Field rural 

1463 creative works found

  • Taken on the Old Healesville road last Autumn.

  • Sorry about the Albert King title but it fits. I love naming my images after some of my favourite songs. Anyway, this was taken on the Ridge road Kallista in the Dandenong Ranges.

  • Hadrian’s Wall, summer 2007

  • © Marbia Studios / This image cannot be reproduced in any format without the express written permission of Marbia Studios. Here are my resent vector art work’s, I think I just went vector crazy. I’m still working on a few other designs. Please feel free to look at my other work /

  • I finally found the tractor I have been looking for. I saw this old antique from the road and thankfully had my camera in tow. I braved the 3 feet of snow and frigid Newfoundland winds but I finally got my shot I’d been waiting to get. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / /

  • This was taken coming from Slaidburn to the Forest of Bowland in Lancashire! Changed the title, which means of the forest, trees. Laminated Print / Card / Framed Print / Poster /

  • A friend and I road tripped through central South Dakota a few summers ago and got to chase this rainbow for about an hour down Highway 14. I pulled over to take this picture of the bow over a ripened wheat field with drops of rainwater still glistening on the points of the barbed wire fence.

  • Taken a few miles east of Leicester, near Allexton. Its that time in the UK, just before the wheat gets harvested – heavy heads beginning to nod gently under the weight of the grain, and the weather unable to decide whether it is summer or not, threatening to flatten the crop, just it is ready. Leicestershire is full of distant horizons like this, and the Barley is all but in now, much of the ground already having been put under the plough in readiness for the next crop.

  • The Farm is a scenic view of one of the many farms on the rural outskirts of Canberra. Behind the scenes / Often, images are born of hard work, careful planning and a lot of patience. Sometimes though, a wonderful scene will appear by chance. It was late in the day when a storm front came over forming some striking cloud formations over the pale brown landscape. The subdued light and limited colours made for a scene similar to a pastel painting. / Canon 1Ds mkIII | EF 100-400mm Artwork / The soft pastel tones and simple composition of this work make it a fantastic addition to your decor. Let The Farm be a window into a peaceful landscape as a framed print or enjoy its’ simple beauty as a canvas. © 2008 A Spence. All Rights Reserved

  • Please Use Larger View October 13, 2008 ~~ Thanksgiving Day…..........Southern Alberta prairie HDR photography – 3 image layering using Photomatix Pro software, tripod THANKS VERY MUCH FOR YOUR VIEWS FRIENDS….....xx

  • Taken at sunset on a farm somewhere between Barmah and the Murray River, NSW. Shot with a Nikon D200, 18-35mm lens 18mm, 0.8 sec F/19, 100 ISO, .9 ND grad filter. Taken on the same evening as ‘Twilight on the Farm’.

  • Why not a Chrismas card !!!! A place called St-Anne-des-Plaines,the paradise of strawberry during summer time but fields of snow on winter…...”with some processing”...When I saw that old barn I already notice the beautiful colors of the wooden boards.Quebec,Canada. / / /

  • Impressionist digital painting done in Corel Painter. © 2009 Anne Hale Featured in Featured Art & Photography, Redbubble homepage June 22, 2009. / Featured in First Things group. / Fearuted in Digital Artists United /

  • Rural scene,only fields …fields…end of winter on a foggy morning.

  • Watercolor on heavy watercolor paper ORIGINAL FOR SALE Bubblemail me for details.

  • Rural Landscape The last strokes of the digital brush. / There, finished. Beautiful. ...Why aren’t I … / ouside? / soaking in the diffused sunlight, / picking off the little buglets that / crawl on my legs, looking for a bite to eat. Why is my name under the glorious green tree, / and not me? —F.A. Moore Digital Fine Art: oil painting style, by F.A. Moore, June 30, 2009. First in series on “The New American Landscape” Special thanks to stock providers who provided images that helped inspire and enable this creation: ITOL-stock, TudorxRose, and CAStock. FEATURED 2009-06-30 Rural Landscape in Freedom in Words and ART / 2009-06-30 Rural Landscape in ImageWriting / Card for “hello” note See also next in series, New Americanl Landscape

  • 3200 ISO is a brave new world for me. As a self confessed low ISO junkie, one who used Ektar 25 film whenever and wherever he could for many years because I wanted tight grain, the tighter the better, I would pull out all the stops I could to use that amazing ISO 25 film! For sure I’d never gone above ISO 1000 and then only to shoot indoor sporting events. Low ISO was(?) a hang-up for me! But I wanted to try astral photography and high ISO can get you there! However as we all know high ISO leads to increased noise which is something fairly new to me. You can use software and Photoshop plugins but I’ve been considering, one way to control noise would be to minimize or eliminate it by keeping the ISO as low as possible and that’s one way I‘m leaning. So in that regard it looks like a fast 50 prime is in order! It’s fun to be experimenting and learning, eh! Camera Model Canon EOS 50D / Tv( Shutter Speed ) 30 / Av( Aperture Value ) 3.5 / ISO Speed 3200 / Focal Length 18.0mm / Flash at 1/16 power and about 12 or 13 paper towels for diffusion. “One Night Under the Milky Way” was shot at Flamber Head on Newfoundland’s East Coast Trail For more information please visit Brian’s Homepage or on Flickr

  • This is the gentle glacier and melt water hills and valleys of Yorkshire outside the village of Kilham. With the crop safely gathered in, the ghost trails of the plants form the track for the rolling runaway trains of the clouds above. Converted into a black and white pinhole. Best viewed large this was taken a few moments before this shot

  • “A Boab Sunrise” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © Sony a100 camera / Photoshop CS4 artwork The Australian Aboriginal legend of the Boab Tree (or Bottle Tree): “When the tree God created the Boab Tree it was to be the most beautiful of all trees in the universe, with the most beautiful flowers and bearing the juiciest fruit. But as the tree grew to maturity its flowers were mediocre and its fruit had a bad odour and tasted vile. The Tree God became so angry that he yanked the Boab out of the ground and slammed it back in the earth upside down and that is why today, when you see a Boab tree, it looks as if its roots are growing up in the air.” Thangool, Queensland A Boab Sunrise was featured in the: Trees group – Sept 09 Image Writing group – Sept 09 Queensland group – Sept 09 Inspired Art group – Oct 09

  • Fletcher, New South Wales. The area is surrounded by green pastures stretching out in all directions leading the eye to the surrounding hills and mountains.

  • Shadows, lines and golden light of sunset over the rolling hills of the Palouse with the town of Steptoe in the distance

  • Best on Full Size it really is When I first began taking photography seriously … and believe me, as much as I joke around, I do take it seriously … someone gave me a wonderful bit of advice: “always turn around.” And in the case of this particular image, it couldn’t have been more wise. I had been chasing the “sunlight-through-autumn leaves” look all that afternoon … and without a whole lot of success, I might add. At one point, I happened to glance back over my shoulder and snap this image … and a couple more for good measure, of course. But it wasn’t until I got home and loaded it up that I realized how much I liked it. Hope you do too. Image taken off of Church Road, Howard County, Maryland. Handheld image taken with the Nikon D300 and the 18-200mm vr Nikon lens, uv filter … not sure if the cp filter was on or not. Shutter 1/250, aperture f/8.0, exp. -0.33, iso 320. Cloning of evil telephone pole and wires then off to Photomatix with three images at +/-2 evals, then back to Photoshop for a light, light Orton and a hint of texture.

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