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Australia Rock, Narooma, New South Wales, Australia.
The South Pacific Ocean near Narooma in New South Wales, Australia.
I took this shot in Bateau Bay, which is part of Central Coast New South Wales Australia. Roughly 2 hours above Sydney. I love the glow of sunsets in wet sand and this, broken by the rocks, formed a scene I just had to capture!
Taken at Norah Head, two hours north of Sydney on the Central Coast of New South Wales. Beautiful little place =) the lighthouse there is too cute.
We lay up on the golden sands – I got my equipment out Sony A100 / Sony kit lens
Mid-north coast, New South Wales, Australia. Best viewed LARGE
Puffin with a mouthful of fish on Skomer Island, Wales
Puffin, Skomer Island, Wales
Puffins on Skomer Island, Wales
Dawn near Rhossili.
The fishing village of Little Haven, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Sandon Point. Great surfing spot on Sth Coast.
What a glorious sky! (even if I do say so myself!) 3 bracketed exposures blended in Dynamic Photo HDR. I used the Canon 5D with 16-35mm at 16mm, f/8, three different exposures, ISO 50, and just one Lee filter at this stage, ND grey 0.9soft, tripod and cable release. Seascapes New Zealand Frogs Lensbaby Infrared Industrial Spam Panorama Landscapes Real Estate Series People Plastic People
Thoroughbreds training on the beach before sunrise on the beautiful South Coast of NSW.
The late summer’s evening tide had just gone out, and during those few moments before it turned to crawl back in again, this craft, “the night owl” slowly drifted across the calm mirror like waters towards home, the harbour at Borth-y-Gest. One of my favorite “own” works because i spent so many childhood days on this beach with my father who is no longer with us. he’d have loved this picture but didn’t get to see it. such is the pain of life and death. My “North Wales” Calender features this, and more images that evoke my own childhood memories.
Manorbier beach, near Tenby, Pembrokeshire.
Byron Bay Moon © AS IS / Vicki Ferrari The most easterly point of Australia! Byron Bay Moonlight Series Byron Bay Moon ©- / Byron Bay Midnight Ocean Rocks ©- These images were taken at Byron Bay, New South Wales, Australia back in 2004. The photographs were shot at night, on a full moon, close to midnight, which is why you can see stars in the sky, a passing ship has its light on, and it also explains the lack of bright reflection on the surface of the ocean. The experimental portraits were taken firing my Sunpak 4500DX flash (handheld), often over and over. Where there are two people (I have deliberately blurred the other person’s face, as a courtesy!) in the image, one of them being me, we had to sit very, very still (difficult for me to do!!) – not smiling (or talking, again hard to do!) as to hold the same smile for an extended period of time can be difficult and if you move your mouth, you get blur. Of course, this explains why those old nostalgic portraits from yesteryear tend to make you think the subjects weren’t that happy! I will also be doing some creative adjustments using Photoshop but will be including that information in the Technical Data. / I am being lazy by writing all of this in one description and pasting it into the relevant image. The other images are linked, for easy viewing. Hope you like this series! Mounted Print – Byron Bay Moon © / Technical Data / Nikon D70 / July 2004 / Close to Midnight / Tripod / Focal 28mm / F4 / 30second exposure / Original JPEG
Byron Bay Midnight Ocean Rocks © / Vicki Ferrari The most easterly point in Australia! Byron Bay Moonlight Series / Byron Bay Moon © AS IS / Byron Bay Moon ©— This shot is AS IS (bar the signature) and was taken looking down from the lighthouse (tourist area), into the ocean – quite an angle to the tripod! This was as wide as I could get it, considering the angle! See below for more information. Please excuse me for being lazy by writing all of this in one description. It will fit with all the photographs in this series. These images were taken at Byron Bay Lighthouse, New South Wales, Australia back in 2004. The photographs were shot at night, on a full moon, close to midnight, which is why you can see stars in the sky, a passing ship has its light on, and it also explains the lack of bright reflection on the surface of the ocean. The experimental portraits were taken firing my Sunpak 4500DX flash (handheld), often over and over. Where there are two people (I have deliberately blurred the other person’s face, as a courtesy!) in the image, one of them being me, we had to sit very, very still (difficult for me to do!!) – not smiling (or talking, again hard to do!) as to hold the same smile for an extended period of time can be difficult and if you move your mouth, you get blur. Of course, this explains why those old nostalgic portraits from yesteryear tend to make you think the subjects weren’t that happy! I will also be doing some creative adjustments using Photoshop but will be including that information in the Technical Data. Hope you like this series! Mounted Print – Byron Bay Moon © / Technical Data / Nikon D70 / July 2004 / Close to Midnight / Tripod / Focal 92mm / F4.5 / 30second exposure / Original JPEG
...but I’m home now, and things still look the same. / ~ Dido ‘Sand in my Shoes’
Marloes beach near Dale in South Wales. Inspirational piece of coastline even in the worst weather there is always a photo opportunity
Early morning on the Porthmadog estuary and Borth-y-Guest harbour , North Wales The tide was coming in fast but there was no wind, making the water reflect the skye beautifully . canon 400D + sigma 10-20mm
Lone boat gently swaying in the incomming tide at Borth-y-Guest , not long after sunrise in early September. porthmadog Estuary, Snowdonia, North Wales. Canon 400D + 10-20mm and Lee ND grad filters
Standing on the southern side of Fingal Head with the lights of Kingscliff off in the distance. It was fairly dark when I took this long exposure, flattening the ocean and blurring the clouds. Lately I seem to get out with the camera on Fridays. Lucky as that’s what tomorrow is. I might head back down to Fingal
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