Tack 

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  • The well worn saddle gear from an outback property.

  • Another image from my desk I created – I have to say I’m the one on the very left… Check out the rest of my Office Supplies series- I really like these blue pushpins :) /

  • I actually did this one a month or so ago- it has just been hiding away in my folders :) It probably doesn’t take much looking to figure out those are all the same pin and I photoshopped it- sadly I don’t have rainbow colored pushpins… wouldn’t they look cool! / / Check out the rest of my Office Supplies series and thanks to tommyjo for the collage he created in honor of my series!

  • Underside of interesting flower found and photographed at Wittunga Botanic Gardens / All artwork is copyright© to Stephen Mitchell, All Rights Reserved. / You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my express consent.

  • It was summer, it was hot, it was very humid, it was drizzling occasionally and it was also only a couple of hours after I had eaten one of the biggest Christmas dinners in my life. But there were photographs to be had down in this little cove so my host and I put up with all the discomforts, scrambled over rocks and ended up very damp but very happy photographers. The photograph was made at Tacking Point in Port Macquarie , NSW, Australia. Fuji S9600: RAW, Manual settings of f/11 @ 1/20sec, ISO80, Auto focus, Tripod mounted with Timer. / S7RAW & Photoshop CS. Find out more about Port Macquarie beaches if you wish. Visit the Seascapes collection in my BubbleSite Gallery for more stupendous seascapes. Enjoy! SEASCAPES – Tacking Point & Lighthouse Beach / (Click the links!) Icing on the Cake #1 / Frog Rock #1 / Balancing Rock #2 / Tacking Point from Sea Acres / Autumn Sail Past Tacking Point Light / Winter Beach Walk / Big Southerly Coming #3 / Build Up Over Lighthouse Beach / The Clouds Build Up Over Lighthouse Beach / Winter Sunset on Lighthouse Beach /

  • Copyright Daniel Rayfield Photography 2008 / I got to witness one of natures finest sunsets today , a fantastic end to a beautiful week. /

  • This is a print of my original acrylic of a tall ship heading for port in a stiff breeze with all sails flying.

  • BEST VIEWED LARGER No Filters, No Colour Enhancement, Just a Magic Moment and the wonders of HDR photography and wonderful sunset , great light and clouds . This is pure HDR generated from 5 bracketted images This shot was taken at Newport Wharf which is located on the shores of Pittwater north of Sydney. Easily accessable by car or public transport. Its the kind of place where you can wind down at the end of the day with a cold beer or a glass of Australian Chardonnay and watch the sun set in the west.. This is my neighbourhood about 5 minutes from my home, “Just a Little Touch of Paradise.” we get some great sunsets in winter. / So if youre visiting Sydney areas like this are within 40 klms of the city.

  • Canon S5 IS: Drawing Pins / thumb tacks photographed on a wet mirror /

  • Winning Photo 2009 Sydney International Boat Show Photographic Competition (Judges Award)

  • This version of the ‘attack’ rebus has the tack in yellow with black outlines.

  • A Nemadji Indian vase, western spurs, and rope. You may also like… /

  • © 2009 Fine Art Photography by Sharon Mau “Music was an important ingredient of ranch lifestyle, adding a joyous note to celebrations and gatherings and relieving the loneliness of paniolo working remote areas of the ranch. Before the era of television and other distractions, paniolo also serenaded their neighbors, bringing music and companionship to far-flung communities. Paniolo music was and is vocal, songs accompanied by guitar and/or `ukulele, stringed instruments whose portability is well-suited to cowboy life. Guitars arrived with the Mexican vaquero, while `ukulele developed later from the Portuguese branguiha brought by immigrants in 1879. Guitar playing grew a uniquely Hawaiian style called kiho`alu or slack-key. Open tuning of the strings produced a specific chord when the instrument was strummed. Some standard slack-key tunings are called taro patch, wahine and maunaloa. Other original tunings – more openly shared nowadays – were carefully guarded family secrets among older generations. Originally, slack-key guitar always accompanied song lyrics. Today it is often performed as a solo instrumental. The paniolo’s other instrument was his voice. Leo ki`eki`e or falsetto singing may have come from the Mexican falsetto tradition of the Vera Cruz area. It also had antecedents in ancient Hawaiian chant. Yodeling – later a popular element in country-western music – made an early appearance in paniolo songs. Church hymns strongly influenced paniolo harmonies. Paniolo songs document and celebrate ranch life. Always composed in the Hawaiian language, they portray personalities, events, work activities and special places. “Wiomina” tells of the 1908 rodeo in Cheyenne, Wyoming. “Me Ka Nani a `o Kaupo” describes Kaupo Ranch on Maui. A round-up of wild cattle is the subject of “Pu`uhuluhulu” and “Ku`u Hoa Hololio” talks about the partnership between a paniolo and his horse. Many songs use kaona, the veiled or metaphoric meaning of words so common to ancient chant and poetry. As an example, “Ne`ene`e Mai a Pili” is on one level about horseback riding, but the motions and emotions can also be understood as a description of lovemaking. Paniolo music is a folksong tradition with compositions passed on orally. Many songs have come to us passed down through families. While most songs were composed and played by paniolo themselves, composers like Charles E. King, Marcus Shutte and Sol K. Bright also wrote songs about paniolo although they were not cowboys themselves. While ranching has dwindled as an activity on the Islands, paniolo traditions live on. Singers like Sonny Chillingworth, Kindy Sprout and others perform and record the rich paniolo legacy.” Quote Text by hawaiihistory.org Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi / Shooting Date/Time 12 May 2009 17:23:51 / Shooting Mode Aperture-Priority AE / Tv 1/15 Av 6.3 Partial Metering ISO 100 / Lens EF28-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM / Focal Length 28.0 mm

  • THE SUBJECT: / The historical Tacking Point Lighthouse sits under the arch of a wonderful rainbow only minutes before the storm hit. THE LOCATION: / Photographed atop Tacking Point, Port Macquarie, NSW, Australia. THE MAKING OF ‘Bending Light’: / Call it serendipity or call it photographer’s luck but it was on a whim that I ended up at Tacking Point this day to witness this wonderful show put on by Mother Nature. / Only a minute after I made this shot the icy, driving winter wind was filled with icy winter rain and I got the heck out of there. / Fuji S9600: RAW, f/3.2 @ 1/640sec, Auto focus, ISO80, Hand held. / Lightroom 2.2 & Photoshop CS3. Visit the Architectural and Seascape collection in my BubbleSite Gallery for more lighthouses and ocean views. UPDATE: 15-7-09 / This wonderful seascape has been featured in the Nautical Group. UPDATE: 19-7-09 / Printed this on Ilford Galerie Smooth High Gloss Media and it came out beautifully. UPDATE: 28-7-09 / My light bending study has been featured in the All About Your Best Work Group. Enjoy! ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN – Lighthouses / (Click the links!) Bending Light – Tacking Point Lighthouse / Tacking Point Lighthouse Under the Arch / Smokey Cape Lighthouse Silhouette /

  • This is a headstudy of an imported stallion from Mexico. It was amazing to see the harmony between him and his rider,the kind of harmony that is only acheived through mutual respect and trust. All the while he stood quietly as children ran beneath him,playing with his tail. All images are protected by copyright and no usage of any kind ,including interpretations for paintings is allowed without permission of artist. Signed fine art prints are available by contacting me. Member of the Equine Arts Protection League.

  • started as a bracket, then layer, and then adjusted layers and masks, shot a 50th and 125th f6.3 iso 800 it is two photographs.. I would like to dedicate this photograph to the competitors in the 2009 Long Island Equestrian special Olympics, to the families of these competitors, and the volunteers than make riding possible to the competitors, to the family member who were shooting there families, children and grand children, who made it a point to take to me about photography, they awesome people. Shooting this event was a very touching experience I will not forget.

  • Tacking Point LightHouse,Port Macquarie,NSW,Australia

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