Looking from Portarlington on the Bellarine Peninsula over Corio Bay to the You Yangs
Looking from Portarlington on the Bellarine Peninsula over farm lands and canola fields toward the You Yangs State Park, fine misty rain adds a glow to the setting sun.
Taken during a sailing trip in Germany, Heiligenhafen. / We anchored in front of a beautiful coast. When I saw the shining red from the yacht I just had to go there. So I took the dinghy and went up a hill to this hugh poppiy field. It was worth the effort….the sea of red was amazing. check what the product looks like here thank you for stopping by!
Water drops caught in a Mottlecah flower. Shallow depth-of field. Kings Park
/ I currently have one limited edition signed, framed print available, Please inquire if interested Featured In Woman Appreciation / (Thanks Shannon and Angel) Funny how time flies when you’re having fun… / “Stop, stop!” / “Oh I really have to go” / “Oh I really have to go” / “One more time? Oh…” 18”x24”, Mixed Media A Special Thanks to DogBreath For the Use of His Grandpa’s Watch photo for reference for my peice. / Check out more of DogBreath’s work here You can contact Carrie at: carrie@carrieglennstudios.com and please visit Carrie Glenn Studios /
Soft evening sky in Donegal Ireland / Sold a laminated print bought by An RB member late july / early august 2008 Olympus sp55-ouz
another picture of my favorite tree.
A watercolour illustration taken from an early reader that I illustrated last year.
The reflections turned out really cool on this one… Gave it a tint in Photoshop also
shot this in 07 in cades cove, located in the great smoky mountains. / we didnt get that much rain that summer, so you had to take advantage of any water while you could. Best if viewed larger shot this using a nikon diopter lens attached to a canon 75-300mm lens, / shot this in aperture priority, Fstop at F14, SS at 1/40, ISO at 200, exposure bias at +0.03, focal length at 120mm
Someone suggested I take my most popular image on Red Bubble / and fractualize it…this is what I ended up with. Thank you Bubble friend.
Westcoast of British Columbia, Canada / April 6, 2009 HDR photography……..3 images layered……..tripod……..Photomatix Pro software THANKS VERY MUCH FOR YOUR VIEWS MY FRIENDS…...... xo
Thanks to Dana For The photo of me! The rest of the image is compiled from photos I took. / Basically the message here is / No matter how stormy life gets… / No matter how pulled in 20 directions you feel… / No matter stressed you get.. / There is hope, and it is a place that resides in you / A Place where no pain can touch you… / A place for Internal Peace, even only for a moment / It is yours, it is In you, and you can find it / All you need do is look.
The little harbour at Coverack, on the Lizard Peninsula, Cornwall, UK. This picture has not been processed as HDR. Best Viewed Large. Hope you like it. / Thank you for viewing.
all stock purchased … / surreal today… xo my crow stock (in my gallery stock) from a park I went to a month or so ago…
Taken with a Canon 5D Mark II, 100 mm macro lens. / Featured in ‘Super Macro Photography’‘ / Featured in ‘That One Great Shot’ / Featured in Made By Nature / 1st in Floral and Faunal Macros challenge This photo and many more are in my Raindrop calendar. Click on the photo below to view it.
Roseate Spoonbills are among my favorite birds. This male was posing on a branch in Iberia Parish in southern Louisiana.
A beautiful view of the pond in Filey, North Yorkshire, UK / Nikon D300 / Tamron 10-24mm / HDR based on RAW one shot, handheld / Photomatix Pro3.2 / PP in PS CS3
Impossible to resist the warm glow of late day sun on this farm… and when standing beside the creek, looking out over the hills, there was no way to feel anything but utter tranquilty. / /
“The Grove” continues the story of four friends who set out for a Christmas weekend in the country…in the first chapter, seen HERE the friends’ day starts out joyfully, but soon deteriorates along with the weather, and they quickly become lost…in the second chapter seen HERE they decide to walk to their destination, but without any idea how to get there... Watercolour on Saunders Not Paper Look” I cried, but my cry fell on deaf ears…Dahlia, who had still been sobbing that we should stay with the car, terrified that she would fall, stumbled and actually fell, and before we knew it slid rapidly into one of the ditches that hidden by snow, lined the roadway…how to get her out without their falling on the treacherous ice, elicited a heated argument between Tom and Mark, Dahlia screaming and thrashing about all the while…finally by Tom yelling that “the more she moved the deeper she sank”, Dahlia got the message and the two men by lying prone on the icy lane, managed to drag her out dripping wet, but… without the boots…it was quickly apparent we would never get them back…no one could possibly reach down to try and find them…we dried her off as best we could, wrapped her in one of the blankets we had luckily brought with us and the two men elected to carry her in turn on their backs…that meant our progress was slower than ever…worse yet, the only torch we had was now flickering badly…to save the battery I turned it off, hoping that we would be guided by the light of the waning moon…... / Suddenly I remembered what I had seen…I turned back excitedly…”Look there”...I pointed to a spot ahead of us…I had seen what looked like a small sheltered grove, but what had really astonished me was the light…blazing brilliant light pouring down through the trees as if from the skies…”Look where? asked Tom…”There” I replied…then stopped silent…my hand dropped to my side…the light had gone…there was nothing there….only impenetrable darkness stared back at us... / Lost / A Weekend in the Country
“The Bothy” continues the story of four friends who set out for a Christmas weekend in the country..the first three chapters can be read by clicking on the links on the images seen below We were shattered….ahead nothing but impregnable darkness..behind us just a faint glimmer from the snow that covered the fields and hills that surrounded us on all sides…with Dahlia getting more burdensome by the minute, we decided to press on in the direction where I thought I saw the light…the snow fell harder…the sled that we loaded with our things dragged heavily behind me..my suggestion that we should leave it behind was quickly vetoed and in light of what happened later, I was glad we brought it along…the wind was relentless…biting, stinging wet particles of rain mixed with snow assaulted us from all sides, as we continued our slow march to ….where?...where we going?...we had no idea but felt an imperative need to keep moving…by this time Dahlia had fallen asleep…a great improvement, as she was now silent, but though she was a slight creature, Mark and Tom were becoming increasingly weary with the weight of her… / Then I saw it again…”There”…I cried, pointing to the sky, and this time the others saw it too…a faint light in the distance, hovering just ahead of us…this encouraging sight spurred us on, and turning the torch on and off in an effort to avoid Dahlia’s fate, we moved through the deepening twilight…one more corner and we saw it…a bothy…partially buried in snow, at the end of lane, and up an incline…The Ritz hotel would not have been more welcome than this little hut, left on purpose it seemed for stranded travellers like us…the door unlocked, we went in, placed Dahlia on some straw in a corner and looked about us for any amenities the bothy might provide…what luck!! there were two candles on a ledge and a few tins of food…we made ourselves as comfortable as possible to wait out the night, shutting the door tightly against the increasing wind which buffeted the building…we fell asleep instantly….much later, the wind seemed to die down… awakened by a slight sound I rose up and in the gloomy murkiness of the room I saw a shadow standing in the open door... For those unacquainted with the term, a bothy is a basic shelter, usually left unlocked and available for anyone to use free of charge. It was also a term for basic accommodation, usually for gardeners or other workers on an estate. Bothies are to be found in remote, mountainous areas of Scotland, northern England and Wales. They are particularly common in the Scottish Highlands.wiki. Watercolour on Saunders Not Paper / The Grove / Lost / A Weekend in the Country
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