Taken in Westfield, NJ 2007 – Just an adorable little house in the height of autumn
Westfield – Nov 2007
I have a black and white version of this as well.
Westfield, NJ – Nov 2007
Most people don’t die until the last moment; others start twenty years in advance, sometimes more. Those are the unfortunates. Louis Ferdinand Céline (1894-1961)
Westfield – Nov 2007
Location: NYC, USA
Trip to upper Manhattan, Central Park, 06/24/08, with Patricia McCarty who is visiting from San Francisco. Original photo, © jwarburton 08. Nikon D70. Featured on Redbubble home page Oct. 30, 2009 Featured in: Scenery 08. / Featured in: Spring And Summer In The NorthEast USA 08 / Featured in: Seasonal Scapes 08
Painted Buffalo skull on leather shield against colorful motif. The turquoise, or blue, colorization, in its many hues, is a sacred color which wards off evil.
My entry to the hairy facial competition? check out the other entries and vote here / . / MORE DESIGNS / . / / / / / / / /
Droving Sheep at Albert © / Vicki Ferrari Albert, New South Wales, Australia. This was taken in the township itself, opposite the Rabbit Trap Hotel. Taken using negs back in approximately 1987. This would have to be one of my favourite photographs! I have scanned the 8X12 print and done some minor touching up (typical neg dust and scratch) with photoshop but apart from that, this image is as it is! Hope you like this! And thank you for looking (and reading!) Framed Print / (psj2)
New Brighton Lighthouse, sits next to the fort, it was originally, a wooden “Perch”. A large post held a light on top and was supported by a sort of tripod. It was erected on the Black Rock in 1683 by the Liverpool Corporation. When foreign ships, passed the old perch, they were charged sixpence for its respect and to keep it in repair. But it was often washed away and a boat had to be launched to recover it from Bootle Bay. In February 1821, the pilot boat “Liver” crashed into the perch and carried it away. It has been said that it was washed away in March 1824 and not recovered until the December. / However the cost of replacing it all the time grew too expensive and it was decided to build a new one. / Taken with my D300 10-20 Sigma lens 7shot HDR Processed in Dynamic Photo and NX2
New Brighton Lighthouse, sits next to the fort, it was originally, a wooden “Perch”. A large post held a light on top and was supported by a sort of tripod. It was erected on the Black Rock in 1683 by the Liverpool Corporation. When foreign ships, passed the old perch, they were charged sixpence for its respect and to keep it in repair. But it was often washed away and a boat had to be launched to recover it from Bootle Bay. In February 1821, the pilot boat “Liver” crashed into the perch and carried it away. It has been said that it was washed away in March 1824 and not recovered until the December. / However the cost of replacing it all the time grew too expensive and it was decided to build a new one. / Nikon D300 10-20 Sigma lens 7Shot HDR processed in Dynamic Photo and NX2
This was one of the last shots taken yesterday at New Brighton on the Wirral. The lighting was great, I could not go wrong, and did not want to go home. / Taken with my D300 10-20 Sigma lens, on my Manfretto Tripod 7 Shot HDR processed in Dynamic Photo and sharpened in NX2 and saved as a jpeg.
From the top of the Empire State Building. Taken just after sunset without a tripod – it was confiscated by the security goons at the entrance… Processing: HDR generated from five exposures of a single image using Photomatix. Featured, New York City, 03/04/09 / Featured, HDR Photography, 03/04/09 / Featured, All About New York State, 08/11/09 5th, Cityscapes and Skylines challenge, The Vibrant City, May 09. / 7th, Night Photography challenge, HDR in night photography, Jun 09. / 7th, All About New York State challenge, City and town buildings, Oct 09. (ref. 0024, 11/2008, Nikon D300, Nikkor 18-70) More from NYC:
Early morning outside McDonalds on Bury New Road. This is a Bus speeding past. Elements of this image were used for Hondas ‘Drive Every Drop’ advertising campaign.
Jackson Bay, West Coast, South Island, New Zealand. / I spent four days out on the coast, waiting for a sunset. All that happened was rain, untill the last day and there was a small gap in the clouds. / Nikon D200 Views 630 /
Jungle Habitat, located in West Milford, New Jersey, was a Warner Brothers-owned theme park that opened in the summer of 1972, and closed in October 1976. By November 1972, the park had 500,000 paid visitors. The park contained well over 1,500 animals, a drive-through section and a walk-through section. The park opened as usual during the summer of 1976, with rumors of a big expansion planned for the summer of 1977. The park’s last weekend in operation was Halloween weekend, 1976. On November 2, 1976, township residents narrowly voted against the expansion. Once this proposal was voted down, Warner Brothers decided to shut the park down and sell the land. After the park closed, newspapers reported that several animal carcasses, including an elephant, had been left there to decay.[3] Competition from Great Adventure, combined with poor management and the park’s inability to easily expand, may have contributed to the demise of Jungle Habitat. For years after it closed, the site’s deteriorated buildings remained, and rumors of animals still roaming the property attracted curiosity seekers.
New York
new river gorge, west virginia. fayette station bridge down below. this is the same overlook that i shot in b/w some ten years ago. Olympus E-3. Zuiko 24mm ED.
I took this shot some time ago now when I went to New Brighton for the day I realised that I had taken several bracketed shots of this vertical view so I processed it today. / New Brighton Lighthouse, 5 shots taken with my D300 10-20 Sigma lens HDR processed in Photomatix Pro, NX2 and Photoshop CS4.
West Coast, North Island, Near Raglan, New Zealand. One of those days when the wind blows in rain clouds off the Tasman sea. Great day to be out about the coast. Sunset was nt the fantastic colours we all hope for, but really it depends what you do with it.
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