these are what captain cook seen from the endeaver when he cruised up the coast apperantly he thought they looked like bottles i think he may have been off his bottle or perhaps sampling some exotic herb from his travels as i cant really see any bottles though im just the boing and me mind works in rather bizzare ways / took this on the way to work the other day i got to work took 1 look and thought / fark thart and kept going out west over the range yahoo now i gotta go back again tomorow what joy =]
Queenslands Glasshouse Mountains are a treasure trove of great walks, brilliant scenery, and plenty of excellent photographic possibilities.
pen on paper
ink on paper
ink on paper
Glasshouse in the Pisa botanical garden
Looking for an escape from the city, we day trip to the Glasshouse Mountains. Forestry attends. We wait and watch the performance of the hills.
I’ve always admired the colours that are thrown up into the sky after a spectacular sunset. The colours are highly visible when clouds are around but in this case a smoky atmosphere from a couple of nearby fires was assisting this brilliant display of colour. The fading light was just enough to crisply define the silhouettes of the trees in the foreground beautifully while in the background the outlines of the Glasshouse Mountains are subtly exposed by a brilliant band of orange twilight. / This shot is taken at Wildhorse Mountain on a clear winter’s day just after sunset at the Glasshouse Mountains just inland from Caloundra on the Sunshine Coast. I love its composition of colour bandings and the random placement of the trees in the framing of the shot as well as the subtlety of the mountains
About Glasshouse Mountains on sunset from Wildhorse Mountain Lookout. I saw these reeds on the way up and knew I had to shoot them later on. - ISO 100, f11, 1/8, 24mm / - Canon 24-70 L / - Canon 400D / - Tobacco Grad / - Tripod Processing 1) Import into Lightroom as RAW / a) Curves / b) Clarity / c) Recovery / d) Soft light layer in Photoshop (13%) / e) Grad filter to bring out the sky a little more / 2) Export using Flickr Uploader and LR2/Mogrify plugin
The Glasshouse Mts. on a cold and rainy day in June
This was shot on August 1st 2009 from the Glasshouse lookout towards Tibrogargen using a 450D and a 17-40L zoomed to 40mm on a tripod, hope you like it. Shutterspeed: 1/8th / Aperture: F22 / ISO: 100 My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. All images are copyright © Jason Asher. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.
Large blue glass blown form
Pair of Bow Vases designed and made by Christopher Williams
Glass bowl, blown glass made and designed by Christopher Williams
Glass bowl with glass spoon, blown glass designed and made by Annetee Meech
Glass bowls with glass spoons made and designed by Annette Meech
The glasshouse at the Dunedin Botanical Gardens Awesome gardens i get to walk through twice a day to and from uni
After a torturous climb up a steep hill to a look out, we settled in to watch an absolutely stunning sunset. After the heat of the day, a mist formed over the valleys beneath Tibrogargan in the Glasshouse Mountains, lit up by the setting sun. / In addition to a horde of mosquitos, the look out is home to dozens of small birds, one of which flew infront of the camera while I was taking the photo.
Stitched together to make a LONG (15k pixels!) panorama.
The Glasshouse Mountains as seen from Bribie Island . . .
Sunset at White Patch, Bribie Island looking towards the Glasshouse Mountains, QLD, Australia. Canon 400D and Tamron 17-50mm lens. ISO: 100 / Aperture: 16 / Exposure fusion with photomatix using 3 shots – .3, 1/13 and 1.3s. Copyright © Shelley Warbrooke. All rights reserved. My images are not public property and are not to be copied, distributed, altered or displayed without strict written permission from the artist.
Glasshouse Mountains, Queensland
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