Canon EOS 400d / / / Leeds Liverpool Canal / Britain’s longest inland waterway (127 miles) was opened in 1816. The Leeds Liverpool Canal took 46 years to build, and finally came in at five times the original budget. The first part to open was the lock-free section from Skipton to Bingley, in 1773. The canal was busy all through the nineteenth century and carried stone, coal and other goods. The canal passes right through the centre of Skipton, and at the canal basin there is a junction with the Springs Branch (Lord Thanet’s) Canal. Only half a mile long but a beautiful stretch of canal that winds around the back of Skipton Castle, acting as a moat, and until 1946 was used to transport limestone from a quarry higher up the hill. The old chute where the stone was loaded into the barges can still be seen. / / Viewed 579 Times / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /
The morning light in Hirst Wood, Saltaire, Yorkshire – ‘sister’ print to The Calling.
Taken in the field just down the lane from my house so I didn’t have far to walk to get this one, lol Nikon D40 – 18-55mm
This is a shot from a couple of years ago. I remember it well, it was one of those mornings when everything was just perfect and all I had to do was turn up and press the shutter, lol .:)
3 miles north of the English seaside town, Whitby, is the small village of Sandsend. The beach is littered with these weathered groynes. If you catch them at the right time you can have great fun with a long expsoure and receeding tide.
The second part of the name Ingleborough is derived from the Old English word burh, meaning “fort on the hill”. On the top of Ingleborough the remains of an old walled enclosure has been discovered inside which foundations of Iron Age huts have been found.Ingleborough is situated in the south-western corner of the Yorkshire Dales, being at the highest point of a large triangle of land with corners at Ingleton, Ribblehead and Settle. HDR / Nikon D80 – 18-135mm lens at 31mm / f29 at 1/30 sec ISO 400 Featured in the Mountains and Mountain Light and your Magic Place groups JAN 2009. / Featured in the Fine Art of Landscape Photography group JULY 2009.
This is the main cascade of Scalebar Force near Settle in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, England. The falls are 2 miles from the market town of Settle and are hid away in a narrow gorge just at the side of the road. Its a very popular spot for photographers as someone had kindly left some arranged leaves on the foreground boulder! Nikon D80/Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens, ISO100, 2 sec exposure at f-22. Features / >>>Movement: Motion Blur group NOV 2008 and MAY 2009 / Waterfall Photography NOV 2008 / North West UK DEC 2008 / The Beauty of European Waters MAR 2009 / A Beautiful Blur MAR 2009 / Nikon D80 Users APR 2009 / All Countries ~ Wetlands, Ponds, Rivers & Streams SEP 2009. / Lakes and Inland Waterways OCT 2009. Winner of the All Water in Motion – Soft Touch Challenge DEC 2008. / Winner of the Yorkshire Grit – Moving Water Challenge JAN 2009. / Winner of the All Water in Motion – The Stairway of Water MAR 2009. / Second place in the National Parks of the World – Your Best Feature MAR 2009. / Winner of the All Water in Motion – The Beauty of Cascades MAR 2009. / Winner of the >>>Movement: Motion Blur – Nature in Motion Blur APR 2009. / Second place in the Nikon D80 Users – Water Challenge APR 2009. / Winner of the Waterfalls – April Avatar Challenge APR 2009. / Winner of the >>>Movement: Motion Blur – Long Exposure MAY 2009. / Runner up in the All About Water – Your Favorite Water Photo AUG 2009.
Ingleton is a village in the Yorkshire Dales, in North Yorkshire, in England. It is famous for walking, hiking and caving. Favourite walks are The Ingleton Waterfalls Trail and the climb up Ingleborough which is one of the famous Three Peaks. Directly from the village visitors can ascend the 2,373 feet (723 m) of Ingleborough and take in a view of the Yorkshire Dales from its summit. Featured in the Mountains and Light group OCT 2008. / Featured in the Fine Art of Landscape Photography group JULY 2009. / Featured in the Colour and Light and the JPG Cast-Offs groups JULY 2009.
A Yorkshire landscape in watercolour on paper, with spattering and masking fluid used to create effects. Featured in the groups: / - Watercolour Paintings in December 2008. / - Just Watercolours on 20th May 2009. / / /
Wain Wath Force is a waterfall situated on the River Swale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, North Yorkshire, England. The falls are located at grid reference NY883015, one kilometre upstream from the hamlet of Keld which has three other waterfalls in its vicinity, namely Kisdon Force, East Gill Force and Catrake Force. The falls in the north of England are often termed “Forces” after the Norse word “Foss” which means waterfall. / Wain Wath Force is not a substantial falls; it has a drop of only around 1.5 metres as the river flows beneath the limestone cliffs of Cotterby Scar. Despite its modest height it is popular with visitors, the Coast to Coast long distance footpath passes the falls on the north bank of the River Swale while the main motor road up Upper Swaledale passes on the south bank. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /
Haworth is a village and tourist attraction, in the English county of West Yorkshire, best known for its association with the Brontë sisters. Nikon D80 Sigma 10-20mm lens / HDR produced from a single RAW file 3 times at +2, 0 and -2EV. Processed in Photomatix 3 software. Tweaks to levels, curves, dodge/burning and sharpness and converted to B+W in Photoshop Elements 6. Featured in the Architecture and Cityscapes group JAN 2009. / Winner of the Yorkshire Grit – Black and White Yorkshire challenge MAR 2009.
This was shot at the hamlet of Keld in the Yorkshire dales national park England when Steve Smith and I were shooting waterfalls… / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens. /
Abstract Macro Photography – Natural Nature close up of an old, dead, decaying tree / armley woods / Leeds
Abstract Macro Photography The picture below is a stolen, burnt out car. / This is showing the rear right side. / You can see what has been produced by the fire / Armley Woods, Leeds. / sunday 31.5.09 / 7.15am / For all these phenomina to appear on the car, the car has been left on fire, and eventually, there is nothing left on the car to burn, so it just dies out. the paint work on the car , bubbles up and seperates itself from the metal at very hot temperatures. / Once it is all cool down, it is very delicate. / You just blow the flakey paint lightly, and this abstract art lies beneath. / If the car had been put out by water, im pretty sure that no abstracts would have appeared.
This is a very close up photorgraph of an old, rusting, decaying, steel, metal fence. / Water Lane / Leeds City Centre
This picture was taken a few minutes later to Of commerce, transportation and pleasure , following the rower has he half drifted closer to the bank on this side. This is the River Ouse as it flows through the heart of york in North Yorkshire Converted into a Holga/film effect Featured by the kind hosts of The beauty of the European Waters Group
Taken from a field over looking Kirby Underdale and the Vale of York on a very foggy early evening in November 2008 this photo shows the fog settling down in the valley beyond a lone tree and hale bale
This is the view looking up the steep sided valley of ‘Dowber Gill Beck’ not far from the village of Kettlewell in the Yorkshire Dales. / The peak in the distance is Great Whernside, I actually made it to the summit but as my camera battery died (as always the spare was in the charger on the kitchen worktop!) on the way up you’ll just have to take my word for it! :) August 22nd 2009 / Nikon D40 – 18-55mm, f/11
Abstract Macro Photography – Cityscape Peeling Paint on an old warehouse door / Kirkstall / Leeds
This is the gentle glacier and melt water hills and valleys of Yorkshire outside the village of South Dalton. With the crop safely gathered in, the ghost trails of the plants form the track for the rolling runaway trains of the clouds above. Converted into a black and white pinhole. Best viewed large this was taken a few moments before this shot
THE WINNER of the challenge Autumnal Equinox Nikon D60 / hdr in Photomatix & pp in PS CS3 / one shot, hand held, / Lens: Nikkor 18-200mm / f/14.0 1/200 ISO800 / North Yorkshire, UK
A dawn in Ribblesdale, Yorkshire. No graduated filters used in this; this is the way it was, with shifting layers of fog… a beautiful sight (taken minutes after emerging from a tent!)
Taken in the North Yorkshire Dales, heading out of the village of Grinton and heading towards Redmire Moor. you climb up a nice gentle slope and then a few bends with wide open roads and hit an area that looks like it has been blasted by nature and man a few times and you came across some open views and then vistas like this one. Best viewed large. Featured by the kind hosts of The Northern Landscapes Group Converted into pinhole black and white
Abstract Macro Photography – Cityscape Very close up / Industrial metal shelfing / Armley Industrial Estate / Leeds
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