Nikon water 

1055 creative works found

  • Como Bridge, Sydney, NSW, Australia Please also visit my website alexkess.com and my photoblog . Cheers, Alex

  • Title: Drops of Life / Capture Date: 06/10/2007 / Dimensions: 3872×2592 / Exposure: 1/750 sec at f/5.6 / Focal Length: 200 / ISO: 400 / Filter: No / Flash: No / Uploaded Date: 06/10/2007 / Comments: Taken one early morning in Oregon after a light shower.

  • Title: Missing Her / Capture Date: 10/01/2007 / Dimensions: 1758×2516 / Exposure: 1/60 sec at f/5.0 / Focal Length: 56mm / ISO: 100 / Filter: No / Flash: No / Uploaded Date: 10/01/2007 / Comments: Emotive work. Is he missing her because she has left, or has she passed away? You decide. © 2008 Charles Dobbs Photography. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Charles Dobbs. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • Title: Something To Lean On / Capture Date: 10/01/2007 / Dimensions: 2592×3872 / Exposure: 1/60 sec at f/4.2 / Focal Length: 34mm / ISO: 100 / Filter: Circular Polarizer / Flash: No / Uploaded Date: 10/01/2007 / Comments: © 2008 Charles Dobbs Photography. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Charles Dobbs. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • Title: Plains de Brazos / Camera: Kodak DX6490 / Capture Date: 02/26/2006 / Dimensions: 3872×1545 / Exposure: 1/750 sec at f/4.0 / Focal Length: 6.3mm / ISO: 80 / Filter: None / Flash: None / Tripod: None / Uploaded Date: 02/26/2006 / Comments: Plains along the Brazos River close to Glen Rose, Texas. © 2006 Charles Dobbs Photography. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Charles Dobbs. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • Taken in Hvar – Croatia.

  • Even God cannot change the past. Agathon (448–400 BC)

  • I think we consider too much the good luck of the early bird and not enough the bad luck of the early worm. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)

  • The River Crana, County Donegal, Ireland. Enhanced with the Orton effect. / Nikon D50 18-55mm lens

  • Long-exposure captured near Idaho Springs – Colorado – Nikon D80 – +2ND filter

  • Tried some real layering here! This a combination of four images layered at different opacities to get the fading away look. / Image 1: the Osprey / Image 2: tree and greenery / Image 3: Ibis / Image 4: ocean waves Sold – card / / / / /

  • A close-up shot of a small section of Upper Falls, Letchworth State Park, New York. Nikon D80, 18-135mm, ISO 100

  • The Trumpeter Swan, Cygnus buccinator, is the largest native North American bird, if measured in terms of weight and length, and is (on average) the largest living waterfowl species on earth. Males typically measure from 145–163 cm (57–64 inches) and weigh 11.8 kg (26 lb); females typically range from 139–150 cm (55–60 inches) and weigh 10 kg (22 lb). It is rivaled in size among waterfowl only by the introduced Mute Swan, which is native to Eurasia, but the Trumpeter usually is longer-bodied. Exceptionally large male Trumpeters can reach a length of 183 cm (72 inches), a wingspan of 3 meters (almost 10 ft) and a weight of 17.4 kg (38 lb). The Trumpeter Swan is closely related to the Whooper Swan of Eurasia, and even has been considered the same species by some authorities. These birds have white plumage with a long neck, a black bill subtly marked with salmon-pink along the mouthline, and short black legs. The cygnets (juveniles) are grey in appearance, becoming white after the first year. Adults go through a summer moult when they temporarily lose their flight feathers. The females become flightless shortly after the young hatch; the males go through this process about a month later when the females have completed their moult. Their breeding habitat is large shallow ponds and wide slow rivers in northwestern and central North America, with the largest numbers of breeding pairs found in Alaska. Natural populations of these swans migrate to and from the Pacific coast and portions of the United States, flying in V-shaped flocks. Released populations are mostly non-migratory. / Trumpeter Swan brood The female lays 3-10 eggs on average in a mound of plant material on a small island, a beaver or muskrat lodge, or a floating platform. The same location may be used for several years. The eggs average 73 mm (2.9 inches) wide, 113.5 mm (4.5 inches) long, and weigh about 320 grams (11.3 oz). The incubation period is 32 to 37 days. These birds often mate for life, and both parents will participate in raising the cygnets, but only the female will incubate the eggs. The young are able to swim within two days and usually are capable of feeding themselves after at most two weeks. The fledging stage is reached at 3 to 4 months. These birds feed while swimming, sometimes up-ending or dabbling to reach submerged food. The diet is almost entirely aquatic plants. In winter, they may also eat grasses and grains in fields. The young are fed on insects and small crustaceans along with plants at first, changing to a vegetation-based diet over the first few months. Predators of Trumpeter Swan eggs include Common Raven (Corvus corax), Common Raccoon (Procyon lotor), Wolverine (Gulo gulo), American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), Brown Bear (Ursus arctos), Coyote (Canis latrans), Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) and Northern River Otter (Lontra canadensis). Most of the same predators will prey on young cygnets, as will Common Snapping Turtle (Chelhydra serpentina), California Gull (Larus californicus), Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus) and American Mink (Mustela vison). Larger cygnets and nesting adults are preyed on by Golden Eagle (Aquila chrysaetos), Bobcat (Lynx rufus), Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) and Coyote. Few predators, apart from the Bobcat and possibly the Golden Eagle, are capable of taking adults when they are not nesting. This bird was named for its trumpet-like honk which some compare to the sound of a French horn. The E.B. White novel, The Trumpet of the Swan, is about a Trumpeter Swan which learns to play the trumpet in order to compensate for having been born mute, a reference to another swan, the Mute Swan. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Trumpeter Swan was hunted heavily, both as game and a source of feathers. This species is also unusually sensitive to lead poisoning while young. These birds once bred in North America from northwestern Indiana west to Oregon in the U.S., and in Canada from James Bay to the Yukon, but their comparatively small numbers in the southern part of their range were reduced to near zero by the mid-twentieth century. Many thousands survived in the core range in Canada and Alaska, however, where populations have since rebounded. Wikipedia / Dreher Park Zoo, Palm Beach, FL / Nikon D70s / 70-300mm / F5.6, 1/250…As is / 10/25/08 – 269/24 / / /

  • Nikon D50 / Shutter Speed: 1/250s / Aperture: f/10.0 / Focal Lenght: 18.00 mm / ISO: 200

  • Shot at Elterwater in the English lake district national park Cumbria. / 3 shot HDR tonemapped image. / Shot with a Nikon D200 and Sigma 10-20mm lens /

  • Taken along the shoreline of Elterwater in the English lake district national park Cumbria. / 3 shot HDR tonemapped image. / Taken with a Nikon D200 and Sigma 10-20mm lens /

  • “Authorized by the Flood Control Acts of 1936 and 1938, Loyalhanna Lake is one of 16 flood control projects in the Pittsburgh District. An important link in a system of flood control projects, Loyalhanna provides flood protection for the lower Loyalhanna Creek and Kiskiminetas River valleys as well as the lower Allegheny and upper Ohio Rivers. Since its completion in 1951, Loyalhanna has prevented over $514 million in flood damage.” Handheld, photographed at Loyalhanna Lake, Saltsburg, Pennsylvania Nikon D80 ~ 18-135mm lens ~ f/3.5 ~ 3 Shot HDR ~ / 1/320th, 1/1600th/ 1/4000th shutter speeds Processed with Photomatix 3.1, with various other refinements in CS4. N 40º 27.441 / W 79º 27.067

  • Two little (baby) ducks moving quickly on a pond. I was focusing and trying to catch the beautiful reflections of the pond and suddenly appeared the ducks into my viewer, and I focused instantly on them, few seconds later appeared the mother duck, I had only few seconds time to shoot some images Nikon D90 – Nikkor AF-S 18-105 VR / F=8.0 Tv=1/60 FL=105.0/157mm ISO=200 / As is, No photoshop / Colour photo, B/W-effect is natural Oberbayern – Upper Bavaria / Germany

  • Cape Lookout Camp, Oregon, USA Nikon D50

  • Yes we do. This wasn’t taken at the same location as my shot Misty Sunrise. This was a close up taken from the same location as Marina Nikon D80 / Tamron 28-300 VC @ 55mm / f/16; 8 secs; ISO 100 / Hitech 10-Stop ND (3.0)

  • Red didn’t show up as well. Used food colouring in water to get the colour. Discussed this pic with my good friend and fellow Bubbler Shawn and we felt that given the colour of the liquid, I should also shoot this using a whisky glass (the glass is wrong for the ‘liquor’) with ice in it and a nice golden glow as the back ground. – so will be doing that over the weekend (or during the week if I manage to get home in time to try it). EDIT: If the liquid is seen as Iced Tea, then it all works out well – so it’s iced tea with a splash of vodka. Nikon D80 / Nikon 105mm AF-S VR / f/22 @ 1/30 sec / ISO 100: WB: Flash / SB-600 and SB-800 + Maglite-mini (Shone a torch along the pour to get light into the liquid.)

  • A tree in Lake Wanaka just after sunrise

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