Horizone wave 

530 creative works found

  • 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 / /

  • This is an IR shot of Nobby’s Beach in Newcastle, Australia. / / I’m keen to see how many connotations you can all come up with. / / This is the beach where the Pasha Bulker came ashore in a huge storm we had earlier in the year. / / / / / / / / / /

  • stop sign at water landscape

  • Camera: FujiFilm FinePix S7000 / Date: 22/01/2008 7:40PM / ISO200 / f/8 / 1.5sec exposure / Cir Polarising Filter / ND4 / ND8 / Shutter Release / Bloody great tripod / / Check out 1,2… / / / Check out 1, 2, 3…. / / / Check out Merewether Baths /

  • take a break from life and walk the plank

  • This was rendered in a large enough size for prints, but to my eye it came out looking “rough” ... though it smoothed out beautifully when I resized it smaller. So until I can get it looking better I am only offering this as a card. Rendered in Apophysis 2.07 Lauren Edit Thanks to Buddy Sears & his new Pixel Terminator I’m now able to put this up as a print. Thanks Buddy !!

  • Location: Naher el Kaleb Lebanon

  • 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).

  • Location: Marina Debayeh, Lebanon

  • Taken at Craigavon lakes in Co Armagh Ireland

  • It is not how it looked in the viewfinder but it is how I wanted it to look in the end. The process of creating photographs is one with endless possibilities between the accurate recordings and significant transformations through camera settings and post processing steps. There is no "right" way to do all this and all options are available – at least for the open minded. So we choose the shutter speed, set the aperture, widen the angle or zoom in, highlight some elements, darken others, sharpen somethings, blur others, saturate and de-saturate, blend and hide,... all which change and transform the raw photo into something interesting for the eye – at times even visual art. Here I tried to create a piece of work that resembled the reality but also transcended into new visual dimensions which could not be seen by the human eye on location – merely in my mind. The long exposure and various post processing steps made this possible. The raw material was captured on Havskåren, a tiny island in the Oslofjord by the Nøtterøy archipelago. I posted this because I liked how the composition turned out. I also love the colors – muted yet warm and inviting. Earth colors. I hope you enjoy this work as much as I enjoyed creating it.

  • 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

  • North Shore of Hawai’i, Island of Oahu Canon 1Ds Mark II / f/8 / 8/10 second shutter speed / 600 mm focal length

  • Location: Marina Debayeh, Lebanon

  • Sunset at Two Rocks beach, north of Perth, Western Australia. Waiting time for this shot – 2 hours ;) Captured with Nikon D70

  • Bournemouth beach. Sold Aug 2009 – Framed Print (medium). Thank you!

  • Nikon D300 / 18-200mm / 30.0 f/3.8 ISO160 / Filey at night / North Yorkshire, UK

  • View more work from this series Kingscliff Beach, Northern New South Wales, Australia. Untouched photograph. / Best viewed LARGE

  • Wales, UK / Nikon D300 / Nikkor 18-200mm / HDR in Photomatix Pro / 1 shot, handheld / PP in PS CS3 including Orton Effect

  • Sunset at Cape Peron, Rockingham Western Australia. Captured with Nikon D300 and Sigma 10 – 20 lens. Featured in SEA group 21/11/2009 / Featured in Around The World group 23/11/2009 / Featured in Sensational Sun group 27/11/2009 / Featured in Colour and Light group 30/11/2009

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 331,500 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Horizone Wave T-Shirts

Horizone Wave Wall Art

Horizone Wave Journal Entries

Horizone Wave Writing

Horizone Wave Calendars