Yorkshire 

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  • How many different ways can you capture a waterfall. I decided on a faster shutter speed than my normal waterblur shots. I bracketed my shot and merged in hdr.. for me a very pleasing end product considering it was taken almost straight into the sun ( with a touch of cover from the trees). :-) MY WATERFALLS SET

  • It’s when I do HDR’s over the top like this, that I get mixed feelings from people…. over the top hdr.. good or bad, I like it. / Taken with my wide angle lens at Whitby’s south jetty. I was so busy looking through the lens I didn’t realise how close the wave was to me…

  • Taken on the back road from Burton Agnes to Rudston, East Yorkshire. / Nikon D40.

  • Typically it was glorious sunshine when I left home but by the time I arrived at Flamborough it had clouded over which almost spoilt every shot I took. This is the best of the bunch. :) Nikon D40 – Nikkor 18-55mm

  • A bit of black and white and HDR treatment to Whitby Abbey Canon 40D / F11 / ISO 200 Sold by Red Bubble / as 1x Poster of Whitby Abbey / Size: Large

  • In a field not far from where my wife grew up in the village of Darfield, Barnsley in South Yorkshire is this lone tree which continues to stand through all seasons. I happened to catch this shot one cold March morning after the field had been plowed, seeded, and flattened. The sky was a deep blue without a cloud in it. I love this shot and the use of negative space. HP PhotoSmart C945 bridge camera, f/8, shutter 1/200, / exposure bias -1.50 ISO 100

  • Situated at the edge of a cliff along the North Yorkshire coast, a naturally defended area and a perfect look out spot, Scarborough Castle still dominates the town and harbour some 300ft (91m) below. The roughly triangular piece of ground forming the headland of Castle Hill has been occupied for over 2500 years, but the first stone fortress on the site wasn’t built until the early 12th century by William le Gros. Remains of his early building include a chapel, much altered in the 14th century, and the curtain walls which were strengthened by Henry II in the second half of the 12th century. Henry II was also responsible for destroying the original gate tower and erecting a more elaborate, three-storey square Keep, typical of that period, protected further by a traditional forebuilding. Although the top of the keep has disappeared, some remaining walls provide a good indication of how splendid this structure was. Fireplaces at the first and second levels can still be seen in the walls. Nothing exists of the once mighty forebuilding except the foundations, which show clearly its size and estimated height of some 40ft (12m). From this date, Scaborough Castle became practically impregnable, although the outer defences were continually improved and reinforced over the years. Scarborough Castle was the strategically important Northern base of Kings and Queens for almost five centuries, and with each new reign came further additions and improvements to the original building. (National heritage.) / Featured In:- Treasured UK Structures, / Going Coastal, / Yorkshire Grit, / All castles around the world, / Your Accepted Viewed 745 (6/11/09)

  • Thornton force is part of the Ingleton waterfalls walk in the Yorkshire dales national park. / Thornton force is the most impressive waterfalls on the walk if not the whole of England, drops 14 metres down and you can walk behind it too, this is part of the river Twiss.. / Shot with a NIkon D70s and a 18-70mm lens fitted with polariser. / 3 shot HDR. /

  • A Yorkshire landscape shot today over lookingEast Gill Waterfall, Keld, North Yorks in the Yorkshire dales national park. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens. /

  • Abstract Macro Photography This image is a little part of someones garden fence. i think that this picture looks like the sea – sand – horizon – sky i have cropped this picture slightly. i have adjusted the brightness/ contrast/ hue and saturation a little bit also, just to bring out the brilliance of what i photographed.

  • Extreme close-up of a sign-post for a Road/ street . / The road/ street sign-post is for ‘Armley Grange Drive LS12’. its THE nice part of Armley with nice well looked after homes and gardens, and very rustic. Its a good place to wander around for photographs. Focal length – 48mm / F/11

  • This is the coloured version of Between rain and sun of the view across Swaledale in the North Yorkshire Dales from Reeth, just before a very windy rain storm hit.

  • This is one of the last shots taken on mine and Shawn Rabon’s Sunrise trip! It also marked the end of his visit. Strangely enough it was only 06.30 and the dawn of a new day! We’d been shooting for hours and it was about our bedtime! / This shot was again taken with 9 stop ND and Grad ND to bring out the sky. / We were truly blessed with the great conditions. The colour on the horizon stayed for ages due to the sun being obscured by the high cloud. / This shot was also taken at Smugglers Cove, Hayburn Wyke, near Scarborough. Canon 400D / 18-55mm lens / Aperture f/16 / Shutter speed 77 secs / ISO – 100 / Hoya pro 9 stop ND filter / ND grey Graduated filter Featured In:- SEA

  • The view across the Vale of York from Sutton Bank, part of the North York Moors National Park. the rain still falling can be seen just on the horizon, while the sun lights up the sheep grazing below. Best viewed large. Taken with an Olympus E500

  • Click Here For Large Framed View A giant erratic boulder on the Twistleton Limestone Scars near Ingleton in the Yorkshire Dales.

  • Abstract Macro Photography – Landscapes Solder

  • Abstract Macro Photography Peeling Paint / Salem Building / Near Tetley Brewery / Leeds City Centre

  • Please View Large Whilst out on our walk yesterday in the Yorkshire Dales we came across this wonderful disused barn just on the south banks of the River Swale Featured in – Dimensions – 24th September 2009 Nikon D300 / Sigma 24-70mm GPS – GeoPic ll Info / 54 24.0118 – 2 8.9177 / 291metres above sea level Google Maps

  • Abstract Macro Photography – Faces This image was really small (approx 2 X 1 inches) / Large Lump of metal/ steel scorched in a fire. / What you see here, was faced to the ground on top of ashes. / Leeds

  • Scaleber force is a stunning waterfall in the yorkshire dales near settle and is situated on the road towards malham and airton. / Set in a deep gordge with a steep and slippery path down to the fall. / Taken with a nikon d60 /

  • Went on a bubblemeet to the historic city of York in Yorkshire… Myself, my wife Donna (her first meet up with some of the redbubble guys) met up with good friends and bubblersSteve Smith (pictured) his good lady Lesley G and Redbubbler Richard ( clickinhistory ) . York minster is a Grade1 Listed building and works alonside English Heritage / This is a shot of Europe’s greatest Gothic Cathedral, York minster. / Here’s some info on York Cathedral from from Wikipedia: / York Minster is a Gothic cathedral in York, England and is one of the largest of its kind in Northern Europe alongside Cologne Cathedral. The Minster is the seat of the Archbishop of York, the second-highest office of the Church of England, and is cathedral for the Diocese of York; it is run by a Dean and Chapter under the Dean of York. The formal title of York Minster is The Cathedral and Metropolitan Church of St Peter in York. Services in the Minster are sometimes regarded as on the high church Anglo-Catholicism side of the Anglican scale. / It has a very wide Decorated Gothic nave and chapter house, a Perpendicular Gothic choir and east end, and Early English north and south transepts. The nave contains the West Window, constructed in 1338, and over the Lady Chapel in the east end is the Great East Window, (finished in 1408), the largest expanse of medieval stained glass in the world. In the north transept is the Five Sisters Window, each lancet being over 16 metres (52 ft) high. The south transept contains the famous Rose window. / Official York Cathedral website / Shot handheld / with a Nikon D300 and Sigma 10-20mm lens / f 14 / 1/5 second / ISO 200 /

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 1/640 second, ISO200, processed in Photoshop Another shot from my recent trip to Settle in the Yorkshire Dales with excellent photographer and mate Jason Connolly. It was a beautiful winters day with clear blue skies with wonderful visibilty of the nearby snowy hills. Happy New Year to one and all!!! Please view large

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