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1595 creative works found

  • The Twelve Apostles

  • Shot on the way up to Bowfell in the English lake district national park in Cumbria England / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens

  • psuedo hdr Sold mounted print to mystery RB buyer Dec 2008. / © Copyright 2008 Squealia, All Rights Reserved

  • Suddenly, the path turns and looking out from the dark bushes, I see the Indian Summer sunshine creating a soft oasis of autumnal colour in the midst of the Weald. /

  • After driving up through the mountains of Killarney, this wonderful view (Ladies View) can be seen looking down into the valley where some of the lakes can be seen nestled in amongst the mountains. Once part of the enormous Herbert estate at Muckross, the road to this scenic vista was improved in honor of Queen Victoria’s visit in 1861. The panorama inspired such awe and gasps of admiration from the Queen’s ladies in waiting that it was dubbed “Ladies’ View.” From this point, the Upper Lake, Middle Lake, Black Valley, MacGillycuddy Reeks, and Gap of Dunloe are clearly visible. http://www.redbubble.com/products/configure/6554993

  • Saw this guy looking out over the Lyth valley that was covered in fog. / Shot near Brigsteer in the English lake district national park Cumbria. / Shot witha Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens. /

  • Another shot of Glen nevis and river nevis in Scotland taken summer 2008, though you may not believe that from the weather we were having, another visit is on the list but not sure when..(weather permiting) / Camera: Nikon D70s / Lens: 18-70 mm /

  • A shot of Ingleborough from Twistleton lane near Ingleton in the Yorkshire dales national park, this was shot on part of my Ingleton waterfalls trail. / Ingleborough is one of the famous Yorkshire dales 3 peaks. / Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens / / Height of Ingleborough is 723 m (2373 ft) /

  • Saw this tree on a walk around the rolling hills of the Lancashire Coutryside near the village of Chipping and the hills of the forest of Bowland. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens. /

  • Shot in November 2006 along the Loughrigg terrace over looking Grasmere in the English lake district national park in Cumbria / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /

  • Shot in the area of Swale dale in the Yorkshire dales national park England. / This old barn attracted my eye against the beautiful Yorkshire landscape behind.. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens /

  • There are references to the “Whitemill” (the building of ‘A Bridge on the River Stour adjacent to the White Mill) in the year 1175 and again in 1326. What is, perhaps, significant is that other places appear to have taken their names from Whitemill (Whitemill Farm, Whitemill Bridge) rather than the mill taking its name from the village. In 1326 we find a deed: “John Chyke to Peter le Boyt – all his tenements at Wytemull… together with part of his mill” which hints that the mill may once have been “Wytemull Mill”. It is possible that an earlier building on the site, presumably of timber framed construction, might have been limewashed. A more likely explanation ties in with the fact that a former chalk pit (now the car park) behind the mill, and that the west end of the building appears to stand on an artificial island made largely from chalk. So it wouldn’t just have been the mill that was white, the whole area would have been white from all the chalk. The mill was rebuilt in 1776 on much older foundations, on a site that is older still. The present mill worked under water power until 1866 when a severe winter flood breached the diversionary works in the river so severely that they were deemed beyond economic repair. By this time the miller was also the local baker so, rather than simply closing the mill, he converted one half of it to run from a portable steam engine in order to keep his bakehouse supplied with flour. Commercial milling however appears to have ended with the flood. With the retirement of the last miller, around the end of the Nineteenth century, the working life of the mill came to an end and the millstones came to rest. After the turn of the century, the tenancy changed hands a couple of times in quick succession and the building spent the next 85 years rotting away as little more than a farm shed. Whitemill, along with the rest of the Kingston Lacy estates, was bequeathed to the National Trust by Ralph Bankes in 1982, but it wasn’t until 1994 that the Trust found the resources (£300,000) to begin the painstaking conservation of the property. The body of the current mill is built of brick, but the Wheelchamber is of quality stone construction. This stonework dates, we are told, to sometime in the fourteenth century, around the period when the Duke of Lancaster held the manor as a grant from the King. It is clear that when it came to the 1776 re-build, the builders considered that the power-plant was good enough to retain even though the superstructure (probably timber framed) was ruined. This fourteenth century dating is reinforced by the discovery of timbers in the foundations, during the underpinning of the river end wall, which have been radio-carbon dated to the same era. It is probable that the current mill is simply the last in a long line of rebuilds on the same foundations.

  • While on a walk up in to the hills of the forest of Bowland (AONB) last summer at the ruins of Burnslack barn near Chipping in Lancashire, these dogs were in our company and I snapped this shot while they were checking out the views.. / Shot with a nikon D70s and nikon 18-70mm lens. / /

  • Shot overlooking the Langdale valley in the English lake district national park Cumbria. / Shot with a Nikon d70s and 18-70mm lens. /

  • The langdale valley as shot from the Loughrigg fells in the English lake district national park Cumbria. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens / HDR tonemapped image /

  • Grass in a shadow, nikon D60 TOP TEN IN THE CHALLENGE From the Ground UP

  • Early morning view of mountain ridges and valleys from the Appalachian Trail near Carver’s Gap and Roan Mountain on the North Carolina/Tennessee border. / In mid to late June, this area is covered with pink and purple rhododendron and flame (orange) azaleas in bloom. / Nikon D50 18-55 kit lens. CP filter / Photomatix HDR -3 exposures /

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery View to Cradle Mountain Cradle Mountain National Park, World Heritage Area, Tasmania. Cradle Mountain forms the northern end of the wild Cradle Mountain to Lake St Clair National Park, itself a part of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area. The jagged contours of Cradle Mountain epitomise the feel of a wild landscape. The Cradle Mountain region is an area of marked geological contrasts. The region has been extensively shaped by glacial erosion and deposition over the past 2 million years. The various glaciers which covered the area have left behind a variety of glacial features including the U-shaped valley of the Dove River. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/640sec / Aperture: F4.0 / ISO: 80

  • Shot on my trip up to the lake district national park today Tuesday 21st July 2009 to meet up with Steve Smith and Lesley G to shoot some wonderful views. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and 18-70mm lens.. / This is a shot of Derwentwater and the jaws of Borrowdale as seen from Castlehead viewpoint in Keswick. / f13 / 1/25 sec / ISO200 / Handheld /

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery One of the many beautiful scenes taken on our walk from Fortescue Bay to the William Pitt Shipwreck. Fortescue Bay, Tasman National Park, Tasmania, Australia. For more information on Fortescue Bay – Click HERE Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/1000sec / Aperture: F4.0 / ISO: 80

  • Nikon D60 + orton effect / 1/160 f/13.0 ISO100

  • November 2009 / Shot on a recent visit to Tarn Hows in the English Lake district national park, Cumbria. / Shot with a Nikon D300 and 18-70mm lens / f18 / 1/6sec / ISO 100 / polariser fitted / Tripod used /

  • “Sunrise at Motion Bay” was taken at Maddox Cove, Newfoundland, Canada.

  • Filey, North Yorkshire, UK / Nikon D300 / Tamron 10-24mm / 1/13 f/3.5 / PP in Photoshot SC3 including textures

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