Stone view 

490 creative works found

  • composite from two shots only a few miles apart in Marshall, NC. USA. E-510.

  • St Nicholas Chapel St Ives Cornwall England

  • Lonely pylon on a wooden jetty early in the morning with heavy clouds after a storm.

  • On the Summit Road through Mt Cavendish Scenic Reserve near Christchurch NZ, there is a small structure which is the Pioneers Woman’s Memorial. This is a view through one of the window openings. Camera:Olympus FE240 compact – auto setting Featured in Photography 101 Group 132 Views as at 20/11/09

  • Another image taken in Rosh HaNikra, North Israel. At the border with Lebanon. / Copyrights© Nira Dabush

  • Stronge light shafts bursting through forest foliage onto cascading Water. Wide angle long exposure capture using Gradient Filters.

  • Featured in Dilapidated Buildings 25th November, 2008. This church in Doon, Ballybunion closed it’s doors to its congregation a few short years after the new, St John’s, church opened in the town centre on 1st August, 1897. The parish could not afford to keep two churches going. / Doon church is used these days as a storage building for farm equipment.

  • The architecural detail on the inside of the Wisconsin State Capital was simply incredible. This is an HDR image, then converted to B&W. Somehow I really managed to get a 3-D effect out of this. For a view in color, click below: / To see an outside view of this buiding: /

  • looking down on a photographer taking some wedding photos

  • Rainbow Series: 2 BLUE ‘ Featured in the group Out of the Blue Featured in the group Colors of Water. Featured in the group Waves. “Featured in the group Extraordinary Fractalius My other works: / A LARGER view to see more in detail… / (Long side is only 1024 here) EXIFr />Taken with a *Canon EOS 400D Digital. Exposure: 30 sec (30) ISO Speed: 1600 Aperture: f/32 Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows Metering Mode: Pattern Focal Length: 54 mm Exposure Program: Shutter priority Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV Flash: Flash did not fire White Balance: Manual On The Calender Page / /

  • My other works: / A LARGER view to see more in detail… / (Long side is only 1024 here) Featured in the group SEA Featured in the group Bubblers’ Weekly Challenge EXIF: / Taken with a Canon EOS 400D Digital. Exposure: 30 sec (30) ISO Speed: 100 Aperture: f/4.5 Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows Metering Mode: Pattern Focal Length: 28 mm Exposure Program: Shutter priority Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV Flash: Flash did not fire

  • The view on a miserable, cold, frosty, misty day across the River Stour from the bridge on Mill Lane by White Mill between Shapwick and Sturminster Marshall, Dorset, England. This narrow (about 9’ [3m]) bridge covers a rather wide span of the river. The span is increased at this point by an extra loop of river cut out to flow under the mill, which stands behind me. The build allowed for small recesses (see shot) in the road between each arch to let pedestrians stand aside from traffic. White Mill bridge is described as ‘the oldest and most beautiful in the county’. There are references to the building of a ‘Bridge on the River Stour adjacent to the White Mill’ in the year 1175. An investigation into the foundations showed that the bridge stands on timber pilings. These have been carbon dated to the 12th C. The original arches were rebuilt in the 16thC. The bridge, built principally of heathstone and Purbeck stone, possesses eight arches, and has undergone extensive repairs in the 20thC, although the original oak piles still remain in place. It has never been widened, this may well be the result of its being of a generous width for a medieval bridge in the first place.

  • MJRANUM Photomanipulation

  • The Colosseum in Rome, Italy during a sunrise.

  • Must View Larger “Lincoln Cathedral is one of the finest gothic buildings in Europe. Here you will find information about its past history, its present activities and our hopes for its future. I hope you will come and visit Lincoln Cathedral to discover its wonders for yourself and receive a blessing.” - The Very Reverend Philip Buckler / (Dean of Lincoln) Canon 5D Mk2 / 16mm / ISO 100 / F14 6 Photos stitched together and made into a sphere

  • Peasholm Park is an oriental themed municipal park located in the seaside town of Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. It opened in 1912 and became a favourite venue for galas, displays and exhibitions. The park was extended to include Peasholm Glen, a natural ravine, in 1924. Attractions include an artificial boating lake, where mock naval battles are staged, a putting green and a champion tree walk. Peasholm Park is sited on the north side of the town of Scarborough in a mainly residential area. The site is about 14-hectares and takes in a narrow steep-sided valley running north-east towards North Bay. The valley gradually broadens until it opens out on to low-lying ground closer to the sea. History / The park is on the site of a medieval manor house of Northstead which was part of the Crown Estate from the 14th century. By the beginning of the 20th century the area was open land used for farming and as allotments. In 1911 Scarborough Corporation bought some land called Tuckers Field from the Duchy of Lancaster to create a public park. It was the borough engineer, Harry W Smith, who had the idea of setting out the gardens in Japanese style. Japanese style statues in the park were purchased from Killerby Hall and exotic shrubs and flowers were imported from the home of a local retired banker who was living in the French Riviera. In 1924 the park was extended south-westwards along Peasholm Glen following the purchase of more land from the Duchy of Lancaster 1921. Parts of the east side of the Glen were in private ownership and these were donated to the Corporation. The park was used for aquatic displays, musical performances and evening firework displays. It becoming immensely popular in the immediate pre- and post-Second World War period. After a period of decay a programme of restoration was initiated. Improvement works have been made possible by the granting of funding of over £300,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund and additional funds from Scarborough Borough Council. Following the draining of the lake, work was undertaken to remove the large amount of silt in the lake bottom,with the aim of removing enough silt to free sufficient water capacity for the lake to operate successfully. The park remains open and in public ownership. Nikon D60, hand held / Lens: Nikkor 18-200mm / 1/60 f/7.1 ISO200 / Single file HDR in Photomatix Pro & PP in PS CS3

  • A 360 degree planet of Lincoln Cathederal and surrounding buildings Please visit my website / PaulThompsonPhotography Canon 5DMk2 / F11 / ISO 100 / 16mm full frame / 8 shots / HDR / 1 Raw File splt into 3 exposures -2/0/+2 / Photomatix

  • Believed to be the oldest man-made navigation in the country that is still navigable, the Fossdyke stretches 11 miles from the River Trent at Torksey Lock and arrives at Brayford Pool. More information on the Fossdyke Canal can be found on the Waterscape website. / Following the Fossdyke and the Witham through the ages Early history / Some historians and archaeologists believe that the Fossdyke Canal was built by the Romans around 120AD to link the River Trent with their city at Lincoln. The earliest definite documentary reference to the Fossdyke Canal is from 1121. 13th century – 16th century / Waterways were responsibility of various landowners and the Church; maintenance inefficient and by 17th century almost impassable (though Lincoln still England’s 4th largest port in 13th century) 18th – 19th century / Fossdyke is leased to various parties – on understanding that trading profits would be used to maintain the waterway 1753 / Act of Parliament leads to straightening and dredging of Witham and Fossdyke 1766 / Grand Sluice and lock built at Boston to protect Witham from tide and flood damage Early 1800s / Major schemes to alleviate problems caused by mud in the tidal section of the Witham between the coast and Boston. Witham was also straightened and deepened between Lincoln and Boston. 1846 / Witham and Fossdyke leased to Great Northern Railway Company End 19th century / Both navigations running at a loss Early 1950s / Regular barge traffic along Witham ceased 1964 / Brayford Pool cleared, 25 wrecked boats removed 1969 / Brayford Trust established 1972 / Commercial carrying along Fossdyke Canal ceased / Please visit me at my website / PaulThompsonPhotography / Canon 30D / ISO 200 / F11

  • On Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park

  • Meldon Reservoir, near Okehampton, Devon within the Dartmoor National Park. What a glorious hot day it was today for the 10th October. Nikon D40 18-55mm

  • PORTMEIRION is an Italianate resort village in Gwynedd, on the coast of Snowdonia in Wales. The village is located near Penrhyndeudraeth, on the estuary of the River Dwyryd, two miles southeast of Porthmadog, and one mile from the railway station at Minffordd, which serves both the narrow gauge Ffestiniog Railway and Arriva Trains Wales (Cambrian Line). / Portmeirion has served as a location for films and television shows, most famously serving as The Village in The Prisoner. / THE PRISONER is a 17-episode, British television series which was first broadcast in London from the 1st of October 1967 to the 4th of February 1968. Starring and co-created by Patrick McGoohan, it combined spy fiction with elements of science fiction, allegory, and psychological drama. / The series follows a British former secret agent who is held prisoner in a mysterious seaside village where his captors try to find out why he abruptly resigned from his job. Although sold as a thriller in the mould of McGoohan’s previous series, Danger Man (called Secret Agent in its U.S. release), the show’s combination of 1960s countercultural themes and surreal setting had a far-reaching effect on science fiction/fantasy programming, and on popular culture in general. Nikon D300 / Nikkor 18-200mm / 1/620 f/22.0 ISO3200 / used of Orton Effect in PS CS3

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