Taken by the ever amazing Priscilla Brice-Weller (with my camera) this is a tribute to the eyeopening designs that are all around us. / Part proceeds from sales of this image go to the “buy Priscilla a house” fund.
Carriageworks Sydney
Tripod mounted single exposure. / / f/9 / 25sec / ISO-100 / Focal Length 27mm 635 views Featured in Cityscapes and City Skylines November 2009.
Coal drops at Benwell, Newcastle upon Tyne, early Victorian era. / In the Thomas Hair style, 1830’s. HB pencil and watercolour. 140lb paper.
The pump engine house, at Friar’s Goose, on the river Tyne, in Gateshead, in the style of Thomas Hair, the industrial watercolourist of the 1830’s. The engine house, is now a ruin, on the reclaimed riverside park land, Felling, Gateshead. Bockingford watercolour paper, 22” x 14” 140lb.
This was a happy coincidence in a time exposure of this water tower.
THE BLACK WATER TOWER. WATER TOWERS ARE STILL AROUND ALL OVER THE WEST LOOP AREA OF CHICAGO. REALLY ITS CALLED FULTON MARKET, NONETHELESS THE POINT IS, THIS IS CHICAGO VERSION OF SOHO. KILLER LOFTS, GREAT RESTAURANTS, A NEW AND “BETTER” CLUB EVERY OTHER WEEK, (CAN’T ROLL LIKE THAT ANY MORE YO’), BUT FANTASTIC BARS. THIS IS A BEGINNERS BACK ALLEY. RUNS PARALLEL TO MADISON AVE. WHERE THE OLD CHICAGO STADIUM USED TO STAND. NOW WE HAVE THE UNITED CENTER. MAYBE YOU’VE HERD OF THIS BALLER THAT USED TO “BREAK ANKLES” AND COLLECT NBA CHAMPIONSHIPS THAT PLAYED THERE. (HINT M J). I WAS BLESSED TO HAVE HAD SEASON TICKETS FROM HIS SOPHOMORE YEAR WITH THE BULLS UNTILL HE RETIRED. BOTH TIMES. THE ALLEY IS ALL GOOD. / M J IS THE BEST TO EVER PLAY THE GAME. I’VE NEVER SEEN HIM IN THAT ALLEY THOUGH, QUITE VEXING.
A picture of a fallen gantry at an abandoned magnesite filtration works.
A revised version of my ‘Middlesbrough Drops’ watercolour painting. The coal drops on the river Tees estuary, in the 1830’s. / In the foreground, is the Tees river ferry – which in those days, was a small, rowing boat. I love the daunting and weird, distant grey structures, ready to drop the coal upon the collier (coal) ships. My version of a Thomas Harrison Hair, 1837 watercolour. Watercolour and HB pencil.
Dawn at Colmslie Reserve, Brisbane Queeensland Australia. / The Gateway bridge is in the background. / 30 sec exposure f22 with nd8 grad.
Industrial Light & Magic This photo was taken using a combination of hand held soft filters – homemade, actually. It has not been colourised with image-editing software. What you see, is what I took. / / Photographer for Hire – All Occasions – Mail Me :) / / My rules for photography and art are very simple – I like it, or I don’t… / / Thanks for visiting my folio :) / I certainly appreciate your taking time to view what I’ve been up to, and enjoy reading your comments. / / / Writings (or ramblings) / Another World / Time & Tears / The 3rd / The 10th / Weaver / High-Flyer / The In-Between Place / The Haggard Crone / Come, Dark / Chandelier Brain / Eat Me / You’re Strange, Rick / Ever-Queen / Sleeping / The Black, White & Grey
New York City west side skyline at night shot from New Jersey
old peters factory taree NSW australia, had to trespass for this one…worth it thoe. CANON 450D / SIGMA 10-20mm
Abstract Macro Photograph Accidental Art / Peeling paint
Sunset- Salt Spring Island, BC Canada
I was out doing a night shoot around the Kwinana industrial area last night with a group of Perth photographers. Had a great night, despite the night getting off to a wet start. A bit of light painting on the Kwinana Beach Jetty. EOS 500D.
Shot in Norfolk, Virginia. Camera: Nikon D90 / Lens: Sigma 10-20mm @ 20mm / Exposure: f7.1, 1/500s, ISO200 / Processing: Photoshop CS3 / Technique: Handheld / Location: Norfolk, Virginia, USA Features: / – Nikon DSLR Users Group: 10/10/2009
National Slate Museum workshop. / Between 1870, when it was built by the De Winton company of Caernarfon, and 1925, when the smaller Pelton wheel came into use, this wheel supplied energy to all the Gilfach Ddu workshops. Today, its bulk still impresses. This is the largest water wheel on the British mainland: it is 15.4 metres in diameter. / The water powering the wheel comes from the Ceunant waterfall, above Llanberis, through cast iron pipes. The water then rises to the tank above the wheel (because the source is higher than the level of the tank). The wheel’s propulsion comes from its rim rather than the axle and so the spokes of the wheel only serve to hold it together — rather like a bike wheel. By means of a system of cogs and pinion wheels, the energy from the water which flows from bucket to bucket on the wheel is transmitted along the line shafting to all the workshops on site. / The wheel is so finely balanced that it begins to turn the minute just one of its 140 buckets fills with water. The wheel itself is a testament to the talent of local engineers, and still works perfectly a century and a half after it was built. Like the incline, the wheel was restored in 2000 thanks to a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, and it works continuously. / The energy created by the water wheel is carried to the various workshops by means of line shafting. The lines of this shafting system were effectively the workshops’ arteries, the means by which lathes turned and hammers pounded, and saws and drills moved back and forth. They carried the power from the wheel to every part of the workshops, bringing life to machines that would otherwise lie still. Nikon D300 / 18-200mm / HDR (3 shots) in ptotomatix / PP in PS CS3
Also available as a roller blind for your window, ask me for details
Industrial Estate at Night in Rotterdam
Rotterdam in the morning fog
Ouseburn in Newcastle, an area of regeneration, hence the name of the image. From an area of heavy industry, hence these wonderful old buildings, to an area of culture and offices. Including an urban farm and heritage center.. The small river is now behind a lock, hence the high water level. Converted into black and white and best viewed large Featured by the kind hosts of The Olympus and Four Thirds Group
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