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  • Paul Vanzella has done a wonderful rework of this photo for me OTHER INDUSTRIAL / REAL ESTATE SERIES / NEW ZEALAND / FROGS / LENSBABY / INFRARED / BEACH / SPAM / PANORAMAS / LANDSCAPES

  • Paul very kindly offered to collaborate with me on this Wilcannia photo. Here’s the result….I’m over the moon, thanks Paul!!!! This is my attempt OTHER INDUSTRIAL / REAL ESTATE SERIES / NEW ZEALAND / FROGS / LENSBABY / INFRARED / BEACH / SPAM / PANORAMAS / LANDSCAPES

  • acrylic painting on canvas, 16×20, Harbor scene on Monhegan Island, Maine Painting is $1800.00. size: 16” x20”

  • This is my cousin’s holiday farmhouse in Maine – New England Region USA. It is about 150 years old and made up of many parts which were added over its life. None of the floors are level and it has a meandering internal layout with narrow staircases and low cielings.

  • Watsons Crags are in Kosciuszko National Park and in my opinion is the most spectacular alpine ridge line in Australia. On this particular occassion I had spent the day skiing out from Thredbo to camp at the frozen Lake Albina on a spectacular little knoll overlooking the Crags. This shot was taken halfway through dinner at my personal restaurant. The heater at the restaurant was pathetic, but the view… For other shots from this area check out my Kosciuszko gallery. To check out other mountain photographs see my Mountains gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • Cove in Maine / 11”x14” Oil on Canvas Original for Sale This was mainly painted using a palette knife and heavily textured with impasto. Featured in: Impressionism Cafe

  • Seagulls over the Atlantic / 10” x 8” Watercolor on Arches Cold pressed 140gm Paper Original Sold Featured in: Impressionism Cafe

  • Dragonfly / Glass Lake – N.Y. / Olympus E510 / Female dragonfly lay eggs in or near water, often on floating or emergent plants. When laying eggs, some species will submerge themselves completely in order to lay their eggs on a good surface. The eggs then hatch into nymphs. Most of a dragonfly’s life is spent in the naiad (that is, nymph) form, beneath the water’s surface, using extendable jaws to catch other invertebrates or even vertebrates such as tadpoles, fish, etc. They breathe through gills in their rectum, and can rapidly propel themselves by suddenly expelling water through the anus. Some nymphs even hunt on land, an aptitude which could easily have been more common in ancient times when terrestrial predators were clumsier. The larval stage of large dragonflies may last as long as five years. In smaller species, this stage may last between two months and three years. When the larva is ready to metamorphose into an adult, it climbs up a reed or other emergent plant. Exposure to air causes the larvae to begin breathing. The skin splits at a weak spot behind the head and the adult dragonfly crawls out of its old larval skin, pumps up its wings, and flies off to feed on midges and flies. The adult stage of larger species of dragonfly can last as long as four months. (Wiki)

  • I just adore these little guys!! Newt Red Eft Newt – Windham, N.Y. / Olympus E510 The main breeding season for newts is between the months of February and June. After courtship rituals of varying complexity, which take place in ponds or slow moving streams, the eggs are fertilised outside the female’s body and attached, singly, to the leaves of aquatic plants. The plant leaves are usually folded over and adhered to the eggs to protect them. The tadpoles, which resemble fish fry but are distinguished by their feathery external gills, hatch in about three weeks. After hatching they eat algae, small invertebrates or other tadpoles. During the next few months the tadpoles undergo metamorphosis, during which they develop legs, and the gills change into air-breathing lungs. Some species, such as the North American newts, also become more brightly coloured during this phase. Once fully metamorphosised they leave the water and live a terrestrial life, when they are known as “efts”. Only when the eft reaches adulthood will the North American species return to live in water, rarely venturing back onto the land. Conversely, most European species live their adult lives on land and only visit water to breed. (wikipedia) /

  • Image captured from Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park, Maine. The clouds suddenly rolled in from the ocean about 1/2 hour before sunset which added a dramatic effect to this shot. All content & images © Stephen Vecchiotti. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.

  • ~StoryPeople.

  • Third Place in the “Peaceful Scenes” challenge in Mood & Ambience August 15, 2009. / Featured in Nikon D40 (x) Group July 12, 2009. / Featured in Rural Around The Globe July 10, 2009. Best on Full Size This is the blue-green version of “White Adirondacks,” which I’m posting by request of one of our Bubble friends, AndyReeve. This was taken along the coast of Maine on September 18, 2008 with the Nikon D40x and the 18-135mm Nikon lens. Shutter speed 1/125, aperture f/5.6, exp 0.00, iso 200. It underwent a bit of tweaking in Photoshop which included a new sky and some fun filters. As with the previous version, I owe our own beautiful and talented Vonne – RavenSoul for her fabulous tweaking suggestions!!! The original: /

  • Rather a snapshot photo of my kitty Barry (Maine Coon, 7.5 months old). I am sorry for a rear LOL view but this is the only picture showing his gorgeous tail.

  • Barry a Maine Coon Featured : / in Animal Kingdom / in Paws n Claws / on Redbubble Homepage

  • ~Quote by Storypeople.

  • 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.

  • Beals Island, ME / Nikon D70, 24-85mm 2.8

  • The world stopped 2009 03 22
    by Antanas

    The world stopped in place when I saw myself over my shoulder and I could have touched that which I saw, but I was backwards and my hand …

    translation by T.Klimas Presentation of my poetry book

  • One of my favorite places in Boothbay Maine. Ocean Point. Canon 5D MarkII / Canon EF 16-35mm f2.8L II / ISO100 0.5sec f/22 / Singh Ray Color Enhancing Warming Polarizer / Singh Ray +2 Stop HS ND Gradient

  • HDR image of Bass Harbor Head Light, Acadia National Park, Maine Mount Desert Island Canon Rebel XSi 162 views as of 11/26/09

  • Best viewed large . / Nestling just below the atmospheric West Yorkshire moors, the beautiful village of Haworth is the jewel in the crown of the Worth Valley. Just to the north of Bradford, Haworth is internationally famous for its connections with the Brontë family, and the three sisters in particular. The majority of their famous works were written during the time they lived at the village Parsonage, whilst their father was parson at the nearby church of St. Michael and all the Angels. Most well known books are Jayne Eyre and Wuthering Heights . Canon EOS 400d , / textures added . /

  • Well folks, it is snowing like crazy right now… and expected throughout the day. This is the only time that I wish I lived in the city….. I love walking on the streets with the soft snowfall…. catching the big flakes on my tongue…. it is so silent at this time of a “big flake world”!!!! Soon the snow plows will come by scraping the roads and will spoil the silence and the beauty…. / Singing….. “Sleigh bells ring..are you listening..In the lane, snow is glistening…. what a beautiful sight, we’re happy tonight, walking in the winter wonderland”! Canon rebel XTi / Canon lens 28-135 / Focal length: 117 / f: 7.1 / Exposure time: 1/200 !

  • By following a cart-track for a quarter of an hour one comes to the canal, a stone’s throw across, dividing the cape from the Nubble Rock. On the top of this bare crag the lighthouse-keeper’s dwelling and fog signal stand out bold and sharp against the blue sky. At the east, a clump of blanched ledges stretches off… This prospect comprises everything between Cape Ann and Cape Elizabeth in clear weather, and is every way admirable. —Samuel Adams Drake, The Pine Tree Coast, 1891 / The “Nubble” is a small, rocky island a short distance off the eastern point of Cape Neddick, about two miles north of the entrance to the York River and York Harbor. In 1602, explorer Bartholomew Gosnold met with local Indians on the island and dubbed it “Savage Rock.” / he placement of a lighthouse on the Nubble had been recommended by many local mariners since 1807. An 1837 proposal was rejected on the grounds that there were already enough lights in the vicinity. Even after the wreck of the bark Isidore in 1842, north of the Nubble near Bald Head Cliff, it still took nearly four more decades before the lighthouse was established. The Isidore, according to legend, still reappears as a ghost ship with a phantom crew. Congress appropriated $15,000 for the building of a lighthouse on the Nubble in 1876. The 41-foot cast-iron tower, lined with brick, was first illuminated on July 1, 1879. At first, the lighthouse was painted reddish-brown, showing a fixed red light through a fourth order Fresnel lens. The lighthouse still exhibits a red light, but the tower has been painted white since 1902. ! The distinctive red oil house was built in 1902, and the walkway connecting the lighthouse to the keeper’s house was added in 1911. The station originally had a fog bell operated by automatic striking machinery. The skeleton frame bell tower was replaced in 1911 by a white pyramidal tower, itself torn down in 1961. For a time, the Nubble’s 3,000 pound fog bell could be heard by the keepers at Boon Island six miles away. The bell was later replaced by a diaphragm horn. / Nathaniel Otterson was the first keeper. His replacement, Brackett Lewis, formerly assistant keeper of Whaleback Light, was keeper from 1885 to 1904, the longest stint of any keeper at the Nubble. While Lewis was keeper, his daughter, Hattie, married Charles Billings in the lantern room. / The next keeper, William Brooks, previously at Boon Island and White Island, picked up extra cash by ferrying sightseers and fishermen to the island for ten cents apiece. This was not appreciated by Brooks’ superiors, and the keeper soon “resigned.” At low tide it was sometimes possible to walk between the Nubble and the mainland. Lucy Glidden Burke Steffen, daughter of keeper James Burke, later described being carried piggy-back by her father across the bar. Canon Rebel XTi / Canon lens 28-135 / ISO 200 / focal length: 75 / F:6.3 / Exposure time:1/1,000

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