Water west Wall Art

898 creative works found

  • I took this picture last winter in West Pennant, Nova Scotia Canada. I just learned that it was destroyed by sub tropical storm Noel. / / GET FREE REDBUBBLE GIFT CERTIFICATES / For every $50.00 worth of my artwork or T-shirts that you purchase on RedBubble, I will give you a $5.00 RedBubble gift certificate that you can use for future purchases on RedBubble. Just let me know who you are when you place your order and I will have RedBubble issue the gift certificate. / Subscribe to art updates / Subscribe to T-shirt updates / Become a fan on FaceBook / Add me as a friend on FaceBook / Follow me on Twitter _____________ / Check out more of my art from these categories: / Holiday Cards / Abstracts / Sketches / Birds / Seascapes/Landscapes/Sunsets / / / ______________ /

  • Imagine a leisurely trip down a serene river in a canoe carved from native timber without a care in the world….. This place was a photographer’s dream and another highlight of my recent trip to the island of Biak, West Papua. Well off the beaten track!

  • Boat house at Newmiller Dam, Wakefield West Yorkshire.Local Reservoir, Nature conservation site and overall lovely place to have a walk.

  • The sense of space was incredible on this beach….lung-fulls of the purest air, ripples of the cleanest water and the gentle weight of humidity. See this beach with the tide rolling in… Aqua Rhythm For enquires about canvas prints, or photographic prints larger than Redbubble options, please contact me via bubblemail

  • Blackwater waterfall is located in Davis, West Virginia. It is 57 feet high. / It feeds from the Blackwater River. The rocks behind the water are actually black. The “black” water is a result of tannic acid from fallen hemlock and red spruce needles, hence the name of the fall. / This is one of the many beauties I got to see while in WV. / If you view larger you will see a heron that was “fishing” at the bottom of the fall. I shot this in SS priority, with a SS of 1/8th of a second, focal length at 44mm, f-stop at 18, and ISO at 100.

  • I saw this as i was walking up towards Chanctonbury Ring (West Sussex, UK), and thought this would be a great texture for my second HDR attempt. Its amazing what you find in the middle of nowhere! / January 2009

  • A fall on the way up to Fairy Falls :) I climbed to the middle of the falls to take this. I’m calling this falls Lower Fairy Falls (no idea what the real name would be). You can barely see the tripod foot at the very bottom of the photograph (it looks like a rock). The trail to these falls starts at Wahkeena Falls. I found it amazing how symmetrical this is.

  • About a quarter of the majestic fairy falls. / Canon 450D

  • Despite occasional new snowfall and freezing temperatures, signs of spring are seen on the high desert plain. Run-off from melting mountain snow now floods our parched and frozen valley. Soon, the valley’s floor will change from winter amber-on-white to vibrant green-on-white. White; the perpetual color of alkali. Soon, the drying wind will come to drink up most of this nourishing water, until a mere trickle remains. Soon, wildlife and waterfowl will return to spend the summer days on eastern Nevada’s broad desert. / Northern Steptoe Valley – Eastern Nevada / (2009.MAR.07) RedBubble Album: High Desert Oasis Canon 350D EOS / Tamron 55-200mm Corel PhotoImpact x3

  • Fav shot of morning at Milsey Bay looking towards the Bass Rock. 10 second exposure using ND8 filter.

  • PRE SUNRISE VIEW,LOOKING FROM FRIARS CRAG ON THE SHORELINE OF DERWENT WATER,TOWARDS THE BORROWDALE VALLEY.

  • Hebden Water is a tributary of the River Calder. It starts form Widdop Moor, flowing through Hardcastle Crags and past Gibson Mill. Eventually joining the Calder in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire. Nikon D80 – Sigma 10-20mm lens – Polarisor

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Marakoopa Cave is a limestone cave in Mole Creek Karst National Park, north-west Tasmania. Mole Creek Karst National Park is a 40 minute drive west of Deloraine. The Mole Creek Karst National Park includes some of Tasmania’s most visited cave systems, including Marakoopa and King Solomons Cave, two of over 300 known caves and sinkholes in the area. A stalactite is a deposit of calcium carbonate which hangs from the ceiling or wall of a limestone cave and is formed by the dripping of mineralized solutions. The term “stalactite” is derived from the Greek meaning to fall in drops. Marakoopa Caves, Mole Creek Karst National Park, north-west Tasmania, Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/60sec / Aperture: F2.8 / ISO: 200

  • Smoky Cape Lighthouse, South West Rocks, NSW / Australia / Canon 350D Smoky Cape was named on 13 May 1770 by Captain Cook: the name arising from the great amount of smoke from Aboriginal burn-off fires on the headland. The lighthouse, first proposed in 1886, was to ensure the safety of the increasing coastal traffic on the colony of New South Wales northern seaboard. The light was completed and first exhibited in 1891 and has several claims to fame. With the dismissal of the renown James Barnet, who designed lights such as Cape Byron Lighthouse and the new Macquarie Lighthouse, and the abolition of his office of Colonial Architect, responsibility for future lighthouses passed to the Engineer-in-Chief for Harbours and Rivers. This marked the end of a lighthouse representing ‘architectural excellence’. From here on most would simply regarded as engineering projects with less and less regard to aesthetics. The other is the unusual feature of having a octagonal tower. This was because it was easier to cast the tower in the octagonal formwork than round formwork. The material used to cast the tower was concrete with local granite aggregate. Mr Oakes who won the contract to build the lighthouse complex died during construction and the work was completed by his executors. The tower is divided into two storeys, with iron floors and staircases. The crown is a typical Barnet being granite voussoir blocks supported on moulded granite cantilevers. The balcony sports an ornate gun metal railing stamped with Queen Victoria’s mark. The apparatus consisted of a first order lantern and lens system that is still in use today. The lantern revolved on rollers turned by a clockwork winding mechanism consisting of cables and weights. In 1912 the original Douglas burners, equipped with 6 concentric wicks, were replaced by Ford-Schmidt incandescent mantles fuelled by kerosene vapour. In 1962 the apparatus was converted to mains electricity. The roller pedestal was replaced with a thrust bearing model powered by an electric motor. With this the compliment of keepers were reduced from three to two. There is a small aperture below the balcony that once held a a subsidiary red light to cover Fish Rock. It is believed the light was automated in 1988 and has since been demanned. The complex consists of the tower and annexe, the headkeeper’s residence and assistant keepers residences as semi-detached cottages, a coach house and stables. As a result of the Commonwealth Lighthouses Act of 1911 this light was transferred in 1915 to Federal control because of it status as a coastal light. Information from Lighthouses of New South Wales

  • All photographs taken with a Canon 20D. 28-135 lens. / This is several photographs taken at South West Rocks, Australia. Featured in ‘All Original Fusion’ / /

  • South of Haystack Rock in Cannon Beach… oh about a mile or less south. Nikon D80 Sept 5th 09

  • These are some of the wetlands in Busselton, a coastal town in Western Australia captured on a very still morning Camera: Canon A590 IS Featured in Live, Love, Dream

  • This shot was taken the same day as “Crested Terns”. They may even be the same birds? I loved the waves in this shot. The great Southern Ocean was really pumping that day. Taken with a Panasonic FZ-20 For more beautiful images of Tasmania please visit RT Gallery

  • Well, I just discovered HDR :-) First attempt and with my camera not available, I will now have something to do

  • Abstract Macro Photography Nose to the ground for this one / Debry / broken bits and pieces / stones / metled plastic / general grim and decay Demolished works site / YCL / Kirkstall Road / Leeds

  • This is the same image as the previous one but this time processed in Photoshop as a Pseudo Infrared image. BEST VIEWED LARGE EOS 20D, 17-40mm (L) / www.davidlewins.co.uk

  • The running water is halted by the ice ! / I loved the contrast of the cold colours in the shadows, then the warm colours of the sunlit hill. / It was pretty dodgy clambering around the very icy boulders fringing the burn (river) but I survived ! / Taken last New Years, at Sligachan. / Shot on my Canon EOS 40D, on tripod, polariser, f22, 1/4 sec, iso 100, auto wb, processed in PS CS3, with selective levels/curves applied to first the foreground, then the sky. Selective colour also employed. MORE SEASONAL IMAGES HERE…...... /

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