Rapid river 

537 creative works found

  • This was taken at Sheep River Falls, Alberta when several kayakers came through. Some portaged around the falls. A couple of them made the jump.

  • A fine autumn day on the Ontonagon River in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

  • Chimney Rock, NC. E-510. 100mm. 1 sec @ f16. iso 100.

  • Watendlath Beck in the English Lake District National Park.

  • This beautiful waterfall in county Leitrim, Ireland was made famous by W.B Yeates poem “The Stolen Child”

  • Murray River before the swell. / Dwellingup / Western Australia

  • Canon EOS 30D A solitary Granite Boulder standing defiantly against the force of a fast flowing river. Scotland has magnificent landscape and views, virtually, everywhere you look but I do tend to see the intimate shots that buried within them. I love detail that nature can show and reveal to you. / This image is one such example. This granite boulder was standing defiantly (hence the name) against the fiercely rampant waters of the River Findhorn, high in the highlands of Scotland. It is one of those marvels that I just love to see – isn’t nature amazing?

  • Had a day out taking a few waterfall details, trying to capture the speed and flow of the River which was full of brown/peaty flood water.

  • Keila Cascade was shot a in the Estonia.

  • I took several pictures of water streaming over the ice and rocks of the Kootenay River, and the colours and textures of this particular rapid made a stunningly elemental composition. There is something about the movement of water over rocks and ice that always reminds me of the raw power of winter in the Rocky mountains. Photographed with my Canon Rebel XT and 15-55mm lens.

  • Shooting along Tremont, we Finally have some water in our rivers, due to a very nice rain season for the year, definitely beats last year of 2007’s drought. / I was playing around with shutterspeed on this showing a new photographer friend of mine from Ohio what the different settings produce. I am trying to get Lou here on the bubble, I didnt warn him about the addiction tho :) / Great thing about digital, we can experiment all we want, and just delete if we dont like. So I am always up for experimenting, especially when my subject isnt taking off in the woods. I shot this in shutterspeed priority / SS set at 1/4th of a second / F-stop at F29 / ISO at 100 / Focal length at 187mm / Exposure Comp at -0.3

  • Aira Beck in the Lake District National Park, Cumbria, England.

  • The Williams River is a tributary of the Gauley River, 33 miles (53 km) long, in east-central West Virginia, USA. Via the Gauley, Kanawha and Ohio Rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining an area of 132 square miles (342 km) in a sparsely populated region of the southern Allegheny Mountains and the unglaciated portion of the Allegheny Plateau. Taken Febuary 15 , 2009 . / Nikon D40 18-135mm W/Tripod /

  • © copyright 2009 All Rights Reserved / You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent. My husband purchased a new camera for me, I have been having issues with my other one. I used a Canon EOS, Digital Rebel XT with Lens Canon EF 70-300mm., Shutter speed was 1/8 sec., F-stop and aperture value was F/32, ISO 100, and Focal Length was 70.0mm. I took a series of this river, because I could not get over the color! My mom and I drove up this dirt road outside Hagerman, Idaho to see the Malad River, this is exactly what we found. The Malad River is a tributary of the Snake River, in Idaho in the United States. It is formed by the confluence of the Big Wood River and the Little Wood River near Gooding. From there the river flows south and west for 11.5 miles to join the Snake River near Hagerman. The river’s flow is affected by numerous reservoirs and irrigation works on its tributaries. The Malad River itself is largely diverted into a power flume that enters the Snake below the mouth of the Malad, via a powerhouse. Below the diversion the Malad River is replenished by numerous springs, yet the average flow above the diversion is higher than at the river’s mouth.

  • Lines drawn in time / bending like Dali’s clocks / Fluid, soft and languid / running away never to return / Never to return / Never to return. - The Canon 5D and the Heliopan polarizing / filter strike again. f22, 4 sec exposure, ISO 50, White Balance Mode: Shade / shot on a windy day

  • Bubbling rapids is one picture Kuttilan from the rapids far exposure for the time… with ndx400 filter. Near in the Salo southern Finland. Canon EOS 40D / Sigma 18-200mm F3.5-6.3 DC OS with NDX400 filtter / 30s / f/27 / ISO100 / 51mm This image are © Veikko Suikkanen. You may not use any images (in whole or in part) without written consent from artist. All rights reserved.

  • River Goddess is my first drawing in my Goddess Series. Drawn on 11 July 2009

  • View Large Flowing south from the Continental Divide to warmer climates / Taken on hwy 93 south in BC / Olympus E510 14/42 lens / July 11 09 / HDR Photomatix 3.2 lightroom 2.3

  • BEST VIEWED LARGE! / The Nahatlatch Park protects one of the largest intact wetlands remaining in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia. A series of small streams flow into, out of, and between the three lakes in the park; Frances, Hannah, and Nahatlatch. Their waters drain into the Nahatlatch River, which is 20 km upstream from its confluence with the Fraser. The powerful Nahatlatch River features a spectacular series of rapids, ideal for river rafting and kayaking. Those seeking a more tranquil experience will enjoy canoeing around and between the placid lakes, swimming in the backwater pools, and fishing along the lakeshores. Other activities for summer recreationists include backcountry hiking, and bird and wildlife viewing, and camping in a rustic setting. /

  • Featured in The World As We See It, or as we missed it. – Oct 27th, 2009 Located on Hwy 105 on the way from Vermillion Bay to Red Lake, Ontario, Canada / Canon XT with 100mm lens, f/32, 1/10sec, ISO-200, 100mm.

  • Near Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario Nikon D90 with 18-200 mm AF-S Nikkor lens

  • Bow River in Banff National Park AB Canada / Inspired by the all those who fight to save our wildlife and their habitats. Groups such as these include The Wildlife Conservation Society of Canada /

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 310,800 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Rapid River T-Shirts

Rapid River Wall Art

Rapid River Journal Entries

Rapid River Writing

Rapid River Calendars