Pine tree 

2666 creative works found

  • View from Silverstar ski resort Canada, taken just as the sun peeked through the clouds. Other images from Silverstar: Silverstar #2 / Snow Shack / More winter images

  • Sunset on the Isle of Pines, New Caledonia. Taken not far from our beach side accommodation, I must have taken nearly 50 shots of this tree in the few minutes before the sun finally disappeared behind the horizon. Other works from New Caledonia Dumbea / Gaol House / Watching the sun fall /

  • An early morning view of the Glasshouse Mountains. Pentax *ist DL , Sigma 18-200mm DC lens @ 26mm. Aperture priority f/14, 0.3s, ISO 200, spot metering, 2.00eV. Photo taken in RAW processed in ACDSee Pro.

  • Mystical moods from the Norwegian tall pine forest. October 2007.

  • Morning fog lies rises from the valley floor covering nearly, a couple of ridges dotted by golden larch trees emerge.

  • Widescreen wallpaper version – 1280×800 Gembrook Station, Puffing Billy Line / Victoria, Australia

  • Drops of rain on a pine tree…

  • I am constantly searching for the SPIRIT of trees and forests and have found that I am drawn to the mystical in my subjects. They speak to me and challenge me to hear their stories and capture the ethereal rather than the absolute concrete. Using my camera as a brush on the forest palette of greens, browns, reds, ambers, yellows, grays, blues and purples I create my images in camera capturing a moment in time when I have stopped to listen and share the sylvan secrets offered to me. Here a group of pines, planted in rows along a country road offers up their story, through a visual whisper. Featured at Forests – March 7, 2009 Featured at “Impressionist Photography” – March 16, 2009 Featured at “A Beautiful Blur’ – August 22, 2009 Featured at “Live, Love, Dream” – August 24, 2009 Featured at “Dimensions” – August 28, 2009 Featured in the Red Bubble Community – August 31, 2009

  • A photograph of a bubble on some twigs….much like the other one but this one had a lot more reflections and colors. You can see my camera and my hand in the middle as well. / It is very yellow, I don’t know how that happened, maybe the gloomy grey skies. Most of them are clear with blue and pink streaks. This one reminded me of colored mercury glass. / (I added shadow to bring out the colors more.)

  • Another from the pine forest in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, Sunday 20 April. With the picturesque shack, lichen covered pine trees, red mushrooms, and then the mist rolling in, I was torn in so many directions – in the end I made an attempt to get all elements in the one shot! / / Margo has kindly provided me with the following info on the red mushrooms – glad I didn’t taste any – I could have flown like Santa’s reindeers!!! / / (1) The Fly Agaric Amanita muscaria is the famous white-spotted red toadstool beloved of children’s book illustrators. They are widely known as one of the few poisonous fungi in the UK, but it is not generally realised that this is because they are in fact strongly psychedelic. Eaten raw, they cause stomach cramps, hallucinations1 and, possibly, death. In some parts of Europe they have long been associated with magic and legend. In Lapland, reindeer regularly get high on them and are seen to leap around, giving rise to the story of Santa’s flying reindeer. Lapps have a custom of deliberately feeding them to their deer, and then collecting and drinking the urine because most of the toxins are filtered out by the reindeer’s digestive system. 1 They are not the same thing as ‘magic mushrooms’. (2) Also, ‘toad-stuhl’ is a German name meaning ‘seat of death’. _ / Landscapes Trees Cards EOD Rusty Flowers Architecture Macro CatchAll DM / /

  • Lithuania You may also purchase my second poetry book / (I could send it for you by post) / . / / . My son`s works (CLICK) Landscapes Portraits Nudes Compositions Flowers Winters Collaborations Fogs ! ! Trees . ABOUT MY EXHIBITION The woks exhibited represent the linkup of two artists, a photographer and a sculptor. Such an attempt to blend two spheres of art is really innovative and a bit unexpected. There had been few who were successful in such an attempt. Both authors, blending their art by the means of the photo art, are the winners. Sculpture, as such, is rather a static art, sometimes “performing” in a specific, sometimes artificial, environment. However, the means of the plastic photography, seemingly, make the sculptures movable, dynamic; they make you feel the sculptures are moving. They become alive, start moving and react both to the environment and the views captured by the photographer. I would like the viewers also note the colour solutions of the photos, aimed at the strengthening of the overall impression of the imagery. The original blend and overlapping of two arts let see the impressive plastic metaphors, giving birth to various associations. CLICK PHOTO IF YOU WANT VIEW /

  • A lake high in the mountains of Utah

  • High on windswept ridges in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest in eastern California’s White Mountains live the planet’s oldest known living organisms – the ancient Bristlecone Pines (Pinus longaeva). Some of these trees were already growing when the Egyptians built the pyramids over 4000 years ago. The oldest known Bristlecone Pine is “Methuselah”. This gnarled and twisted tree is about 4,800 years old – and still able to reproduce. But only a few bristlecones have been able to grow to such incredibly old ages, survived ultraviolet rays, extreme cold, wind, and aridity in this harsh environment between the Eastern Sierra Nevada and Death Valley in an elevation between 10,000 and 11,000 feet (3,048 and 3,354 meters) above sea level. These old trees, the oldest living things on earth, 2800 years older than Christ, are now strictly protected by law and guarded carefully. “Thank you for being a friend” Card / Laminated Print / Please note: RedBubble automatically re-sharpens and adds contrast to uploaded images for web display. That’s why some originally properly exposed, sharp thumbnails and large previews appear too harsh and too sharp. / Printed Photographs are properly exposed and sharpened!

  • Kootenay River, (National Park) B. C., Canada.

  • Kootenay River, B. C., Canada.

  • I took this on the way home after a Christmas Concert by the Big Rock Singers and just had to share it right away. We have had a dump of six to eight inches of heavy wet snow lasting all day, causing me to shovel several driveways several times today. However, the absolute beauty of freshly fallen snow mixed with blue Christmas lights makes up for any of the day’s toils. Hope you like it.

  • Taken “à contre jour”....I liked the smooth lines made by the sun…St-Hippolyte,Quebec,Canada. / Nikon D200 / f 2.8 / iso 100 /

  • Misty haunting morning this morning, sitting in a pine plantation at Mt Burr in the Limestone Coast area of South Australia. Last hints of fog lifting as the sun rose towards a clear blue sky. Canon 400D 18-55 lens with ND4 filter. Three shot HDR converted in Photomatix and cropped to size. Damn it was cold!!!!!!!!!!

  • Out early this morning to watch the sun rise through the fog in a pine plantation at Mt Burr – Limestone Coast South Australia. Certainly worth the cold to see the beauty as the sun tried to force its way into the forest. Canon 400D 18 – 55 with ND4 filter. Processed in Photoshop CS3.

  • A rural road near home,autumn time.I love that light at the end like there’s always something to hope for in life…. / Taken with a Nikon D 200 / / Wayne Cook / Wonder where this goes, / Between the sun and the gravel track / One foot step and then one back, / My dance and a smile and shimmy, / Oh, suddenly I feel such joy! / One beautiful foggy road……and no end in sight:)

  • Twin Lakes located in Utah near Brighton Ski resort.

  • canon 5d mk ii 16-35 mm lens

  • Lazy Dayz / Candid shot of a boy in a tree on the Isle of Pines, New Caledonia. It reminded me of those carefree childhood days, the long summers with not a worry in the world. / Camera – Nikon D90 / Lens 55-200mm

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