A deep, cold pool down in the bowels of Hancock Gorge. Not much sun gets down here due to the high, narrow walls of the gorge.
This Edwardian building, once the home for cotton trading in Manchester, has a roof with three glass domes, and on this sunny afternoon their shadows were falling onto the parquet flooring. You might imagine that the single person walking down the hall was pre-arranged, but in fact she just appeared as I was about to take my one and only shot!
5 PM, Corner 5th Avenue, Midtown Manhattan Copyright
This image was created using a cropped version of Crossing Swords / / / / / © Shelley Heath (aka Soul Creates), Copyright 2008, All rights reserved.
Macro rock photography. /
Artist at work / Melbourne Graffiti 2008 Melbourne Graffiti Artists This laneway in Melbourne is a gallery for artist to express themselves it is well know around the world for the beauty young emerging graffiti artists can contribute to it. / Melbourne Graffiti has become a tourist attraction and a popular backdrop for fashion and wedding photography / / / Art 4 a day Grafitti artist preparing his wall, / will continue till night falls, / hopefully his work will be there in the morning
“Discos” ~ Compact disks hanging in a Solola, Guatemalan market ~ October 2008
Banryutei rock garden (Karesansui), Kôyasan, Japan.
Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Abstract Patterns of a Fan Palm
A sheet of weathered metal with rusty lines which to me, looked like tiger strips. I am so drawn to rust and abstract patterns. Captured in Toronto with the Nikon D200, Tamron 17-50mm
Close-up photography, taken of lovely symmetrical sea urchins. The texture fascinates me. / Captured February 2009, Perth, Australia. © Gudrun Eckleben, www.geeart.com
Criss Cross patterns formed by shadows on a small footbridge. B&W was the only option for this. Hope you like it. / Thank you for looking.
20-05-09 Featured in Color and light Group / Top10 in Patterns in Flowers – MACRO Challenge by Shapes & Patterns Group Canon EOS 450D Ef-S 18-55mm + macro filter / Tv 8 sec / Av f/32 / ISO 200 / Converted form RAW / Lightroom 2 + Photoshop CS4
Abstract plant, in Berlin (Germany)...
Florence Oregon, USA. I apologize for the simplicity of this image…there is just something about it that I find appealing.
This is a shot of a detail of a rock I found near the seashore. Looked like a stone or rock used for construction purposes and now exposed by the constant water erosion. /
Texture Series Bakery 164 / Woodhouse Lane / Leeds
A little aphid (1 mm.) on a little rose. Sony Alpha 100 + Minolta 50 mm. 2.8 macro / iso 100, f 4, 1/80 sec. Thank you for your attention. Featured in the group Images & Ideas / Featured in the group Photography – Rule of Thirds Top ten in the challenge Bugs on Flowers
PORTMEIRION is an Italianate resort village in Gwynedd, on the coast of Snowdonia in Wales. The village is located near Penrhyndeudraeth, on the estuary of the River Dwyryd, two miles southeast of Porthmadog, and one mile from the railway station at Minffordd, which serves both the narrow gauge Ffestiniog Railway and Arriva Trains Wales (Cambrian Line). / Portmeirion has served as a location for films and television shows, most famously serving as The Village in The Prisoner. / THE PRISONER is a 17-episode, British television series which was first broadcast in London from the 1st of October 1967 to the 4th of February 1968. Starring and co-created by Patrick McGoohan, it combined spy fiction with elements of science fiction, allegory, and psychological drama. / The series follows a British former secret agent who is held prisoner in a mysterious seaside village where his captors try to find out why he abruptly resigned from his job. Although sold as a thriller in the mould of McGoohan’s previous series, Danger Man (called Secret Agent in its U.S. release), the show’s combination of 1960s countercultural themes and surreal setting had a far-reaching effect on science fiction/fantasy programming, and on popular culture in general. Nikon D300 / Nikkor 18-200mm / HDR (one shot handheld) in Photomatix pro 3.2 / and pp in PS CS3
PORTMEIRION is an Italianate resort village in Gwynedd, on the coast of Snowdonia in Wales. The village is located near Penrhyndeudraeth, on the estuary of the River Dwyryd, two miles southeast of Porthmadog, and one mile from the railway station at Minffordd, which serves both the narrow gauge Ffestiniog Railway and Arriva Trains Wales (Cambrian Line). / Portmeirion has served as a location for films and television shows, most famously serving as The Village in The Prisoner. / THE PRISONER is a 17-episode, British television series which was first broadcast in London from the 1st of October 1967 to the 4th of February 1968. Starring and co-created by Patrick McGoohan, it combined spy fiction with elements of science fiction, allegory, and psychological drama. / The series follows a British former secret agent who is held prisoner in a mysterious seaside village where his captors try to find out why he abruptly resigned from his job. Although sold as a thriller in the mould of McGoohan’s previous series, Danger Man (called Secret Agent in its U.S. release), the show’s combination of 1960s countercultural themes and surreal setting had a far-reaching effect on science fiction/fantasy programming, and on popular culture in general. Nikon D300 / Nikkor 18-200mm / 1/620 f/22.0 ISO3200
Strictly for the digital photographers out there. This ©Naf4D ©ColorCheck is to go along side my 18% Grey Test Tee ....seeing as it’s proven to be a very popular buy. Accuracy of Colours not guaranteed – just a bit of fun! ;-) /
An image I took at the hospital outside of my doctor’s office. Beautiful architecture
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