Winter wood 

1324 creative works found

  • original oil on canvas stretched on a wooden frame / 15.75×19.69 inches (40×50 cm) / can be shipped worldwide (insurance) / price : 500 usd / payment via paypal

  • oil

  • original oil on canvas stretched on a wooden frame / 23.62×27.56 inches (60 X 70 cm) / can be shipped worldwide (insurance) / price : 900 usd / payment via paypal

  • original oil on canvas stretched on a wooden frame / 19.69×27.56 inches (50 X 70 cm) / can be shipped worldwide (insurance) / price : 800 usd / payment via paypal

  • oil on canvas

  • I love the bronze and texture colour of this leaf, which I photographed on the deck..

  • original watercolor 31 X 41 cm / 12.09×15.99 inches / 250 usd / payment via paypal / can be shipped worlwide

  • Taken in Whitby North Yorkshire~ / Captain Cook…(He had a santa hat on…lol).. / the old Abbey ruins and the church Captain Cook’s training as a seaman began in Whitby. He was born on 27 October 1728 at Marton-in-Cleveland. His father, originally from Scotland, was also called James and married Grace Pace from Cleveland. They had eight children, though several died young. When James was still a child, his father moved to Great Ayton, a few miles away near the Cleveland Hills, and became the foreman at Aireyholme Farm. / Here the young James received the rudiments of education at the village school and assisted his father on the farm. In 1745, he began work in a grocer’s shop at Staithes, a fishing village only a short distance from the busy port of Whitby. / After eighteen months, he determined to go to sea, and was introduced to the Walker family. John Walker and his brother Henry were Quaker shipowners engaged in the coal trade between the North-East and London. The Quakers, or Society of Friends, were upright, hospitable people known for their simplicity of manners and public spirit. / The young Cook could not have come to a better environment. The Walkers’ ships were workaday ‘cats’, trading to London and across the North Sea. Cook began the life of a sailor on the Freelove in February 1747, carrying a cargo of coal to London. / After three voyages in the Freelove, Cook took part in rigging and fitting out a new ship of Walker’s called the Three Brothers. Signing on after his apprenticeship had expired, he remained on that ship until 1752, apart from a voyage to the Baltic and St. Petersburg in the Mary. In 1752 he became mate and joined Walker’s latest ship, the Friendship, sailing in her for three years. By 1755 Cook was an experienced and trusted seaman, and Walker offered him the command of the ship. But Cook had other plans. HERE

  • Not far away from my house lies a country road where my son’s friend lives. He kindly allowed my sister and I to invade his family’s property for a photo shoot. The angle I chose allowed me to place the late afternoon sun directly behind the fence’s top railing. There is not noticeable glare because there was only 90 minutes of daylight left. This photo was shot in colour, but I changed the RAW file to black and white, before converting to JPG. I chose that option because I wanted to keep the colour version as well. I used the camera default settings for the black and white conversion, so I got the same result as I would have obtained by shooting directly in monochrome. No other change was made, uploaded completely as is. Shot in aperture priority / Focal length 18mm / ISO-100 / Aperture f/10 / Shutter 1/250 sec. Nikon D60 / AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55mm f3.5-5.6G VR

  • I photographed this old cabin in the rural part of the Columbia valley in the Rocky mountains. I had to go back to see how it looked in the heart of winter. The heavy cover of snow and little bit of open water made the drive worth it, it so reminded me of Jezi Baba’s hut in slavic fairy tales…magical but very eerie. I think what is really affecting about this cabin is that it still looks like someone could be living there! Hope you all like it.

  • A group of six whitetail deer grazing in the woods after a new coating of snow.

  • Taken in Jefferson NH

  • March 1, 2009 / Manchester, Georgia

  • Mineral creek in Barnardsville NC at 17degf. iso100, f-32, shutter 8.0sec, FL 230mm

  • ...just a barn….winter time .... :))) /

  • A capture taken in the back roads of Stanbridge.Quebec..from my archives…

  • Beautiful morning sun rays shine through the barming woods in Maidstone (Kent) after the very heavy snow fall. Taken on Auto with Nikkor 200mm lens.. A slight clarity adjustment in Lightroom but apart from this the image is directly from the camera.

  • Another wagon wheel, time has given each one their own unique weather view into the past. This wheel is now located in the mining/ ghost town of Pinos Altos, New Mexico. /

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