Photography shadow 

1645 creative works found

  • Enjoy!

  • All work in this portfolio is © Stephanie Rachel Seely. / These materials (images and poems) may NOT be edited, copied, reproduced, printed, distributed, displayed, performed, or used in any way, in whole or in part, without my written permission. Please respect copyright and do not save or upload any images or poems to Photobucket, Flickr, Myspace, Facebook etc. These creative materials are NOT public domain. This work was featured in A Fascinating Purple Check out my autumn art

  • Third Avenue, New York City Copyright

  • Second in the series!

  • David Iori Photography Website / Email Me / . / © Copyright 2008 David Iori Photography, All Rights Reserved Shot with a Nikon FA and ILFORD FP4 125 Film Developed and then scanned @ 4000 DPI. I wanted to try and catch the shadows cast on the rocks and ground from the surrounding foliage. I’m looking forward to wet printing this image. Taronga Zoo To Bradleys Head Walk Sydney Harbour National Park, has a choice of three walks. The longest takes you around the foreshore, through Bradleys Head to Chowder Bay (about four hours return). The path is mostly good though there are some fairly steep steps. Bradleys head offers spectacular harbour views. Once a cannon emplacement, it features a monument to the four navy ships that have borne the name HMAS Sydney. The park is home to many varieties of wildlife – it is a favourite nesting place of the ringtail possum.

  • Edition of 5 / Signed print available through www.illyphotography.com

  • Enjoy!! _

  • “Growth in the City” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © A surreal depiction of how high rises in a city seem to emerge from the horizon as if built overnight. Sydney, New South Wales. “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.” / ~ Winston Churchill /

  • This Rose Bud waiting to open up for the world to see, was in the garden at the Swan Inn, at the back of Dawlish. / It had a leaf directly above it, like a roof protecting it from the rain, but also shadowing the poor thing. I hope you like it. / Thank you for looking. Pentax K110D. / Sigma 70-300mm Macro.

  • Afternoon light filtering through the trees… Location: Woodside (Adelaide Hills), South Australia Taken in Autumn ‘08 Top 10 place in the Leafy Landscapes challenge, November 2009 Featured in The Adelaide Hills group 2008 More from the Autumn Afternoon Series… 786 views, November 2009

  • No not really. Cropping refers to the removal of the outer parts of an image to improve framing, accentuate subject matter or change aspect ratio. Depending on the application, this may be performed on a physical photograph, artwork or film footage, or achieved digitally using image editing software. The term is common to the film, broadcasting, photographic, graphic design and printing industries. Other images from Melbourne/Inner city suburbs and city streets

  • I return to this exact spot a lot. I have to say it is one of my favorite places to take photographs. This canyon is one of nature’s great cathedrals. It’s hard to explain the feeling that comes over you when you are standing there staring out across the water…Especially during this time of year, when there is nobody else out there. You can have the whole place to yourself, or share it with someone special.

  • Sunset over the Blue Ridge Mountains, captured at Shenandoah National Park in Virginia. Featured work in “Mountains & Mountain Light”, ”#1 Artists of Red Bubble” and “JPG Castoffs ” – May 2009. Equipment : Nikon D200 – Nikkor 12-24 F2.8 ED lens – Circular Polarizer – Manfrotto Tripod. All content & images © Stephen Vecchiotti. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.

  • Winter: Alt. Stadt Innsbruck. Canon 450D / Aperture: f/4 / Shutter: 1/4000 / ISO: 800 / Lens: EF50mm f/1.8 II

  • Okanagan Lake, Penticton BC, Canada- Winter 2008

  • Beautiful little white flowers and great light in a mess of weeds in the backyard…

  • WINNER of the challenge Whitby Whitby / North Yorkshire, UK The History of Whitby Whitby has a wonderful history, a ruined abbey, a working harbour, a delightful collection of red-roofed pantile cottages, narrow cobbled streets, and claims to have the country’s best fish and chip shops. The town is also close to the scenic North York Moors National Park and the unspoilt fishing villages of Staithes and Robin Hood’s Bay. Whitby is divided in two by the River Esk. St Mary’s Church and Whitby Abbey are on the eastern headland. The Abbey is accessible by road, and also via 199 steps from the town to the summit. These steps have associations with Bram Stoker, as he based much of his Dracula novel here whilst staying in Whitby in 1890. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (better know as Lewis Carroll) also set some of his work and poems in Whitby, as he was a regular visitor. The Abbey’s history dates back to 675 A.D. when St. Hilda founded a monastery. The present structure is from 1078 and is now in the care of English Heritage. Nikon D60 / Nikkor 18-200mm / HDR one shot, handheld / PS CS3 effects / f/13.0 1/125 ISO100

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