Brisbane’s Story Bridge crosses the river from the Northern pier walkway to the south side of the river.
Captured at Sunrise in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado / Thoughts most welcomed!
Shutter Speed 1.6 Sec, ISO 800, F8.0
This is a green house on the campus of cal State Long Beach many years ago. Took a late night walk and found this photographic opportunity!
Nightshot of Waterside in Norfolk, VA. During the Christmas season, downtown buildings are outlined with lights as seen in this image. On windstill days the reflections cast can be pretty neat. My art with 1000+ views
As Autumn begins to give way to winter, the morning sky and light becomes more soft, as Mother Nature takes a turn and starts her winter hibernation. This sure was a different styled shot for me. I actually intended to get down to Washington Park and shoot the sunrise but instead was greeted with something that seemed otherworldly. The sun backlighting the clouds and the dampness in the air made for quite a surreal feeling, standing here in absolute solitude, not a sound, not even the Geese you see in the water made a sound…it was ominous. I figured I would try something really different for once and got out my tripod and put on my Minolta 28mm F2.8 lens for this shot ( I am LOVING that damned lens BTW, sharp as a tack!) and started firing off shots, then it hit me,—-why don’t I try a few long exposures, and well, this is the end result. 10 seconds. Personally I kinda like it, an odd impression it gives with the Geese in the water, reminds me of a painting, and surreal as well. Does it work?? I am not entirely sure, you be the judge. I would love to hear what ya all think of this shot. I have gone ahead and submitted it under the surreal category, a category I don’t think I have ever submitted to before…. Anyways, I would love some feedback on this! / Thanks all! / -John / -—-—-—-——- See more on my website jdebordphoto.com / All artwork is © John De Bord, All Rights Reserved. You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent
Some more light painting shenanigans. / Bulb mode, 2 minute exposure at f11.
Monument Valley by Moonlight. Az All content & images are © Nolan Nitschke. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved. www.nitschkephotography.com
I was just chillin’ at home when this burglar entered my house…good thing my house is completely empty. Straight out of the camera. taken with a canon 400D. the red lights in the back are LEDs and the blue ‘ribbon’ is done with a rewired cold cathode. A blue gelled flash fired at 1/2 lit the subject. The red bird logo is also done in camera. It is done with a stencil and a flash.
I found this freak inside some old abandoned house…. Actually, it is my good friend Phill who helps me with my pictures. Poor guy always gets stuck posing in them. We did this shoot in an old abandoned house located in Japan. Info: Shot with a Canon 400D. This picture is straight from the camera with no editing or post processing. The lighting was done with LEDs, cathodes, and gelled flashes. The ‘fiz-iks’ logo was done with a flash and a stencil.
The Erasmusbrug (“Erasmus Bridge”) is a cable stayed bridge across the Nieuwe Maas river, linking the northern and southern halves of the city of Rotterdam, Netherlands. / The Erasmusbrug was designed by Ben van Berkel and completed in 1996. The 808 metre long bridge has a 139 metre-high asymmetrical pylon, earning the bridge its nickname of “The Swan”. The southern span of the bridge has a 89 metre long bascule bridge for ships that cannot pass under the bridge. The bascule bridge is the largest and heaviest in West Europe and has the largest panel of its type in the world. The bridge was officially opened by Queen Beatrix on September 6, 1996, having cost 165 million Dutch guilders (about 75 million euros) to construct. Shortly after the bridge opened to traffic in October 1996, it was discovered the bridge would swing under particularly strong wind conditions. To reduce the trembling, stronger shock dampers were installed. The bridge was featured in the 1998 Jackie Chan film Who Am I? In 2005 several planes flew underneath the bridge as part of the “Red Bull Air Race”. In 2005, the bridge served as the backdrop for a performance by Dj Tiësto titled “Tiësto @ The Bridge, Rotterdam”. The performance featured fire fighting ships spraying jets of water into the air in front of the bridge, a fireworks barge launching fireworks beside the bridge, and multi colored spot/search lights attached to the bridge itself. source wikipedia Taken with a Nikon D70s with a Sigma 18-200mm on a Manfrotto 055XPROB with a 804RC2 head.
Narrabeen just after sunset / Sydney-NSW / Canon 400D / Cokin ND Filter / ISO:100 / Exposure:1 Min 45sec / F/Stop:5.6 I never really feel experienced when it comes to processing landscape images! / Not sure this is overly great but ill post it anyways…any help or advice would be greatly appreciated :D / Cheers
“Mielahisvuohta” ; ‘State Of Mind Where Your Intellect Is Disconnected….’ / Inspired by: Mari Boine – Mielahisvuohta / I am real sorry that there is no link to this music. I could not find it on youtube or any other place on the web.. From a series where I work with all my emotions, dreams, nightmares and fears in general. I work in the dark with a flashlight and my Nikon D-300 on long exposure mode. Some times I stage the things I want to work with, but most of the time I work intuitive letting the emotions flow free…
...if you were facing this way but most people were going the other way! I have a love/hate affair with freeways, hate being on them but love taking photos of them and seeing this one is only 5 minutes from my house it’s always the one I go to. Walking home from the station I looked up and that damn this is gonna be a good sunset and as I didn’t have enough time to get anywhere near the coast or somewhere beautiful I headed here instead. / Settings Canon 40D, 10-22mm EF-S. FL: 16mm 8 seconds @ f25, ISO 100 ND8 Grad Filter Adobe Lightroom 2 Featured in the Melbourne & Victoria Group on the 5th of May 2009 Featured in the Speed Group on the 8th of May 2009 Click here for my other photos of the Monash Freeway
This is the lighthouse at CapeSpear, Newfoundland. It is the most easterly point in North America. / / Settings & Gear Used / / Manual Exposure / Shutter Speed: 21 seconds / Apeture: 8 / ISO: 100 / Focal Length: 22mm / / Canon 400D / Canon 10-22 lens / Manfrotto 055XProB Tripod / Manfrotto 222 Joystick / Cable Release / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / / / / /
well I’m leaving this morning / squeeze in one final shot / a photograph longing to live / passed the time that’s gone quickly / the time that’s gone slow / now the time has but nothing to give words written on postcards / are making the claim / without question I have been to this place / and backed up by this picture / I’m guilty as charged / it’s written all over my face sneak into the cave / past the sniggering rockpools / that caused me to submerge my toes / to then be met by the falling / of suicide droplets / each one pounding considerable blows tripod legs planted / camera scanning the scene / hunting for the lay of the land / but it’s so dark in here / the lens struggles to focus / as I try to work out where to stand and meanwhile the waves are rushing away / either shy / or unfashionably late / there’s too much dark inside / and the outside’s aglow / it’s a contrast I can’t quite equate so this might be the one time / I venture these caves / for shame the shot wasn’t quite right / but if chance should allow to recapture somehow / it won’t be the dark that I dismiss / it’ll be the light —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- Location: Portreath, Cornwall, England © Donald Cameron 2009 / Monophotography.co.uk
Whilst in Melbourne this week I took a night stroll down towards the MCG from Federation Square off Flinders Street and photographed the Ferris Wheel that is often seen on RedBubble. A long exposure shot of the slowly turning wheel that is covered with ever changing lights revealed the patterns seen in this series of images. Canon 400D – 17-85 lens.
Submerged Sherman tank off Saipan’s Garapan Beach, Northern Mariana Islands, USA The Battle of Saipan was a battle of the Pacific campaign of World War II, fought on the island of Saipan in the Mariana Islands from 15 June 1944 to 9 July 1944. The invasion fleet embarking the expeditionary forces left Pearl Harbor on June 5, 1944, the same day Operation Overlord was launched with the invasion of Normandy. The Normandy landings were the larger amphibious landing, but the Marianas invasion fielded the larger fleet. By July 7, the Japanese had nowhere to retreat. Saito made plans for a final suicidal banzai charge. On the fate of the remaining civilians on the island, Saito said, “There is no longer any distinction between civilians and troops. It would be better for them to join in the attack with bamboo spears than be captured.” At dawn, with a group of a dozen men carrying a great red flag in the lead, the remaining able-bodied troops — about 3,000 men — charged forward in the final attack. Amazingly, behind them came the wounded, with bandaged heads, crutches, and barely armed. The Japanese surged over the American front lines, engaging both Army and Marine units. The 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 105th U.S. Infantry were almost destroyed, losing 650 killed and wounded. However, the fierce resistance of these two battalions, as well as that of Headquarters Company, 105th Infantry, and elements of 3rd Battalion, 10th Marines (an artillery unit) resulted in over 4,300 Japanese killed. For their actions during the 15-hour Japanese attack, three men of the 105th Infantry were awarded the Medal of Honor – all posthumously. Numerous others fought the Japanese until they were overwhelmed by the largest Japanese Banzai attack in the Pacific War . Many hundreds of Japanese civilians committed suicide in the last days of the battle, some jumping from “Suicide Cliff” and “Banzai Cliff”. Efforts by U.S. troops to persuade them to surrender instead were mostly futile. Widespread propaganda in Japan portraying Americans and British as “devils” who would treat POWs barbarically, deterred surrender (see Japanese Military Propaganda (WWII)). In the end, about 22,000 Japanese civilians died. Almost the entire garrison of troops on the island — at least 30,000 — died. For the Americans, the victory was the most costly to date in the Pacific War. 2,949 Americans were killed and 10,364 wounded, out of 71,000 who landed. – Wikipedia WARNING / ©2009/2010 Globalphotos All rights reserved. / All photographs, text and images by Globalphotos are the exclusive property of Globalphotos – protected under Australian and international copyright laws. / These images may not be reproduced, copied or manipulated without written permission. / No use for Public Domain. / Use of any image for another photographic concept or illustration is a violation of copyright.
Light painting with a bicycle torch , Nikon D200 24mm F16 37sec exposure some RAW exposure editing during import to computer as original background detail too dark I was walking past garden grounds with bike and camera and came across this bench when inspiration to attempt a freehand painting , / I think the posture and lighting feel lend themselves to make it feel slightly sad , like he is missing someone . Comments please
FEATURED in Mood & Ambience group on November 8, 2009 / FEATURED in The Weekend Photographer group on November 9, 2009 / TOP TEN winner of “Challenge with a difference…” in Photos of Lighthouses group on November 19, 2009 / / =============================================== / / The Nautical Mile / Freeport, Long Island, NY / / / / Canon OES Rebel T1i / Canon EF-S 18-55 IS / Shot on November 7, 2009 / / / /
From under the Burrard Street Bridge, this is False Creek in Vancouver BC Canada. I’ve taken many shots from the dock side before (other shore), but this time I wanted it to be about the harbour, rather than the bridge as a focal point. / This is my first work using PhotmatixPro3 to render HDR from 3 exposures. / Thank you for your views & comments. Cheers, S. /
Featured in JPG Cast-Offs – 02/12/2009 / Featured in OUTSIDE THE BOX! – 09/12/2009 / Featured in Students and Beginners – 19/12/2009 This is a photograph I created last night in an empty carpark. First I was shooting from a small hill on the side of the carpark but I wanted to get higher, thats when I saw the roof of a tennis club right next to this carpark. So left the car running and climbed onto the roof, set the shot, set the self timer for 10s, then jumped from the roof into the car and did this figure-of-eight. With all that work this was the only shot I could be bothered doing! Canon EOS 400d – 18-55mm – 25mm / 30s, f5.6, ISO 100
The Reflective Eye. The London Eye at Night. / I just love the magic of the London Eye any time, but at night it really seems to come into a life all of it’s own. The Thames and London also seem such a peaceful place. / Nikon D700 with 24-120mm Lense.
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