watercolor depicting small farm scene
A view of Billingborough from the edge of the fen.
Old farming road in Mount Jackson, VA. Impressionism.
Rural Manitoba, where the road keeps going but the gravel stops. Sunsets / The Prairies / Blue / Autumn / Orange / Sunsets / harvest / rural
A farmhouse at Weardley in West Yorkshire
A light dusting of snow covers the country side in Central North Carolina. /
This is the Onion Field Road with several effects and an inversion to create a rather eary digital painting.
This road has seen a lot of Action around the 10 acres of land that I have lived on for the past 20 or so years in Queensland, Australia… / For 1000s years all this all used to be a Forrest until well Over 100 years ago it all got turned into Farm Land as far as the eye could see, the land Later got Broken up into Smaller Lots of land and a School placed in the Area on one of the Blocks of land. Dirt Roads begun to work all the way around and connect all the smaller lots of land together, the area developed further as other Farms Sprung up and took the larger blocks of land, History took its ground as the Road known today as Daisy Road became a USAF/RAAF Training Base during World War 2 from 1942 till the end of the war 1945. The Air Strip after the War became a Racing Track during the 1960s and took full advantage of the 2Km long straight road. Since then up to now more and more people have settled in the area as Australia and Worlds Population increases year after year. Just a Matter of time until this Area too becomes a small Town… I took about 8 Photos of the Road I then manually joined the photos together with Photoshop CS 2 and altered the final image further… as you can see the unnatural bend in the road due to a panoramic effect…
This was taken in Arlington Vermont during a snow squall.
Photography: Susie Pryce (jpryce) / Treatment: Hickerson /
The steep, winding road linking Ambleside on the shores of Lake Windermere with the summit of Kirkstone Pass in the Lake Distroct National Park.
This rural picture shows the former small ferry inn, once called “Café Landlust”, on the southern side of the River Lek at Culemborg. Administratively it belongs to the village of Schalkwijk. Today it is just a farm though on its wall you still find the little plate “volledige vergunning” (which means they served all sorts of drinks). Quite often you may have got wet feet at this place as it lies in the foreland in front of the dike, just a few meters above the normal level of the river. There is a beautiful old picture of the inn on Flickr here: / http://flickr.com/photos/ababerson/69426221/ An aspect which strikes the eye on this picture is the very modern street pattern, typical for more and more small country-roads here in the Netherlands. The red strokes are for the cyclists. As many school-children coming from the villages south of the river and going to secondary schools at Culemborg use the ferry, their journey will certainly be a lot safer due to this modern street design. With thanks to my deviantARt-friend Sander van den Berg who gave me vital information about the inn. Since five years he has a very beautiful gallery here: / http://sandervandenberg.deviantart.com/ Near Culemborg, 19th December 2008, 3.02 pm / Nikon D80, Nikkor 18-200 mm at 18 mm / F 5,6, 1/320, ISO 200
/ The Camden Markets are a number of adjoining large markets in Camden Town near the Hampstead Road Lock of the Regent’s Canal (which is usually called Camden Lock), often called collectively “Camden Market” or “Camden Lock”. The stalls sell crafts, clothing, bric-a-brac, fast food, and other things. It is the fourth most popular visitor attraction in London, attracting approximately 100,000 people each weekend. It began in its present form in 1974 when the Camden Lock crafts market was formed. There was a small local food market in Inverness Street long before that; as of 2008 this market retains only three fruit and vegetable stalls in addition to stalls like those in the other markets. / Camden Market is made up of five markets that are all together in one place. Camden Lock Market, The Stables Market, Camden Canal Market, Buck Street Market, Electric Ballroom Market and Inverness Street Market. The shops along Chalk Farm Road are also open at the weekends and have their frontages wide open in a semi-market style. It is difficult, if not impossible to tell where one market ends and another begins.
A PERSPECTIVE ABOUT OLD BARNS / He said,” you couldn’t get paint that beautiful”, for a new country home he’s building down the road. Only years of standing in the weather, bearing the storms and scorching sun, only that can produce beautiful barn wood. / It came to me then. We’re a lot like that, you and I. / Only it’s on the inside that the beauty grows with us. / Sure we turn silver gray too… and lean a bit more than we did when we were young and full of sap. / But the Good Lord knows what He’s doing. / And as the years pass He’s busy using the hard weather of our lives, / The dry spells and the stormy seasons do a job of beautifying our souls that nothing else can produce. / And to think how often folks holler because they want life easy!
a young mountain sheep on the road. (Montana).
Photograph taken late afternoon, on a friend’s property near MT Barker, Adelaide Hills, South Australia.
a drive through the heartland / canon 40d, 18mm, ISO100, 1/200, f/11.0
An almost secret country road on the way to the old village of Shannock, Rhode Island. / A tree farm and an awesome view at almost any time of the year. JPM © 2009.11.07 / Leica V Lux1
RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.
On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.
It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.
Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 332,500 items to more than 70 countries around the world.
Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.