Bar Beach / Newcastle NSW Australia
Sunrise over Signal Hill, Newfoundland. The first spot in Canada to see the beautiful morning dawn. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / /
stop sign at water landscape
Lord Howe Island Other captures from Lord Howe Island... / Watch me / Send me a Bubblemail Landscapes Water & Seascapes Black and White People and Portraits Architecture Urban images Europe
Newcastle Canoe Pool, NSW, Oz. Camera: FujiFilm FinePix S7000 / Date: 23/01/2008 8:16PM / ISO200 / f/8 / 6.5sec exposure / Cir Polarising Filter / ND4 / Bloody sensational tripod / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /
take a break from life and walk the plank
the lure of the ocean and horizon…..water, air, space, infinity. For enquires about canvas prints, or photographic prints larger than Redbubble options, please contact me via bubblemail
All work in this portfolio is © Stephanie Rachel Seely. / These materials (images and poems) may NOT be edited, copied, reproduced, printed, distributed, displayed, performed, or used in any way, in whole or in part, without my written permission. Please respect copyright and do not save or upload any images or poems to Photobucket, Flickr, Myspace, Facebook etc. These creative materials are NOT public domain. Based on a story I wrote a few years ago about a mermaid being the guardian of dawn. / / Foliage brushes created by me from photos I’ve taken.
By far the most famous fictional ghost ship is The Flying Dutchman. The ship has become synonymous with the phenomenon so that “Flying Dutchman” is often used as a generic term for any apparition-type ghost ship. The term may also refer to a real ship that was reported to be seen – often as an apparition – after sinking, or to a ship found floating with no crewmembers on board. According to folklore, the Flying Dutchman is a ghost ship that can never go home, but must sail “the seven seas” forever. The Flying Dutchman is usually spotted from afar, sometimes glowing with ghostly light. If she is hailed by another ship, her crew will often try to send messages to land, to people long since dead. / Versions of the story are numerous. According to some, the story is originally Dutch, while others claim it is based on the English play The Flying Dutchman (1826) by Edward Fitzball and the novel The Phantom Ship (1837) by Frederick Marryat, later adapted into the Dutch story Het Vliegend Schip (The Flying Ship) by the Dutch clergyman A.H.C. Römer. Other versions include the opera by Richard Wagner (1841) and The Flying Dutchman on Tappan Sea by Washington Irving (1855).
Use the categories below to view my work Images available to download Featured on RB home page and Groups Macro and close up Abstract Black and white, monochrome, selective colouring Blue Flowers Landscape, nature, seaside, ..... in colour Trees & forests (view larger recommended for these images) Alternative greeting cards Paris Collaboration: writings and images People All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Anne Staub. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of any of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from myself is prohibited. All rights reserved.
All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Anne Staub. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of any of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from myself is prohibited. All rights reserved.
Taken at Craigavon lakes in Co Armagh Ireland
Location: Beirut, Lebanon
Photographed before dawn on December 12, 2008 on the North Shore of Hawaii. I panned the camera during the slowish shutter speed. The natural lighting is actually moonlight. Canon 1Ds Mark II / f/5.6 / 4/10 second shutter speed / ISO 100
Palm Silhouettes / Sunset Christmas Day on Maui The Adventurer “Dusk on the sea; the fading twilight shifts / The night wind bears the ocean’s whisper dim wind, on your bosom many a phantom drifts - A silver star climbs up the blue world rim. / Wind, make the green leaves dance above me here And idly swing my silken hammock – so; / Now, on that glimmering molten silver mere / Send the long ripples wavering to and fro. / And let your moon-white tresses touch my face And let me know your slim-armed, cool embrace While to my dreamy soul you whisper low. Dream – aye, I’ve dreamed since last night left her tower And now again she comes on star-soled feet. Welcome, old friend; here in this rose-gemmed bower I’ve drowsed away your Sultan’s golden heat. Here in my hammock, Time I’ve dreamed away For I have but to stretch a hand out, lo, I’m treading languorous shores of Yesterday, Moon-silvered deserts or the star-weird snow; I float o’er seas where ships are purple shells, / I hear the tinkle of the camel bells / That waft down Cairo’s streets when dawn winds blow. South Seas! I watch when dusky twilight comes Making vague gods of ancient, sea-set trees. / The world path beckons – loud the mystic drums – Here at my hand the magic golden keys / That fit the doors of Romance, / Wonder, / strange / Dim gossamer adventures; seas and stars. Why, I have roamed the far Moon Mountain range When sunset minted gold in shimmering bars. / All eager eyed I’ve sailed from ports of Spain / And watched the flashing topaz of the Main / When dawn was flinging witch fire on the spars. / I am content in dreams to roam my fill / The vagrant, drifting sport of wind and tide, / Slave of the greater freedom, venture’s thrill; / Here every magic ship on which I ride. Gold, green, blue, red, a priceless treasure trove, More wealth than ever pirate dared to dream. / My hammock swings – about the world I rove. / The sunset’s dusk, the dawning’s glide and gleam, Moon-dappled leaves are murmuring in the wind Which whispers tales. Lo, Tyre is just behind, Through seas of dawn I sail, / Romance abeam.” ~ by Robert Ervin Howard My images do not belong to the public domain and may not be reproduced in any manner whatsover without my express written authorization. / Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / 25 December 2008 19:25:33 / Tv Shutter Speed 1/250 / Av Aperture Value 10.0 / ISO 100 / Lens EF28-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM / Focal Length 28.0 mm Currently with 995 Views and 1 Sale
Dusk at Point Lonsdale Pier Victoria. HDR of three images combined in photomatix, and adjustments to curves and saturation.
Views like these are magic! / After moving from the east I feel like I’m home with these gorgeous ocean views all around me. / Vancouver Island, British Columbia Canada / From Victoria looking south towards Washington State, USA Canon 400D HDR & PSCS3 / FEATURED in #1 ARTISTS on REDBUBBLE (02 17 09) / FEATURED in THE WOMAN PHOTOGRAPHER (02 18 09) / FEATURED in Seachanges (02 21 09) / FEATURED in You’re Accepted (02 23 09)
The future is always beginning now. Mark Strand
This is another shot of the coal loader at Catherine Hill Bay NSW, Australia. This was just after the sun went down, I love taking photos here.
Bournemouth beach. Sold Aug 2009 – Framed Print (medium). Thank you!
Coastal Grunge / Fisherman casting off the rocks at Cottesloe Beach, Western Australia with passing ship on the horizon. Camera – Nikon D90 / Lens 55-200mm / Texture Layers added for a grungy effect.
Wales, UK / Nikon D300 / Nikkor 18-200mm / HDR in Photomatix Pro / 1 shot, handheld / PP in PS CS3 including Orton Effect
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