.

  • Water reflecting the light as it journeys down the falls in silky rays………..Bald River Falls, Monroe County, Tennessee. Bald River Falls is located along the Tellico River which is a destination for both Trout fishing April- September and Kayaking in the spring and high water.There are numorous hiking trails also. Camera: Canon Rebel XTi / Lens: Canon 28-135mm / Focal Length: 115mm / Aperature Priority / Shutter Speed: 0.6 / F/Stop: f/16 / ISO: 100 / bias 0.67ev / Tripod: Bogen / Filters:Hoya Polarizer / Cable Release / Format:RAW

  • Canon 350D lens 17-40 mm / River stream in the forest.

  • Another from the pine forest in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, Sunday 20 April. With the picturesque shack, lichen covered pine trees, red mushrooms, and then the mist rolling in, I was torn in so many directions – in the end I made an attempt to get all elements in the one shot! / / Margo has kindly provided me with the following info on the red mushrooms – glad I didn’t taste any – I could have flown like Santa’s reindeers!!! / / (1) The Fly Agaric Amanita muscaria is the famous white-spotted red toadstool beloved of children’s book illustrators. They are widely known as one of the few poisonous fungi in the UK, but it is not generally realised that this is because they are in fact strongly psychedelic. Eaten raw, they cause stomach cramps, hallucinations1 and, possibly, death. In some parts of Europe they have long been associated with magic and legend. In Lapland, reindeer regularly get high on them and are seen to leap around, giving rise to the story of Santa’s flying reindeer. Lapps have a custom of deliberately feeding them to their deer, and then collecting and drinking the urine because most of the toxins are filtered out by the reindeer’s digestive system. 1 They are not the same thing as ‘magic mushrooms’. (2) Also, ‘toad-stuhl’ is a German name meaning ‘seat of death’. _ / Landscapes Trees Cards EOD Rusty Flowers Architecture Macro CatchAll DM / /

  • Early this morning I decided to drive about an hour into the Blue Mountains to go for a bit of bushwalking and to check out the lookouts around the Wentworth Falls area. / However the weather was terrible, with it basically being a whiteout with visibility down to about 20m and constant drizzling rain, so not the best weather for lookouts and photography! / I decided to head over to King’s Tableland and have a look at McMahon’s Lookout which is down the end of a 20km dirt track, however half way down the road I decided to capture the view in front of me which consisted of the road and trees disappearing into the thick mist. / I will have to head back up on a clearer day! / Photo taken with barely any post processing, just exposure, black point and levels.. / Thanks for having a look, as always comments and critiquing are most welcome.. Best Viewed LARGE EXIF Data / Date: 21/04/2008 / Time: 10:40am / Aperture: f/11 / Shutter: 0.05sec (1/20) / ISO: 200 / Focal Length: 26mm

  • Published in OnExposure 2008 hardcover. Sold as cards and prints / Canon Rebel xt Canon L70-200 / The Niagara River, Niagara Falls, Ontario Canada.

  • Location: / West Wood, Rhodes Minnis, Kent, England Map: / Multimap Date and Time: / 12 October 2008, 10.17 a.m. Camera Details: / ISO200: f/22 : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / I had the good fortune of being able to share time when out the camera this morning with my old friend Nick and we not only managed a beach sunrise at Folkestone, but also caught the autumn fog in a wood somewhere in Kent after driving around country lanes for the best part of an hour.

  • SHOT ON LITTLE RIVER ROAD,GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK,TENNESSEE. / CANON EOS 10S,VELVIA,200MM LENS,REMOTE RELEASE,BOGEN TRI-POD,F-16@1/30

  • taken this from my apt ,in prague city a couple of years ago / over looking the river in prague around 8am near charles bridge watching leaves fall /

  • Canon EOS 5D Mark II, tripod-mounted, remote shutter release / Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8L Zoom Lens with Canon UV Haze Filter and Hoya HMC ND x400 Filter (aka The Black Glass) / ISO: 50 / Aperture: 7.1 / Focal length: 24mm / Speed: 180 seconds / WB: Auto / Focus: Manual / Image: single RAW file, converted in Canon’s Digital Photo Professional, linear contrast applied / Location: Sylvia Falls, Valley of the Waters Creek, Blue Mountains National Park, 5 April 2009 Taken at the exact same spot, and on the same shoot, as the longer timelapse Sylvia Splendour

  • Ever had that nightmare where you’re falling? A photo I took while walking downtown Chicago and some photoshop fun :)

  • It would be a bit dishonest of me to title this image Misty Mountain Falls or similar, as I created the effect by using a Lee Graduated Mist Filter and a Lee 0.9 Soft Grad ND Filter on a Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8 USM Lens set at 24mm, mounted on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II, itself mounted on a tripod. It was a clear bright day when I shot this around 9.30am at Sylvia Falls in the Valley of the Waters in the Blue Mountains National Park. A favourite place and a favourite subject to shoot. As I am want to do of late months, I also used the Hoya HMC ND x400 Filter (aka The Black Glass – thanks Adriana for the name!), and this image was shot over 480 very patient seconds. Phew! ISO 50, aperture f11, single RAW file. Untouched. Unfortunately it was also the day I lost my Canon Remote Switch. Reward offered, there is a theme to my gear, as you may have guessed. Featured by the Dimensions Group November 2009 Best viewed large

  • Stopped at Nigretta Falls near Hamilton Victoria on our way to Melbourne last week. Nice amount of water passing over the summit at the moment thanks to recent rains. Canon 400D with 17-85 lens. CIR Polariser to help slow the flow rate. No ND filter with me (Damn!) but the overcast day helped.

  • Suggested Framing: /

  • Grand Lake, Algonquin Park Ontario, CANADA / September 26th 2009 / Nikon D40, Nikkor VR 55-200mm lens Featured in The Woman Photographer November 2009 / Top Ten placement in the ‘Cuz I’ve Never Been Featured, #1 Artists of RB group, November 2009 / Top Ten placement in the Colour challenge National Parks of the World November 2009 / Feautred in the Canada group November 2009 / Top Ten placement in the Autumn/Fall Colours of Canada challenge, the Canada group November 2009 / Top Ten placement in The Great Outdoors challenge, JPG Cast-Offs October 2009 / Featured in the Colour and LIght group, October 2009

  • I am sure that deer, especially, really enjoy their morning solitude. Their needs are small, safety, food, water and a quiet spot, in the morning, much like we like morning coffee or tea or whatever our routine. This image has it all. The mist is rising as the sun climbs up out of it’s slumbering state. It is Autumn and so the foliage reflects that. The reflections are calm, for this is a stream that doesn’t flow fast, but takes it’s time getting where it wants to go. The whole tempo here is at a very slow pace, the message is wake up slowly because one never knows what the day will bring. Background image taken at River Bridge off of highway 62 on the way to Union Creek, Oregon. The image was softened in Dreamy photo, I then used layers to make any changes. Using a layer mask, I erased the mist over some of the water in the foreground, so that the reflections would be clearer. I then added the autumn leaves in the right foreground as composite layers and then added the small deer as a composite layer.

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