Wildwood 

165 creative works found

  • This early 1960’s photograph is of the Rio Motel in Wildwood, New Jersey. This picture was used in the Rio’s color postcards and brochures. The Rio Motel was demolished in 2003. Copyright Aladdin Color Inc. No reproduction is permitted other than the products on Red Bubbles website. For stock usage go to www.RetroStockPix.com To view other Retro photographs go to: www.RetroViews.com

  • This is a 1960’s picture from the Aqua Circus pool at Sportland Pier in Wildwood, New Jersey. Three people diving at the same time from three levels of diving boards. The Aqua Circus was located on the Boardwalk by the Kings Inn Motel. Photograph copyright Aladdin Color Inc.. No reproduction is permitted except these products from Red Bubble. For stock usage please go to: www.RetroStockPix.com To view other Retro photographs go to: www.RetroViews.com

  • Fall colors in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. A few miles inside NC from Newfound Gap

  • This photograph is from the Caribbean Motels postcard from the 1960’s. We used an actual 1960’s picture of the neon sign and added that in the sky. This photograph is copyrighted by Aladdin Color Inc. and no reproduction is allowed other than the purchasing of this product on RedBubble.com. For stock usage, please view: www.RetroStockPix.com To view other retro photographs visit: www.RetroViews.com

  • Fall isn’t to be out done by Spring with all the new beginnings and shades of green. For a brief time it bursts into a splendor of warm color just before the dead of Winter.This is the Middle Prong Little River located in the Tremont section of the GSMNP Camera: Canon Rebel Xti… Lens: Canon 28-135mm…. / Focal Length: 44mm… Aperture Priority… / Shutter Speed: 1/2 s… Aperture: f/8… / ISO: 100… Tripod: Bogen…… Bias 0.0 EV… / Filters:Hoya Polarizer… Cable Release… / Format:RAW

  • Stunning fall color in the hills of Tennessee

  • A fox family moved into a small ‘wild’ place between two homes in the community Lake Wildwood, CA, a pretty and private community outside Grass Valley and Nevada City in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains. This isn’t all that unusual except for the very close proximity of the families to the den. The two cubs played on the rocks within feet of one home and sometimes a LOT closer, probably always under the watchful eyes of at least one parent. One of the two houses was the house of my friend, co-partner and guide. She’d never seen the foxes before this picture because they seemed to prefer hanging out at the other home. And after being advised by a veterinarian that foxes can and will take cats down for food, my friend was very concerned since Jimmy, the CatHuman has recently lost all sight in one eye. It’s not that he’d lose a fight; Jimmy is also ‘Jimmy, the ChickenCat’. LOL! I’ve known him to get in a scrap or two but never on the offensive and certainly never willingly. His protector was the other house cat, Tigris who recently departed for the Great Cathouse. Also nobody made made a positive ID on the type of foxes. On Saturday morning, I set out for the rocks where the den probably was and was startled by squirrels going nuts with warning chatter I’d never heard there before. I hunkered down but didn’t need to: this fox walked out of the rocks, glanced at me (and I missed the shot) and proceeded very casually into a deeper place in the rocks. I waited about 20 minutes for something else to happen and when it didn’t, I started into the rocks. I don’t know how bright that was but it didn’t last long once I saw how many holes I couldn’t see into and thought of the heat and snakes. They may have an agreement with each other but I wasn’t about to test that with a snake. (See later that same day in another post and see why!) Sierra gray fox is what we decided this cutie is.

  • taking a walk on the beach at daybreak, wildwood nj.

  • Walking on the beach one morning, I came upon this pair of shoes left behind by their owner, and I couldn’t resist making this shot. While I was doing so, a girl came beside me and I politely asked her to pass behind me and not in front of the shoes, to avoid marring the sand. She looked at me quizzically for a moment, with a worried frown on her face, and that’s when I realized that she had come to retrieve her forgotten shoes… She was a good sport and let me take a few shots before picking them up. Featured in the group Faded Seaside Glamour on January 8, 2009 Featured in the Image Writing group on April 17, 2009 Featured in Shameless Self-Promotion on June 4, 2009 Finished in *4th position of Top Ten in Forgetting tomorrow and what grief I might find. of Prize Challenges!! Finished in 6th position of Top Ten in the Traces Left Behind challenge of the Mood & Ambiance – Strictly Photos group on April 15, 2009 1st place winner in the Shoes challenge of the Shameless Self-Promotion group on June 4, 2009 1st place winner in the Left Behind challenge of the Mood & Ambiance group on October 23, 2009

  • My first sunrise photo session, ever! I loved it! There something truly magical about witnessing the beginning of a new day.

  • When I first saw the result of this shot , I thought that it looked like a flower of light. Then I was struck with the obvious: it’s a fantasy condor’s nest! Featured in Night Photography in September 2008 Featured in Movement: Motion Blur on October 28, 2008 Featured in the group AMERICAS ~ Rural, Urban, Wild, Free – Expressions of Artists on December 15, 2008 TOP 10 CHALLENGES / Finished in 5th position of Top Ten in Lights in Motion Blur of >>>Movement – Motion Blur Finished in 2nd position of Top Ten in the Black & Red challenge of the Mood & Ambiance – Strictly Photos Group on April 19, 2009

  • I’ve driven past this fountain for over 7 years and twice before attempted to take photographs of it – once during the day and once at night. The daytime shots were OK and basically showed the fountain in its setting: a large and pretty golf course. I tried to isolate the fountain but its location pretty much prevented that. The nighttime shots were a bit different and hid the greens and fairways of the golf course well while actuating the fountain. Unfortunately, I wasn’t anywhere near up to the challenge of capturing the shot until last week. The difference this time was the combined usage of NO ISO boosting, proper aperture, and much slower shutter speeds. I pulled up the shutter time to a full 29.1 seconds by using the “BULB” setting instead of a preset shutter speed. The D80 will make a 30 second open shutter but I tried it for about 30 minutes and was never satisfied until I found the “sweet spot” at a touch over 29 seconds manually. To offset that much light coming into my Nikkor 18-35 kit lens, I set the exposure bias (what I always call the ‘offset’) to -5 and the camera automatically upped that to -6, tho I don’t know why or how. LOL! Finally, the aperture was set at f/36, much smaller than I’d ever tried before. But the slower shutter speed mandated constant light for a long time so I shrunk the lens opening quite the opposite as I would have with shooting the moon or nighttime buildings. It took a bit over 1 hour for me to eventually get the settings the way I wanted them, lock the tripod down as securely as possible, and use the remote trigger to trip the shutter release. (Using my hand, no matter how carefully, caused shake that blurred the image enough to see.) One other important thing of note: my focal length was 42 mm because I used the kit lens, the wide angle Nikkor that came with the camera. This made the fountain a LOT smaller in the finished shot instead of filling the frame as I used to do using a telephoto lens. The difference there was the PhotoShop Elements program I used to make the shot large enough for Red Bubble but do absolutely nothing else. I had been trying to get the largest shot out of the camera and enlarge less in post-shoot processing. I now know that putting a smaller but better image into the software is far preferable to putting in a large image that sucks anyway. LOL! I hope some of this makes sense to the budding photographers new to DSLR shooting. And as usual, I give enormous credit to the work and comments of oastudios, a master of getting the balance between water and light perfectly. SEE HIS STUFF!

  • / Photography / Smudge Art TM / / Fractalius Art / Fractal Art / Flood Art / By: Madeline M. Allen / Thank you for viewing my work Image copyright © 2008, Madeline M. Allen / Copying and displaying or redistribution of / this image without permission from the / artist is strictly prohibited*

  • / Photography / Smudge Art TM / / Fractalius Art / Fractal Art / Flood Art / By: Madeline M. Allen / Thank you for viewing my work Image copyright © 2008, Madeline M. Allen / Copying and displaying or redistribution of / this image without permission from the / artist is strictly prohibited*

  • Fall is a wonderful time. Nature shows off some of her most beautiful colors. The air begins to cool and it becomes pleasant to be outside after the scorching summer. Most wildlife becomes more active with winter feeding and mating rituals. Fall is a fabulous time, so get out and enjoy. Take a hike or just find a quit place to relax, but get out and toss your cares to the wind….image taken from the Oconaluftee Valley Overlook on the NC side of Newfound Gap Rd.,GSMNP

  • The Little River Road is about 18 miles long. It runs between the Sugarland Visitors Center at the Gatlinburg entrance to the Smoky Mountains and the Wye in Townsend. Once you pass the road going to Elkmont Campground it snakes through the gorge along the sides of Little River. Its one of the more popular drives in the Smokies. Numerous pull offs offer unending possibilities to get out and explore the river. Fall colors can be spectacular. Along the route there is a picnic area, waterfalls, and hiking trails. The road may not be for the timid, not use to mountain roads. In some places you are on the edge of the river on one side and against a rock bluff on the other. It seems narrower than it looks and has room for motor homes to meet, so drive slow and enjoy. It is one of two ways to get to Cades Cove. From it you can also enjoy fly fishing, kayaking or just playing in the water. Tubers often dot the river on the Wye end in summer. Camera: Canon 40D… Lens: Canon 24-105 f/4…. / Focal Length: 24mm… Manual… / Shutter Speed: 2s… F/Stop: 16… / ISO: 100… Tripod: Bogen…… Bias 0.0EV… / Filters:B+W Polarizer… Cable Release… … / Format:RAW

  • The “wild” deer in Wildwood are a bit less wild than in the REAL wild. Calling them to you is sometimes a bit too easy: all you have to do is stand there. LOL! There’s a cherry tree in that backyard as well so they raid it when they find cherries in it. Cathy doesn’t pick them so the deer have free ‘pickins’ from all they can reach and the ones that fall later. There’s a mommy and doe who all but live at Cathy’s, under the front deck when it’s cold or lounging on the back lawn’s cool grass when it’s hot. Neither one of them is particularly tame yet but I can toss them stuff if they see my hand in the air first. If not, they spook thinking something is close or I’m throwing things to get rid of them. LOL! All of the ‘doe kisses’ series was taken with the Nikon D80 in my right hand and aiming blind on full automatic, burst after burst. There was a little trepidation when the noise of the first burst happened but the lure of gooey goodness overcomes all, ya know? ;-) Just in case you were wondering / ____________ / f-stop: f/5 / exposure time: 1/100 seconds / Exposure bias: none / focal length: 18mm (or the lowest the kit lens [18-55mm] will go) / metering mode: pattern / no flash (I doubt a deer would have been that brave even if it was low powered. LOL!) / Nikon creative setting: normal so saturation and sharpness were flat too / And on full auto, white balance is auto too. /

  • Wildwood Park in Welches, Oregon 2007 Welches is right in the shadow of Mt Hood. Life begins anew all over the dead stump. Life from death…the circle of life. The tree fell in a storm. Nikon D80 Earth Keepers Group: Lets recycle more so we can save some trees… Many things that are made with wood can be made with recycled plastic! Lets put all that trash to good use!

  • I believe this is a Catbird. I stopped at Wildwood Lake to see if I could get some Oriole pics, and this catbird landed nearby – so here it is! Taken 6/11/09 – Wildlwood Lake, Harrisburg, PA. / Natural color and background. / . / The Catbird is a slate gray bird with a black crown and a long thin bill. It is often seen with its tail lifted up. Nests in thick shrubs. Catbirds eat insects and fruit and migrate to southern states. The raspy call sounds like a house cat.

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Canon 100 – 400 L series lens @ 400mm, F6.3, shutter speed 1/100 second ISO200, edited in Photoshop Whilst in Kent we visited many wonderful wildlife parks, this wolf was part of a pack of wolves at Wildwood, it is an amazing wildlife centre with an excellent collection of animals. Althought I am not a huge fan of zoos I believe they have a place in preserving our wonderful wildlife that may soon not be seen in the wild. Please view large

  • A spiderweb in Wildwood Park near Mt Hood Oregon. Sept ‘09 Nikon D80 / Put it through CS4

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Tamron 90mm lens , F6.3, shutter speed 1/50 second ISO1000, edited in Photoshop Whilst in Kent we visited many wonderful wildlife parks, Wildwood is an amazing wildlife centre with an excellent collection of animals. This cute little mouse was having a nibble, I could not resist taking a snap!! I have been offline for a few weeks, our brand new PC turned up the other day (hoorah!!), this is the first time I have had chance to have a play Please view large

  • Photo of a beaver at Wildwood, Canterbury, Kent. Out of several visits to Wildwood this year, this is the first time I’ve managed to see the beavers out and about. I took about 60 shots in total and I think this is the best one – its also my new desktop background too! Sony alpha a700 / 230mm f5.6 / shutter 1/125sec / exposure -0.7 / ISO 320

  • Taken at the beach in NJ. Summer 2009 / Nikon CoolPix-Point and Shoot / LightRoom

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