This Piece was taken on Wednesday 18th April 2007. / At One Tree Hill in Melbourne’s Dandenong Ranges.
This Piece was taken on Wednesday 18th April 2007. / near Burkes Lookout in Melbourne’s Dandenong Ranges.
I’ve got a few alley and street shot’s strung through my portfolio, I thought I’d link them up into a series. Here’s a sample: / !http:...
I’ve got a few alley and street shot’s strung through my portfolio, I thought I’d link them up into a series. Here’s a sample: / / None of these pics follow a specific style, some are similar and others a pretty different. Hope somebody out there likes em! Here’s the links / Lane Hot spot / Hosier Lane (this one’s a photo montage, not just a single photograph) / Greyscale Londsale / Melbourne Laneway 1 / All these were taken in Melbourne with a Pentax MZ-50 SLR.
The Twelve Apostles, Port Campbell National Park, Victoria, Australia.
Intersection of Canning Street and Princes Street, North Carlton, Melbourne, Australia. / 7pm, August 2006. Minolta 7s Around 5 secs exposure.
Kangaroos, ruins and granite boulders are just some of the photographic highlights.
Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance member. © Darren Stones 2007. Woodlands Historic Park is located in the Melbourne suburb of Greenvale in Victoria, Australia.
For those interested in “A taste of Australia”, I’ve put together 30 images which can be viewed as a short slideshow on Flickr. “*A ta…
For those interested in “A taste of Australia”, I’ve put together 30 images which can be viewed as a short slideshow on Flickr. A taste of Australia The images include: Fauna Outback Coastal People Sport Festivals and a few others The images are also geo-tagged – Map Hope you enjoy folks. Cheers. Latest 20 images uploaded to Flickr
Leaving the train station in Melbourne. Just thought it looked good.
This photo looks down a street dragging your eyes to Flinders Street Station taken by Nick Filshie
Taken on the way to basketball in the car with my 2 daughters one winter afternoon last year.
From the Official Site: The Shrine of Remembrance was built between July 1928 and November 1934 in remembrance of the 114,000 men and women of Victoria who served and those who died in the Great War of 1914-1918 – 89,100 of them served overseas and 19,000 did not return. The people of Victoria felt that their debt to these volunteers, who had defended them at such great costs to themselves and their families, should be recognised by a worthy permanent monument of remembrance. Although the country was faced with frightful unemployment and financial difficulty in the late 1920s and the 1930s, so great was the gratitude of the people that the huge amount required to build the Shrine was raised or promised within six months from the opening of the appeal in 1928. The design for the Shrine of Remembrance was selected by competition among Australian artists and architects. Eighty-three designs were submitted and the winning design was by two Melbourne returned-soldier architects, Philip Hudson and James Wardrop. The inspiration for the external outline came from one of the seven wonders of the ancient world – the mausoleum at Harlicarnassus to Mausolus, King of Caria in South West Asia Minor. Prince Henry, the Duke of Gloucester and son of King George V, officially opened the Shrine before a crowd of 300,000 people in November 1934. Since then, it has been a growing monument, with other memorials added to the site to mark the service of successive generations, such as the Second World War Forecourt and the Remembrance Garden Post 1945 Memorial. Details: / Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mk II / Lens: Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM / Exposure: 13 exposures (2,-1.66.-1.33,-1,.66,-.33,0,.33,.66,+1,+1.33,+1.66+2 EV) / Aperture: f/18 / Focal Length: 22 mm / ISO Speed: 200 / Accessories: Manfrotto 190XB Tripod, Manfrotto 322RC2 Heavy Duty Grip Ball Head, Canon RC1 Wireless Remote / Date and Time: 14 July 2009 6.41am Post Processing: / Imported into Lightroom / Exported 13 exposures to Photomatix / Tonemap generated HDR using detail enhancer option / Re-imported back into Lightroom / Exported HDR and 0 EV exposure to CS3 and layered HDR on top of 0 EV / Brush tool to even out the sky / Noise reduction layer / Magic wand tool to select the monument / Unsharp mask on selection / Re-imported back into Lightroom / Vibrance adjustment in Lightroom / Added keyword metadata / Exported as JPEG
A black and white snapshot of city life in a small Melbourne lane way. Melbourne, Australia
A series of shots I hope to build on, not your typical tourist shots ,hoping for a slightly different view/feel of Melbourne.
The Apostles down in Victoria, Australia. Just a little drive down Great Ocean Road and you find yourself at the door step of these guys. Amazing stuff… don’t think I did it justice though.
Prompted by my dismay at a proposed freeway development in Melbourne and its environmental impact. A new freeway through the south-easter…
Prompted by my dismay at a proposed freeway development in Melbourne and its environmental impact. A new freeway through the south-eastern suburbs. Parts of this proposed freeway will necessitate the clearing of large chunks of three nature reserves and a nearby stand of eucalypts, one of which is an Aboriginal scar-tree. It is sad to think that in the 21st Century we still, in the name of so-called progress, clear remnant, native bushland. / I was pleased to see this article here in the National TImes.
The Shrine of Remembrance is Victoria’s largest and most visited war memorial and is probably Melbourne’s most recognised landmark. It is a permanent and lasting memorial to the ANZAC spirit which is confirmed by the number of visitors to the Shrine throughout the year and the many people who attend the more than 120 ceremonies that are held at the Shrine annually. The Shrine is located on Melbourne’s most recognised boulevard, St Kilda Road, just south of the Melbourne central business district. Source Canon 450D
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