Acrylic, Mixed Media & Muslin. / Painted by Ciska June 07 61CM X 92CM ORIGINAL SOLD
La Rue Obscure is the oldest street in the old town of Villefranche sur Mer on the French Riviera, between Nice and Monaco. It was built on virgin soil at the beginning of the 13th century. La Rue Obscure formed the basis of the rest of the town’s construction on the slopes rising from this coastal lane. It gave inhabitants of the town certain refuge against possible attacks. The ship captains who were forced by storms to anchor in the bay, could make necessary repairs in safety. La Rue Obscure also welcomed precious merchandise, such as wine, in its cellars.
This is the rig taken from the dance floor, otherwise known as the work deck. It was not a good day with regard to the sea state. Bucket anyone?
Another attempt of a nautical image.
We lay up on the golden sands – I got my equipment out Sony A100 / Sony kit lens
/ Tobermory is a gorgeous little town on the northern tip of the Bruce Peninsula in Ontario. It’s harbor not only filled with luxury yachts but also with a lot of shipwrecks, which makes it a divers paradise. It’s part of the Fathom Five National Marine Park of Canada. Luckily for me you don’t have to dive to discover a few of the shipwrecks. Luckily because I spent to much time underwater once, without diving gear, and I’m not inclined to submerge myself for longer periods under water. ;) This beauty caught my eye when strolling along the shore, with the duck approaching, I had to hurry but I was just in time to capture it. This image is one of my most popular wallpapers on my wallpaper website and I hope it will make me proud here also. You can find this image as a wallpaper on my wallpaper website more work / preview /
The Sydney Heritage Fleet brought the 3 masted, steel hulled James Craig to dock at historical Williamstown. Built in 1874, it carried cargo around the world, until it was abandoned in favor of the steam revolution and sunk in 1932. Restored in 1972.
Sailboat cruising in the light of the silvery moon.
Taken at Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village at Warrnambool in Victoria
cruise ship in a caribbean ocean
This is a macro of the inside of a flower, but please don’t ask me which one because I have no idea what it was. LOL Scott said it looked like candy corn so the name was born. Candy corn for those of you that don’t know is a rocket ship shaped candy that is three different colours; red, yellow, and white I do believe. For those of you that may wonder, I did not manipulate this photo in any way other than to crop a bit off to get this to RB dimensions.
Newcastle Harbour by night
All work in this portfolio is © Stephanie Rachel Seely. / These materials (images and poems) may NOT be edited, copied, reproduced, printed, distributed, displayed, performed, or used in any way, in whole or in part, without my written permission. Please respect copyright and do not save or upload any images or poems to Photobucket, Flickr, Myspace, Facebook etc. These creative materials are NOT public domain. Albert County, New Brunswick. Colour edited in PS. I often imagine fall in unconventional colours :-) Check out my autumn art
My town ( Newcastle ) had it’s annual Maritime Festival today, and as a part of the celebration it had a nautical display. The HM Bark Endeavour Replica is a Tall Ship that is a replica of the ship that captain Cook used in the late 18th century to discover Australia. This is taken from the Harbour Foreshore at Newcastle East – at the end part of the Hunter River untouched, using a 6 MP Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-S500. F-stop: f/7 / Exposure time: 1/640 sec. / ISO speed: ISO-80 / Exposure bias: -0.7 step / Focal length: 10mm / No Flash, compulsory
acrylic painting,original size 92×153 cm / greek mythology
This abandoned building is located in Nelson, New brunswick. I’m not sure what this building was used for, I can’t find any history on it online. / It has a sign that reads; LOL No 147 and the year of the building is 1906. It was definitely creepy though! -cross processed /
BETTER VIEWED LARGER This shot taken at dusk at Sydneys Darling Harbour. The magnificent replica of Captain James Cook’s famous ship of discovery, HMB Endeavour, returned to Sydney in April 2005 having completed 11 years of world voyaging under the HM Bark Endeavour Foundation. The vessel was then transferred to the Australian Government and then to the Australian National Maritime Museum, where the ship is displayed as one of the nation’s foremost historical exhibits. The museum maintains Endeavour and undertakes voyages to display the vessel to audiences in other ports, and to enable the public to experience 18th-century square-rig voyaging and seamanship Technique: HDR, 5 bracketted images, Photomatix Pro, Capture NX Equipment: Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm, Handheld For more information on this wonderful replica visit the Australian National Maritime Museum:
BETTER VIEWED LARGER This shot taken at dusk at Sydneys Darling Harbour. The magnificent replica of Captain James Cook’s famous ship of discovery, HMB Endeavour, returned to Sydney in April 2005 having completed 11 years of world voyaging under the HM Bark Endeavour Foundation. The vessel was then transferred to the Australian Government and then to the Australian National Maritime Museum, where the ship is displayed as one of the nation’s foremost historical exhibits. The museum maintains Endeavour and undertakes voyages to display the vessel to audiences in other ports, and to enable the public to experience 18th-century square-rig voyaging and seamanship Technique: HDR, 5 bracketted images, Photomatix Pro, Capture NX Equipment: Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm, Handheld For more information on this wonderful replica visit the Australian National Maritime Museum:
!BETTER VIEWED LARGER This shot taken at dusk at Sydneys Darling Harbour. The magnificent replica of Captain James Cook’s famous ship of discovery, HMB Endeavour, returned to Sydney in April 2005 having completed 11 years of world voyaging under the HM Bark Endeavour Foundation. The vessel was then transferred to the Australian Government and then to the Australian National Maritime Museum, where the ship is displayed as one of the nation’s foremost historical exhibits. The museum maintains Endeavour and undertakes voyages to display the vessel to audiences in other ports, and to enable the public to experience 18th-century square-rig voyaging and seamanship Technique: HDR, 5 bracketted images, Photomatix Pro, Capture NX Equipment: Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm, Handheld For more information on this wonderful replica visit the Australian National Maritime Museum: http://images-1.redbubble.net/img/art/framecolor:black/framestyle:flat30/mattecolor:off%20white/product:framed-print/size:large/view:preview/3337208-2-untitled.jpg!
BEST VIEWED LARGER This shot was taken after dark at Sydney’s Darling Harbour, near the Australian National Maritime Museum. A still night was generous with reflections. The Australian National Maritime Museum is housed in a sleek white building on Darling Harbour. The museum shares the history of Australia and the sea. Here you will find antique racing yachts, WWII destroyers, jet-powered boats, and Australia II – the 12-meter yacht that won the America’s Cup in 1983. The museum displays permanent and temporary exhibits, many of which have interactive components. Some of the exhibit themes include the Navy exhibit, First Australians exhibit and the Leisure gallery.There are guided tours both inside the museum and on the ships moored in the bay. Highlight gallery tours are free, check times of this and other tours and booking requirements at the ticket desk The museum being on the left, Cape Bowling Green lighthouse Cape Bowling Green lighthouse was built 70 km south of Townsville in 1874, when the colony of Queensland was booming with gold rushes and sugar production. The increased coastal traffic associated with the boom resulted in shipping accidents on the sand shoals around Cape Bowling Green and the need for a lighthouse to assist safe navigation. The magnificent replica of Captain James Cook’s famous ship of discovery, HMB Endeavour, returned to Sydney in April 2005 having completed 11 years of world voyaging under the HM Bark Endeavour Foundation. The vessel was then transferred to the Australian Government and then to the Australian National Maritime Museum, where the ship is displayed as one of the nation’s foremost historical exhibits. The museum maintains Endeavour and undertakes voyages to display the vessel to audiences in other ports, and to enable the public to experience 18th-century square-rig voyaging and seamanship Equipment: Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm / Technique:HDR 5 Exposures Handheld bracketted
The James Craig, a tall ship that visited Newcastle on the weekend as a part of the 2009 Maritime Festival.
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