Kent 

19 members found (show all)

1495 creative works found

  • Part of “Together Alone” portfolio. (Brisbane City.) Abstracts and Artsy Architecture Landscapes and Nature Street Tasmania

  • Looking out to sea at sunset near Sigatoka, Fiji. Kodak 400, Praktica LTL and Pentacon 50mm Lens. Abstracts and Artsy Architecture Landscapes and Nature Street Tasmania

  • I saw this wonderful spectacle of one day when I was coming home from the city. Praktica LTL with SMC Takumar 35mm (I think) and Kodak Colour 400 . Abstracts and Artsy Architecture Landscapes and Nature Street Tasmania

  • A vine climbs through a hole in brick work as the afternoon sun adds to the adventure. Entered in Gaia – The Living Planet (More the living planet part.) Abstracts and Artsy Architecture Landscapes and Nature Street Tasmania

  • A lounge chair looking glorious in some reflected afternoon sun… This was tinted to show off the light. Abstracts and Artsy Architecture Landscapes and Nature Street Tasmania

  • These witch’s hats caught my eye on my ride home from work.

  • For Holly :) Taken at 4 times magnification of a rain drop hanging from a plant in our English garden.

  • Location: / Littlebourne, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 21 December 2007, 3.15 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/22 : 0.62 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / Taken on the shortest day, the light was disappearing quickly and a mist started to rise from the river.

  • Location: / Barham, Kent, England Map: / Google Maps Date and Time: / 17 June 2008, 7.59 p.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/10 : 1/40 second : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / I had driven past this eye catching field a few times, before going out one summer’s evening with the camera to capture it in a lovely light.

  • Location: / St. Margaret’s Bay, Kent, England Map: / Multimap Date and Time: / 16 August.2008, 5.49 a.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/22 : 4 seconds : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / This for me is what makes it all worth while. For every 10 or so times I set the alarm early and creep off out into the darkness, I get a reward of the most amazing of natural light shows. St Margarets Bay this morning was the best i’ve had the good fortune to see and suddenly the 4.a.m. alarm call seemed to be worth it. Photographs from St. Margarets Bay, Kent

  • Location: / St. Margaret’s Bay, Kent, England Map: / Multimap Date and Time: / 16 August.2008, 5.52 a.m. Camera details: / ISO 200 : f/22 : 4 seconds : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / Summer sunrise over the English Channel at St. Margaret’s Bay. A cool white balance temperature has enhanced the blues against the backdrop of a firey red sunrising sky. Photographs from St. Margarets Bay, Kent

  • Location: / West Wood, Rhodes Minnis, Kent, England Map: / Multimap Date and Time: / 12 October 2008, 10.17 a.m. Camera Details: / ISO200: f/22 : 18mm : Nikon D40 : Nikon 18-55mm lens Shot narrative: / I had the good fortune of being able to share time when out the camera this morning with my old friend Nick and we not only managed a beach sunrise at Folkestone, but also caught the autumn fog in a wood somewhere in Kent after driving around country lanes for the best part of an hour.

  • My First Visit to Leeds Castle / Looking through the blossom. Easter Flowing Beauty at Leeds Castle Kent UK. On this photography trip, I thought “I’ll go out and only take my 50mm prime (no Zoom capability) with me, this meant that for every single shot, to get the framing right I had to move rather than the lense. It was really interesting. Peoeple were watching me much more than normal, I had to duck down, stan tall, kneel in mud and walk back or walk forward, just to get the framing right. It was a good exercise because what you do get with a prime lense is pure light and quality of glass. It’s obvious in the sharp details in the 170 pictures I took on this shoot. I’ll definitely try it again. However, only taking the 50mm prime did hhave it’s limitations as well. I couldn’t get close enough to some subjects to capture the detail that I’d like to have. However, next time I can alway take along my zoom with me. One good things about Leeds Castle, it cost £16.50 to get in, but that enables you to go back as my times as you like within one year. So I’ll definitely be back to capture some more wonderful scenes from here. The place is a choc-box full of delights for any photographer or artist. It’s magical and amazing. / Camera. Nikon D700 50mm at ISO 200 /

  • Tuppers just never ceases to inspire me to try something different. Cheers Paul

  • Location / St Margaret’s Bay, Kent, England August 2009: Taken 45 minutes before sunrise and facing away from where the sun rises from. The glow of red above the famous white cliffs are those from the docks at Dover which handles the cross channel ferries to France (one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world)

  • Backlit lime slice macro / Nikon D300, Sigma 105mm macro

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 5 seconds, ISO100, tweaked in Photoshop Whilst down in Kent we visited Canterbury Cathedral. It is an amazing building, the archictecture is just jaw dropping, a place well worth a visit. The Cathedral’s history goes back to 597AD when St Augustine, sent by Pope Gregory the Great as a missionary, established his seat (or ‘Cathedra’) in Canterbury. In 1170 Archbishop Thomas Becket was murdered in the Cathedral and ever since, the Cathedral has attracted thousands of pilgrims, as told famously in Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Canterbury Cathedral in Canterbury, Kent, is one of the oldest and most famous Christian structures in England and forms part of a World Heritage Site as of 9th December 1988. Please view large

  • Sunset… Taken in Ashford Kent UK HDR Featured in maximum-exposure December 2009

  • Black & White Photo of two trains at New Romney Trainstation Featured in South East UK group October 2009 Featured in Who needs color for beauty black and white art at its best group October 2009

  • Also Seen on Flickr Featured in Postcard Style November 2009 / Spotlight of the week in Extraordinary Fractalius Novemeber 2009 This is a photo of a boat at Dungeness, and manipulated using Fractalius in CS4 with Textures added.

  • Taken in Dungeness, Kent

  • A 2 image small pano of Scotney Castle, Kent, England, a National Trust Property. PLEASE VIEW LARGER 2 images shot in RAW, +2,0,-2 EV’s, ISO 100, f22, tonemapped in Photomatix 3.2.6, stitched in Autopano Pro and post editing, including adding textures in CS4. Canon 400D, CanonEF-S 17-85mm IS USM lens at 30mm. The earliest record from 1137 gives the owner of the estate as Lambert de Scoteni. Roger Ashburnham is credited with building the castle c.1378-80. Construction of the castle began as a roughly rectangular fortified house with towers in each corner. The original plan may never have been finished, and by 1558 it is likely only the southern tower remained. In 1580 the south wing was rebuilt in Elizabethan architecture style, and around 1630 the eastern range was rebuilt in three story Inigo Jones style. The Elizabethan wing remained a bailiff’s residence until 1905, but the eastern range was partly dismantled on the completion of the new house in 1843, leaving the ruin as a garden feature. Catholic Recusant owner Thomas Darrell hid Jesuit Father Richard Blount, S.J. in the castle while he administered to Roman Catholics from 1591 to 1598. Catholicism was then illegal in England, and during the second raid by authorities to arrest the Father he fled over a wall into the moat and escaped. The Darrell family owned the estate for some 350 years. In 1778 Edward Hussey bought the estate and his grandson, also Edward, built the ‘new’ Castle to the designs of Anthony Salvin, from sandstone quarried from the slope below. The hollow created was developed into a Quarry Garden and contains a 100 million year old impression of a dinosaur’s footprint. On Christopher Hussey’s death in 1970 the estate was left to the National Trust. / (Source: Wikipedia) Featured in ’ The Photographers Vault’ Group 9th December 2009 Featured in ‘Dimensions’ Group 10th December 2009 Featured in ‘Retired and Happy’ Group 11th December 2009 Featured in the ‘100-499 Viewings Group’ 15th December 2009 Featured in the ‘Retired and Happy’ Group 16th December 2009 Featured in ‘Castle Magic’ Group 18th December 2009 272 viewings at 18th December 2009 : CUN94-JBNUK-XNE5B

  • Deal seafront in Kent and some unexpected weather! / . / Featured in Art & Photography Red Bubble front page. / Featured in THE PHOTOGRAPHERS VAULT / Featured in “Tone It Down”! Tech’ details: / Taken with an Olympus E400. Sigma 10-20mm lens 250th sec at f11. / Silver Efex pro filter in Photoshop used to turn the image into a decent mono version, then some dodging and burning (to darken the clouds and mainly on the boardwalk in the foreground) to bring out the atmosphere.

  • A 12 frame panorama involving 36 separate bracketed RAW images, +2,0-2 EV’s. Tonemapped in Photomatix 3.2.6 to create HDR. Stitched in Autopano Pro 2.0.5 and finished in CS4. Dimensions: 12083×4835 pixels at 220ppi PLEASE VIEW LARGER Canon 400D, Canon EF-S 17-85mm IS USM lens at 72mm. ISO 100, f22. Tripod used with Nodal Ninja NN3 MK II Panoramic VR Tripod Head Kit Leeds Castle, four miles (6.5 km) southeast of Maidstone, Kent, England, dates back to 1119, though a manor house stood on the same site from the ninth century. The castle and grounds lie to the east of the village of Leeds, Kent, which should not be confused with the far bigger and far well-known city of Leeds in West Yorkshire. History / Built in 1119 by Robert De Crevecoeur to replace the earlier Saxon manor of Esledes, the castle became a royal palace for King Edward I of England and his queen, Eleanor of Castile in 1278. Major improvements were made during his time, including the barbican, made up of three parts, each with its own entrance, drawbridge, gateway, and portcullis. Richard II’s first wife,Anne of Bohemia, spent the winter of 1381 at the Castle on her way to be married to the King. In 1395, King Richard II received the French chronicler Jean Froissart there, as Froissart described in his Chronicles. Henry VIII transformed the castle for his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, and a painting commemorating his meeting with Francis I of France still hangs there. His daughter, Queen Elizabeth I was imprisoned in the castle for a time before her coronation. The castle escaped destruction during the English Civil War because its owners, the Culpeper family, sided with the Parliamentarians. The last private owner of the castle was the Hon. Olive, Lady Baillie, a daughter of Almeric Paget, 1st Baron Queenborough, and his first wife, Pauline Payne Whitney, an American heiress. Lady Baillie bought the castle in 1926. She redecorated the interior, first working with the French architect and designer Armand-Albert Rateau (who also oversaw exterior alterations as well as adding interior features such as a 16th-century-style carved-oak staircase) and then, later, with the Paris decorator Stéphane Boudin. Baillie established the Leeds Castle Foundation. The castle was opened to the public in 1976. On 17 July 1978, the castle was the site of a meeting between the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan in preparation for the Camp David Accords. In September 1999, Sir Elton John played two sold-out solo concerts in the grounds of Leeds Castle. Source: www.wikipedia.com Featured in ‘HDR Photography’ Group 31st December 2009 Featured in ‘Around The World’ 31st December 2009 Featured in ‘a Europa!’ 1st January 2010 143 viewings at 1st January 2010 : C5HDD-T665K-XKHVA http://www.redbubble.com/products/configure/15509917

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