Silver tree 

557 creative works found

  • Photoshop

  • Entered in the 1620 group challenge, One. / I could go on for ages about how or why this image represents me, but basicaly i found my relation with it when my friend the other day described me as some one who is “a complete weirdo yet retains the ability to function normaly in society”. This relates as the image portrays an every day normal branch we would expect to see growing from the ground or any old pot, yet in this image it is growing from an underwater tea-cup. Above the surface, in the society its normal, however if we look a little deeper it isn’t exactly what we expect. This i feel applies to almost everyone, some more so than others however. Enjoy!

  • A panorama I shot at the Silverstar ski resort in Canada. I’d love to go back there one day. Other images from Silverstar: Silverstar / Snow Shack / More winter images

  • Trying a black and white version of the Birch image, hope it works. Kye http://www.acornconcepts.com / http://www.virtualorkney.com

  • Taken not far from a beautiful little town in Italy called Parma. /

  • I love it when the world offers up a great collection of elements in one space, and all you have to do is go ‘click’… RAF Museum Collindale, UK

  • another attempt at HDR using a single RAW silver star, Canada

  • This is a drawing I have done for David my nephew for his eighteenth birthday. He came loaded with images he liked and this is what I have come up with. Coloured Pencil on smooth cartridge paper Also available as a T Shirt

  • 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. Check out my autumn art A rather unconventional colour for autumn, but I like it just the same. In case it has gone unnoticed, I absolutely love this particular Photoshop leaf brush. The background is an old painting.

  • Untouched Photograph from my Colour & Motion Study series.

  • Fractal Explorer. Talis varI formula. Postwork in PI and PSP.

  • ‘Burning’ Original now sold 24″ x 18″ x2″ Oil painting The Quotes for this work: / “Time is the school in which we learn, Time is the fire in which we burn.” / Delmore Schwartz * / “Necessary, forever necessary, to burn out false shames and smelt the heaviest ore of the body into purity.” / D.H. Lawrence (1885 – 1930) / Source: Lady Chatterley’s Lover, 1928

  • Having a bit of a play around with some old hand coloured photo’s. This disperate group of handcoloured images owe nothing to Adobe in any way shape or form. They were shot with an old SLR using B/W film…. ahh film…. and then processed and printed in a wet darkroom on to Iford multigrade satin paper. Then the photographs were tinted with Marshalls very fine transulent photo oil paints then scanned with my very nice HP H4050 Scanjet flatbed scanner. The day after I took this photo…. the tree got chopped down… and it was in full bloom…. the saddest thing I ever saw….. sigh…..

  • Fractal Explorer JT 16 Rose Garden Formula. The Old Way.The most well worn, trod by countless numbers. Ways of The Ancients, the most true of all.

  • Photo taken in Alsace in eastern France

  • Mixed media, original is 19” x 25” In mythology, a harpy is a winged death spirit, with the head of woman and the body of a bird. She can be seen as terrible or beautiful. Recently sold as a laminated print

  • Cottages at the end of a lane in Wanlockhead, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. High in the Lowther Hills to the west of the M74, Wanlockhead is Scotland’s highest village at 467m (1531 ft). It owes its existence to the lead, gold and other minerals found under the surrounding countryside. These mineral deposits were probably first exploited by the Romans and from the 1200s they were being worked again by groups of miners who gathered here each summer. The first permanent settlement appeared in about 1680, when the Duke of Buccleuch built a lead smelting plant and workers’ cottages that could be occupied all year round. Although lead was for many centuries the mainstay of the village’s economy, it was not the only mineral found here. What became known as “God’s Treasure House” also produced zinc, copper, silver and gold. Some of the world’s purest gold, at 22.8 carats, was found locally and used in the Regalia of the Scottish Crown. Today’s Wanlockhead depends primarily on tourism. The Southern Upland Way long distance footpath passes through the village, but the main attraction for the motoring tourist revolves around the village’s industrial past. Information from Undiscovered Scotland. Camera: Canon EOS 450D (Digital Rebel XSi in the USA) / Exif data from the JPG / F-stop f/5.6 / Exp. time 1/125 sec (not even remotely accurate considering this is an HDR image) / ISO 200 / Focal length 51 mm BEST VIEWED LARGER Three bracketed JPGs converted to HDR in Photomatix. Related shots can be found at: Lowland Scotland. Featured in : You’re Accepted : 13 July 09 / Third place in the Cottages on Pathways Challenge in the Cottage Style Group : 27 July 09 / Featured in : UK to Australia and Back : 29 July 09 Click here for a random page of photographs /

  • A flight to Denver Colorado, a 5 hour drive to Togwotee Mountain Pass, USA at an altitude of 9767ft made for some spectacular scenary, but also made for the worst altitude sickness EVER. One by one our party fell ill, only I remained standing. I went out on Christmas Day, took various shots including this one from the car, I also took a video diary of the trip for everyone in bed. I should really dig it out as I remember they wern’t happy with my jolly commentary. Only after I got stuck in the snow did I begin to feel exceptionally ill. The trip was immediately cut short. I missed out on the Devils Tower Wyoming and Mount Rushmore. Dammit. Canon 10D, 70-200mm at 135mm, f/9.5, 1/90 sec, ISO 200. No filters used and mounted on the car door. A small amount of dust and scratches removed in photoshop. This shot is also available from a photobook collection called Rural Mementos by redtree.me © Copyright 2009 David Reid – redtree.me – All rights reserved.

  • Canon REbel Xt Canon L 70-200 /

  • A little bit of humor in the title …....... / A little love bird lost in a winter forest. The original measures 80×80 cms and was painted with acrylics on box canvas then metal foils were layered on top. / Original available for sale at – www.adamregester.com

  • A watercolour painting of silver birch trees in their autumn colours

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