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.
Golden leaves of fall line a rushing stream as it tumbles past large moss covered boulders South of Mt. Rainier
Autumn leaves line a stream flowing through the rainforest at the base of Mt. Rainier
stop sign at water landscape
/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /
Last one for the series. Similar to Fluid but different. / / I really liked the darkness at the top and bottom of this one. / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /
Canon 350D lens 17-40 mm / River stream in the forest.
The roaring waterfalls of Iguazu, a small patch of grass amidst all that watery violence, fighting for survival. / Available as wallpaper
The river where I oftenly go with my dog ,my hiding place.
La Freyte, Pyrenees – a tumbling river with lots of falls. Featured in the group ‘A beautiful blur’ October ‘08 Canon EOS 400D 18-55mm lens. Slow shutter speed. Minimal editing on contrast in Adobe Photoshop 2.
Laukaa, Finland. The river of Kuusaa.
The piece that I made as a milestone before my 18th Birthday, which would be today, June 22nd. Personally I like the way it turned out quite well and I hope you all do as well. Technical Info- / Time: 26 Hours 31 Minutes / Programs Used: Photoshop Cs3 / Tools: Standard Mouse / Dr. Peppers Consumed: 5 / Actual Size : 6000×4000 pixels
/ Waterfalls in Almonte Canada© Tim Wilson / Takwn With the Digital Rebel XT
I was inspired this morning after reading and commenting on Julie Langford’s Post. It made me remember that sometimes the journey – the people you meet, the things you learn along the way – is more important than the destination. So despite the bitter frosty morning I rugged myself up (two thermals are better than one) and set out to greet nature and the day with Sami and my trusty tripod in tow. Turns out The Day had advance warning from Nature that I was coming (I think it was the blue wren who visits me that let the secret out)... and together they turned on an absolutely gorgeous – albeit bloody freezing – show. This is most likely the easiest image I have ever had in post production, the only enhancement it has had is a slight vignette added. For the mist gently rising off the water… the glorious colour… the frost on the reeds… the delicate reflections… the beautiful ray of illuminating light… I owe a huge debt of gratitude to Nature and The Day. Title inspiration from Newton Faulkner’s song “Gone in the Morning” Best viewed LARGE
According to colour therapy, this piece speaks of holding onto your inner truth as the true source of confidence, self-love, and ultimately your potential. It encourages you to turn away from outside influence and fears, and to hold on to the belief in your ideas, self, and dreams. In effect, this work then encourages a revelation of your true source of your happiness, thereby allowing your potential to flow and flourish. This is the original work of Leni Kae (dip Colour Therapy), Copyright 2008 all rights reserved. Permission is required for use of this image. Original work is oil on canvas 102cm (w) x 122cm (h), from the collection titled ‘Flowing Colours’, and is available for sale. Please enquire with the artist for interest in orginal work or print, +61 450 099 455, lenikae@gmail.com. Leni Kae is an artist and Colour Therapist whose work is designed with colours and form that prompt neurological triggers to promote liberation. View Website for more information. PRINT EXAMPLE: / Medium Size, Black frame, black matte, flat frame style
Had a day out taking a few waterfall details, trying to capture the speed and flow of the River which was full of brown/peaty flood water.
Sedona, Arizona, USA 2008 Was so focussed on getting to this river before sunset , such a rushed hiked that I lost my bearings on the return trip and nearly spent the night out here !! Was rather daunting but incredibly beautiful nonetheless. I now make sure I have plenty of time either way, perhaps I should invest in a compass and a star chart LOL
Filling up a glass of water and noticed this out of the kitchen window. Literally ran outside with a t-shirt and slippers on to get this before it went. First few shots were a golden amber in color then it went to this before it disappeared. Only snapped about 30 bracketed shots before it was gone. Gonna go a repot my orchid while this is uploading (and I finished it, thanks dial-up). Hope you like it. Please critique… print available here and on my website. All artwork is © Christopher Hintsala, All Rights Reserved. You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent.
Location: Hunter River, Hexam, Newcastle, NSW.
Colorful maple leaves scattered across moss covered boulders as a small streams tumbles around a bend in Washington near Mt. Rainier
Tumut River in infrared.
Part of the “Out of Place” series exploring the culture / nature divide – our alienation from nature. I find it perplexing just how easily we humans get mesmerised by work that is often intrinsically meaningless and the virtual world which seems mainly mired in trivia. It’s all the more strange when you consider that the bulk of humanity has only lived in cities for less than 100 years. Prior to that, for countless millennia the natural world was all we knew. / I spend hours in the Park and it’s interesting watching the way other people relate to it. For example, this set of falls is literally 1 minute off the main road through the Park. There are 3 sets of fall each more majestic than the one before. And yet the average amount of time that people spend here I’ve noticed is less than than 10 minutes. 10 minutes!! And then off home to get ready for work or to sit down and watch 4 hours of T.V. / I / just / don’t / get / it. / Still – one advantage – fewer people to bugger up my shots. / Anyway this is part of a series attempting to portray this collective psychosis of our species. Yes she is actually sitting there on top of a 30m waterfall – not photoshopped- very brave I thought, though we did take the wheels off the chair so she didn’t go sailing over. Model: Jacqui S / Photography / art direction: Geoff Canon 1Ds MkIII / Tv: 1.6 secs / Av: f/22 / ISO: 100 / FL: 24mm
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.
Haha, one day I had to fight with other togs to get to the spot I want…. / Buachaille Etive Mor`, scottish Highlands, undoubtedly Scotlands most photographed mountain… Featured in Your Magic Place / Featured in The Beauty Of Nature / Featured in Style, Class & Elegance / Featured in Dimensions / Featured in Fineart & Landscape Photography
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 303,500 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.