Waterloo 

196 creative works found

  • 40km round trip walking, 3 days waiting – One image. The quiet little patch of beach that is Little Waterloo Bay isn’t the worst space I’ve had to wait for the light !

  • One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)

  • One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)

  • One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)

  • One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)

  • One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)

  • One of the public statues comprising Antony Gormley’s Event Horizon exhibit in London (they’re gone now!)

  • I went down to Wilsons Prom for two days over the Melbourne Cup long weekend and got a few nice pix. This particular trip for me was unique due to the fact that 140mm of rain fell the day I arrived causing many usually dry creeks to flow vigorously. I left for Waterloo Bay from Telegraph saddle at 9:00pm in the rain optomistically hoping for a spectacular return of Sol. Arriving after midnight the spectacular sunrise and many new creeks did not disappoint. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • This shot was taken on a massive weekend where we walked the whole 64km southern Prom circuit via the lighthouse in two days. Upon awaking on the second day I wandered down to the beach in front of the bodies of five sleeping hikers who had spent the night there, set up my tripod and within seconds took this shot as the sun emerged from its night time sojourn. I then wandered down the beach and took another two shots through the boulders before the sun disappeared behind the horizon of clouds. Despite a very crowded campsite I was the only one there (seagulls excepted) who witnessed this beautiful sight. This particular trip was taken within weeks of the track re-opening after the 2005 bushfires as the skeletal silhouette of trees attest. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • Thank you for looking.

  • London Skyline including big ben & the London eye from the waterloo bridge at dusk.

  • A variation on the Waterloo Pottery Kiln I have added earlier. I think this is such a great shape, keep thinking of old glass milk bottles!.

  • Little Waterloo Bay is a gorgeous little cove on Wilsons Promontories east coast. There is a campsite behind the dune you can see with Waterloo Bay proper the next sandy bay along. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • I love rocks and the Prom has some of the best ones around. This one lives in Waterloo Bay. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • Location: London UK

  • waterloo bridge , southbank , river thames, 2008 private view © 2009 Urban Umbra

  • I love rocks and the Prom has some of the best ones around. This one lives in along Freshwater Creek that runs into Waterloo Bay. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • The Battle of Waterloo occured on the 18th June 1815 and marked the end of the French domination of Europe under Napoleon Bonaparte. It was a coalition of British, Russian, Austrian and Prussians under the leadership of The Duke of Wellington. Waterloo Bay was visited on the anniversary of this battle thus the current nomenclature. This picture was taken in the pre dawn light using a very long exposure from near Little Waterloo Bay looking along this incredibly ruggard coastline towards Cape Wellington. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • An old cemetery lying on Calton Hill in Edinburgh which opened in 1718 for the burial of tradesmen and merchants. It was extended in 1767, but divided in 1818 by the building of Waterloo Place (the street at bottom right). The larger part lies to the south of Waterloo Place and includes a number of grand and interesting memorials. An enormous obelisk (shaped liked Cleopatra’s needle) by Thomas Hamilton (1784 – 1858) remembers the political martyrs of 1793, who were ‘transported’ for sedition. The classical monument (the round one) to philosopher David Hume (1711-76) was built in 1777 by Robert Adam (1728-92) and the Emancipation Monument (1893), comprising a bronze of Abraham Lincoln with a grateful freed slave, remembers the Scottish soldiers who fought in the American Civil War (1861-5). Other residents include painter David Allan (1744-96), Robert Burn (1752 – 1815), who had built the Nelson Monument on Calton Hill and was the father of architect William Burn (1789 – 1870), publisher Archibald Constable (1774 – 1827) and sculptor Sir John Steell (1804-91). Behind all this is the panorama of the magnificent Edinburgh skyline from the Crown of St. Giles Cathedral on the left, the towering height of the Spire of the Hub in the center and Edinburgh Castle on the right. Camera: Canon EOS 450D (Digital Rebel XSi in the USA) BEST VIEWED LARGER Three bracketed JPGs converted to HDR in Photomatix. Related shots can be found at: Edinburgh. Click here for a random page of photographs

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