View allAll Photos Tagged Aftermath

Winter afternoon at Toms Hill

 

Another storm victim.

Want to see this photograph on your wall? Get in touch via peter@peterhill.au or at peterhill.au/contact/

Strobist: Profoto in softbox behind and above. Pretty much just a massive fill light. Triggered via pocket wizards.

On the island spit of 'Orford Ness' in SE England, famous for its Natural Nature reserve and also our Ministry of Defence secret nuclear experiments!!!! This image is just so post apocalypse!.

 

(Although in reality it is the ruins of the old coastguards watch hut.)

 

Enjoy!

 

A pair of N&W EMDs bracket a low-nose ALCO as they pass through the aftermath of a derailment on the former Nickel Plate Fort Wayne-Chicago mainline in Valpo. Tom Golden photo.

We had a violent storm Saturday 20/9, caused a lot of damage and flooding.

  

7 x 4.5 in

handmade collage

jun 2012

Highway 144, Ontario, Canada

 

A photo of the aftermath of the forest fire that evacuated us from our home for two weeks. It left a bleak landscape but it is 'greening up' quite nicely now although it will take many years before evidence of the fire is gone.

 

A few other photos from the same and other fires in the area are included in the first comment box.

Urquhart Castle overlooking Loch Ness on a cloudy afternoon. Multiple exposures to reduce the number of people in the scene.

 

From Wikipedia:

Urquhart Castle (Scottish Gaelic: Caisteal na Sròine) sits beside Loch Ness in the Highlands of Scotland. The castle is on the A82 road, 21 kilometres (13 mi) south-west of Inverness and 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) east of the village of Drumnadrochit.

 

The present ruins date from the 13th to the 16th centuries, though built on the site of an early medieval fortification. Founded in the 13th century, Urquhart played a role in the Wars of Scottish Independence in the 14th century. It was subsequently held as a royal castle, and was raided on several occasions by the MacDonald Earls of Ross. The castle was granted to the Clan Grant in 1509, though conflict with the MacDonalds continued. Despite a series of further raids the castle was strengthened, only to be largely abandoned by the middle of the 17th century. Urquhart was partially destroyed in 1692 to prevent its use by Jacobite forces, and subsequently decayed. In the 20th century it was placed in state care and opened to the public: it is now one of the most-visited castles in Scotland.

the Glasgow School of Art after the fire that destroyed much of this side of the historic Charles Rennie Macintosh building

 

Rolleiflex 2.8 E

Kodak Portra 160

Tetenal Colortec C-41

Scan from negative film

This is not a river or a creek. It is usually just a dry ditch, but with the storms and tornadoes of last night, rain water dashed down the ditches, down our hills and inundated everything. Water washed across the road down here at the river. AND, it softened the ground for trees at risk in high winds, that were precariously perched about power lines, and . . . more on that later. This is just one end of our road, which was impassable both ways. We were without power and phonelines/signal for about 18 hours. We had thought it might be longer, given what we saw! So kudos and applause for Athens Utilities, who cleared roads and got power lines back up and working the next morning!

Mademoiselle's Helenina original photo is here

 

Posted in Pimp My Pixels group

 

Mademoiselle Helenina is resting...

Beautiful blizzard aftermath

* Snowstorm

* Winter memories

* Wisconsin, USA

 

...of an eventful Saturday night party...

Wedding on a pier. Major unstable air mass with embedded Cumulonimbus cells passed through just before the service and all scurried off to shelter just after.

 

Peppermint Bay, Woodbridge, Tasmania.

 

Fuji X-T1, Fujinon XF14/2.8 R, 1/1700th Sec, f/2.8 ISO 200

 

How sharp is that wide open?

After the snow day.

We got a little bit of snow :)

Never a dull moment, even when the Pie is passed out.

The girls had a huge catnip party. I found Magpie just as you see her here. Shameless.

In my 11th winter in this region, it was the biggest single-day storm that I have seen. Most of what you see in these two photos (see the other in Comments) fell in one day; there really wasn't a big buildup before. I have seen more snow but not falling in one day.

 

Most everybody was ready to roll by morning of the day after, but some, like this guy, were still digging out. You can see the extent of the snowfall beyond him by the car.

 

© Anvilcloud Photography

New limited edition digital print. Based on one of my canvases from my show at the Contact Theatre. But with more rubble.

 

A quiet moment in the aftermath.

 

Available to buy from my SHOP

When blowing out the candles after breakfast I noticed my camera lying 20 cm away.

 

Check out all my photos through the excellent Flickriver!

The morning after.

 

I unwisely decided to test my 'new' used camera with a roll from a batch of untested expired film...

 

Expired Kodak Colorplus (December 2006)

Praktia PLC 2

Pentacon 50mm f1.8

 

Developed by John Gunn's

 

My Links

Leica M4-P

Minolta M-Rokkor 40mm

Kodak T-Max 400

 

Taken in May 2017

zp.663 | (Detroit, MI)

 

Always a pleasure stopping by MCS. These days its a bit more "clean", but I miss the days of decay here.

Another notable Hurricane Milton image that went around the world was of the wrecked construction crane. It toppled on to the offices of the Tampa Bay Times and the adjacent building of Johnson Pope, a legal company. The wreckage remained in situ more than a week later.

 

As Hurricane Milton approached the Gulf Coast, concern had been officially expressed about the risk of such a collapse. Gov. DeSantis subsequently paid St. Pete a visit, declaring that the construction company had displayed “a lack of common sense” in its failure to secure the crane from the storm.

A portfolio of six (6) images (Image: 11-1/4 x 26-3/8 inches; Overall: 13" x 30") printed in Epson UltraChrome ink on smooth natural finish rag paper. Available only as a collection of six (6) unmounted, signed and dated prints for $900.

 

On August 4, 2015 a great storm with winds measured over 100 mph devastated portions of the forest of Leelanau, Michigan near Traverse City, with trees bringing down power lines and closing roads around Glen Arbor. Some of those forests will never fully recover. The piece of Birch log in this set of pictures was chain-sawed by workers out of a tangled heap of trees felled by the storm to clear a popular bike path.

 

In placing this artifact of the Aftermath of the Leelanau storm in juxtaposition with the Aftermath of Detroit's own slow economic and cultural storm, I hope to set up visual and conceptual tensions at various levels, aesthetic, philosophical, cultural, and ethical, among other possibilities.

 

I hope this set of images will stimulate and provoke reflection on Disaster and Aftermath, our responses to these, and humanity's place in Nature.

 

- Thomas VanderMeulen

My watercolor paint box after painting

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