Lahaina 

57 creative works found

  • The setting sun adds color to slice of beach off the South coast of Maui near Lahaina. The ebb flow of the rising tides evident in the foreground where the water is ebbing and middle where a waves begins to curl as it comes ashore

  • A golden beach near Lahaina glowing in the light of the setting sun as a gnarled Banyan Tree appears to reach for drink in the rising tide.

  • A lone tree on the South coast of Maui near Lahaina seems to be in danger of being swept out to sea by the ebbing tides at sunset.

  • Na ke Akua e malama mai ia `oe / Hawaiian translation: God Protects You Beneath the Banyan Tree / Lahaina Maui Hawai’i © Fine Art Photography by Sharon Mau Featured in the Visual Texture group 22 December 2008 Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi

  • Sarit Giovanni Cardone Saritis Caricature Art / Front Street Lahaina Maui Hawaii Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved

  • “You were created to be the sovereign governor, the one within who decides what remains within you. Nothing can be held in the mind that isn’t remembered there.” excerpt by Guy Finley Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi

  • Sunset Front Street Lahaina Maui Hawai’i / Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved

  • Diamond Head Art Gallery Front Street Lahaina Maui Hawai’i

  • A color sunset as the tides roll in near Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii.

  • Front Street / Cheeseburger in Paradise / Lahaina / Maui, Hawai’i

  • © 2008 Sharon Anne Mau

  • A lone tree anchors the coast and braces for the impact of another wave of the incoming tide as it crashes ashore at sunset near Lahaina on Maui.

  • Featured in The Two of Us group 31 December 2009 Featured in the Mood & Ambiance group 31 December 2008 Here we are in Lahaina with our dearest friend Marjie near the pier after visiting with our artist friends beneath the Banyan Tree where Jacob usually is displaying his beautiful photographs on certain weekends. We are about to leave Marjie with my car to wander about on Front Street and enjoy the beautiful sunset on her last evening on Maui before catching her flight back to Seattle the following day. Jacob and I drove up the mountain together to our home in Makawao. Thank you Marjie for photographing us together on his Harley, you know this is a very cool shot, we love it!! Photography by Marjie Wallace / 08 November 2008 Listen to the beautiful song The Road That Never Ends by Keali’i Reichel

  • Jacob and Sharon were riding home on his motorcycle as I walked over to catch the sun setting in Lahaina. This is a favorite spot of mine at the north end of town. / My camera is Nikon D-60 AF-S NIKKOR 18-55mm “Sunset in Lahaina ~ 2008” / Featured in HAWAII~ ALOHA NA’AU group ~December 2008

  • Jacob Robert Mau / Front Street / Lahaina / Island of Maui / Hawai’i © 2008 Sharon Anne Mau This is a personal statement. Everything displayed on Jacob’s bike is significant. Jacob has plenty mana. A note on the decals on the windscreen: King Kamehameha the Great is Jacob’s Ohana. Ohana is a Hawaiian word meaning Family. Jacob is a direct descendant of the King, his royal lineage precedes King Kamehameha the Great and his is a son of Hawaii. Jacob Mau is Kanaka Kupuna. Here is an informative link on his Ohana / “Biographical and Genealogical Information of Hawaiian Ali‘i (Royalty), Chiefs, and other Important Persons of Early Hawaiian History” / ” Native Hawaiians of Pre-Contact Times through the Hawaiian Monarchy Period” Alapa‘inui [Alapa‘i]—Son of Kauaua-a-Mahi and Kalanikauleleiaiwinui [Kalanikauleleiaiwi]; paramount chief of Hawai‘i Island; makua kāne hoahānau of Kamehameha I on the side of Kamehameha’s mother, Keku‘iapoiwa (II); father of Keawe‘ōpala; brother of Hā‘ae; led armies of Hawai‘i Island and Moloka‘i (c.1736) against the invading armies of O‘ahu; after five days of fighting at Kawela (“The heat”) in southern Moloka‘i, the O‘ahu chief Kapi‘iohookalani (“The head curls of the royal chief”) was killed and his O‘ahu army was defeated;[iv] defeated Kalani‘ōpu‘u’s warriors in battle; said to have poisoned Keōuakupuapāikalaninui [Keōuanui] (father of Kamehameha I); wives included Keaka, Kamaka‘imokou, and Kamaua; children included Keawe‘opala (son with Keaka), Manona (daughter with Kamaka‘imoku), and Kauwa‘a and Mahiua (daughter and son with Kamaua). KA-UAUA-A-MAHI is Jacob’s Ohana. This decal Kauaua Built was designed and created especially for Jacob’s Ohana when they held a family reunion here on Maui 10-11 August 2002. A committee within the family designed and created the ‘adhesive sticker’ and decals. The decals were produced for all his family members to purchase and applied to T-Shirts and tank tops for proudly displaying their Ohana name as a fund raiser for future family reunions, scholarships for their keiki (children), and also for other projects. This decal is not available for those outside his family. Read more on Jacob’s royal lineage here

  • My beautiful husband at sunset in Lahaina / Maui Hawai’i Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi

  • A visit to Lahaina is not complete without stopping by to visit with the coloured Macaws on Front Street. You can have your photo taken with these beauties perched on your shoulders. If it is a quiet time, we will be allowed to take photos and on this evening, my timing was great! As I circled, getting the best shots of these beautiful birds, this one started grooming and showing off for me. Camera; NIKON D60 / Lens; AF-S NIKKOR 18-55mm

  • Metal Sculpture displayed on a gallery wall in Lahaina / Maui Hawai’i © 2008 Sharon Anne Mau “Let thy love play upon my voice and rest on my silence. Let it pass through my heart into all my movements. Let thy love like stars shine in the darkness of my sleep and dawn in my awakening. Let it burn in the flame of my desires. And flow in all current of my own love. Let me carry thy love in my life as a harp does its music, and give it back to thee at last with my life.” ~ Poetry and Songs by Rabindranath Tagore

  • This is a favorite location to catch the sunset in Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii. I think everyone who has been along the waterfront here would know this spot. It is at the north end of town on Front St. just before you drive into the residential area. Featured in ISLANDS OF THE WORLD group ~ 19 April 2009

  • Tides rolling shore as the sun sets over a rocky beach near Lahaina on Maui.

  • Boats sit docked in Lahaina Harbor in Maui, Hawaii.

  • Mala Wharf / Mala Wharf / Species found at Maui Mala Wharf Island of Lānaʻi on the horizon / 05 March 2009 “Lānaʻi has been under the control of nearby Maui since before recorded history. The first inhabitants of this island may have arrived as late as the 15th century. According to the Hawaiian legends, man-eating spirits occupied the island before that time. For generations, Maui chiefs believed in these man-eating spirits. Depending on which legend one follows either the prophet Lanikāula drove the spirits from the island or the unruly Maui prince Kauluāʻau accomplished that heroic feat. The more popular myth is that the mischievous Kauluāʻau pulled up every breadfruit tree he could find on Maui. Finally his father, Kakaʻalaneo had to banish him to Lānaʻi, expecting him not to survive in that hostile place. However Kauluāʻau was able to outwit the spirits and drive them from the island. The chief looked across the channel from Maui and saw that his son’s fire continued to burn nightly on the shore, and he sent a canoe to Lānaʻi to bring the prince, redeemed by his courage and his cleverness, back home to Maui. As a reward, Kauluāʻau was given control of the island and he encouraged immigration from other islands. True to himself Kauluāʻau had, in the meantime, pulled up all the Ulu, breadfruit trees on Lānaʻi, accounting for the lack of breadfruit on that island. The name Lānaʻi is of uncertain origin, but the island has historically been called Lānaʻi o Kauluāʻau. One theory is that the phrase means “day of the conquest of Kauluāʻau.” The first people to migrate here, most likely from Maui and Molokaʻi, probably established fishing villages along the coast initially but later branched out into the interior where they raised taro in the fertile volcanic soil. During most of those times, the Moʻi of Maui held dominion over Lānaʻi. Even today, Lānaʻi is part of the County of Maui, but apparently the Maui leaders primarily left the people of Lānaʻi to their own devices. Life on Lānaʻi remained relatively calm until King Kamehameha I or Kalaniʻōpuʻu-a-Kaiamamao came over to take control, slaughtering people on every part of the island. So many were killed that when Captain George Vancouver sailed past the island in 1792, he didn’t bother to land because of Lānaʻi’s apparent lack of villages and population. It is mentioned that Lānaʻi was the favourite fishing spot of Kamehameha out of all the eight islands. Information Source Wikipedia This photograph cannot be modified for commercial or advertising use, nor can it be copied or reproduced in any form without the photographer’s permission. I own full and exclusive copyrights on all my photographs and they are protected under International Copyright laws. My images do not belong to the public domain and may not be posted in another webpage on the internet or intranet, published in any book, magazine, newsletter or newspaper, duplicated, used in a dirivative work of art, used as illustration for musical, dramatic, and/or literary works, or used for commercial use of any kind whatsoever without my express written authorization, including but not limited to resale of my images without a license for use. Duplication is strictly prohibited. All Rights Reserved Universewide © 2009 Fine Art Photography, Research and Photojournalism by Sharon Anne Mau

  • Unique and colorful tiles adorn the steps to upper level of “Cheeseburger in Paradise”, Lahaina,HI (...plan dinner at sunset-time!) / All proceeds of sale go to Philadelphia Mission charity, / http://www.philadelphia33.org/

  • At “Cheeseburger in Paradise” in Lahaina, HI. I saw a big bowl full of these cute little umbrellas that go into misc. tropical drinks… Although I passed on the tropical drink, I couldn’t pass up the photo op!

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