View allAll Photos Tagged DEEPEST

Snow in deepest Stacksteads

My Mancave covered in snow and looking cold.

 

More to come throughout the day too, according to the forecast.

Today will be a day spent mainly indoors I think.

 

Stay warm and safe folks ♥️

 

Herbie arrived at our house two years ago today…

 

flic.kr/p/2o9UnsP

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Deepest Darkest Kent :o)

Spirit Island is a tied island in Maligne Lake and is one of the most iconic landmarks in Canada’s Rocky Mountains. Maligne Lake is a lake in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada. The lake is approximately 22.5 km (14.0 mi) long and is 97 m (318 ft) at its deepest point and known for its azure water, surrounding peaks and glaciers visible from the lake. Photo by my wife Barb. Print Size 13x19 inches.

En juin 2021, le photographe Steve Haining a entrepris de battre un record du monde Guinness en réalisant la séance photo sous-marine la plus profonde avec un mannequin . À l'époque, cela ressemblait à l'exploit ultime de la photographie sous-marine, repoussant à la fois les limites de la plongée et de l'art. Pourtant, Haining et le mannequin Ciara Antoski ont continué à se mettre au défi, battant le record encore et encore.

 

Pour leur dernière tentative, le duo a organisé une séance photo à 50 mètres sous l'eau .

 

°°°°°°°°°°°

 

In June 2021, photographer Steve Haining set out to break a Guinness World Record for achieving the deepest underwater model photoshoot. At the time, it felt like the ultimate feat of underwater photography, pushing both the limits of diving and art. Yet, Haining and model Ciara Antoski kept challenging themselves, breaking the record again and then again.

 

For their latest endeavor, the pair held a photoshoot at 163.4 feet underwater.

  

Credit : Steve Haining

Manor Heath Park, Halifax, Yorkshire.

 

Much better if you click again to view large!

 

www.robertbirkbyphotography.co.uk

 

A cloud bank out over the ocean obscures another sunset; oh well!

 

Tripod-mounted with Lee Big Stopper & remote trigger. Thirty seconds was only just enough, but I managed to keep the dogs off of the pristine beach in the foreground; hurrah!

 

Come say hello at Pelcomb Portraits.

My arrival - Looking along Wast Water (the deepest lake in England) towards Wasdale Head and Great Gable - Lake District National Park, Cumbria, 18th November 2005.

 

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My deepest gratitude to all of you for following me on my journey to photograph butterflies. Thank you for all your wonderful comments and praise of my work, your faves and your views. It wouldn't be any fun without you.

 

Happy Thanksgiving! Be well. Be happy.

" Where is your self to be found?

Always in the deepest enchantment

that you have experienced "

{Hugo von Hofmannsthal}

"with the deepest faith I leap and begin to soar

But with the failing light I feel so insecure..."

© Chris Frick, Switzerland. All rights reserved.

Rod Stewart

 

Strobist: AB1600 with gridded 60 X30 softbox camera left. Reflector camera right. Triggered by Cybersync.

Yesterday, Eschacher Weiher

 

- gestern am Eschacher Weiher ....

No deis sólo lo superfluo, dad vuestro corazón.

  

- Madre Teresa de Calcuta

  

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My worldwide travel will start in November 2016! If you want to follow my adventure: Facebook

 

Contact: ietphotography@gmail.com

 

In case you want to use or print any of my pictures, please contact me or visit my website.

  

One of the greatest flickr groups: DIPLOFOCUS

 

My flickr account: Flickr

 

500px: 500px

Devil's Dyke is the longest, widest and deepest dry chalk valley in the country. Legend has it that the Devil dug the valley to drown the parishioners of the Weald. Scientists, however, believe it was formed in the last Ice Age. John Constable described it as 'the grandest view in the world'

Autumn blue hour on the deepest lake in England, Wast Water in the Lake District National park, Cumbria, UK.

  

Wall art

  

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All images are copyright © John Finney Photography.

Don't use without permission.

Please contact me here before using any of my images for any reason. Thank you.

  

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Workshops & Tours: We are now taking bookings for our new 2021 Isle of Harris Tour!

 

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My deepest condolences to the victims and their survivors of These perfidious Terror outrages at Paris yesterday evening

A macro picture of a small doll. I like the bokeh and deep blue tones here.

 

The picture was taken with a 35mm lens, combined with 12+36mm tubes.

 

Edit: Voor de Nederlanders, dit is een macro van een wuppie, een pluizig verzameldingetje die de Albert Heijn een tijd terug uitdeelde.

 

Follow me on instagram for more photos: www.instagram.com/jeff.camphens/

A Brie me marcou novamente nessa tag ( =D yaaay )!

 

Sukita não é uma boa garota como imaginava... quase toda noite ela tem sonhos comprometedores com seu primeiro namorado, o Yue.

 

Não podemos culpá-la tadinha, afinal, não dizem por aí que o primeiro é sempre inesquecível?

My deepest gratitude goes to Frolic Mills, the fantastic BOSL team and everyone who voted for me for the BOSL Top Male Model Award. I sincerely regret not being able to attend the ceremony due to real life matters. It was such a shock when I came home last night to find out that I won the BOSL Top Male Model Award. I honestly did not expect it and I am deeply honored and so thankful for the award. I share the award with all the nominees because they are all excellent models and my good friends…..each one I have deep respect and admiration. CHEERS to Mikey, Apollo, Angelik, Daniele, Marcus, and Harsch.

 

THANK YOU to all my mentors and role models in the fashion industry for the inspiration you have put in me to strive to do my best. THANK YOU to all my SL family, friends and everyone who have supported me in my modeling journey. THANK YOU to everyone who have given me all the opportunities in my modeling career and have not given up on me especially these past few months when RL has been very difficult and I have not the time to model as much as I wanted to. THANK YOU to each one of my modeling agencies for their faith in me. Thank you to everyone for their support, kindness and well wishes. I am sorry for not listing all the names of the people I am grateful for but I am afraid that I might miss anyone. Thank you again to Frolic Mills, Editorial, Persia, BlackBarbie and the BOSL Team. Thank you all for bringing this unexpected joy and honor into my life. These past month has been tough for me in RL and you all have truly brighten my day.

 

CONGRATULATIONS to all the nominees and winners.

Best Wishes to Everyone.

<3

RicoRacer Flux

my deepest thanks to all my flickr friends

for fave,comments and notes..

May God bless our soul this Holiday Season!!!

 

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

The rendering of your emotional highway has no barriers?

what do your deepest fears cross and encounter?

is there cherishment upon the way that feeds your heart?

picking moments with which the Soul is eaten, in part

is it the deliverer, the healer, the persecutor impart

 

smoothly surfaced into the light of day passing

a room, destiny, space, in time, rivers flowing

still in mind, awakening the emotive checklist of strife

recording movements and controlling daily schedules

watching every living matter, is this what you call life??

 

bear in mind what you simply cannot bear to face

with eyes closed, the entitled apparition becomes real

a chest note unspoken, which designs a noted bas-relief

filled with emotional spirit and natural purulency

go beyond the norm, look further afield, inherit more belief

 

taking your hand, reinvigorating this life shared

second to none and afraid no more, seize the willowed moment!

behold the veranda of opportunity and purest veracity

entering such a thalamus of hidden and untold dreams

here we feel the world in our hands within plentiful capacity

 

there is no wrong in a oneness of love, a oneness of spirit

where Nature is present, life abounds in surviving heartbeats

theurgic possibilities astride hermetic touches advancing

where breaths become deeper and silently longing

forever becomes the present of predestined-eternity's glancing

 

we are the insight of ourselves when open to heavenly calling

into our destiny we strive purely, future surrendered today

as the past catches up with the forgiveness of time itself

we're bold enough to go where our resistance never dared step

a shell of time, and only time will tell where we may tread ourself

 

are we to remain in fate's shadow, or shall we reflect glory -

on our own offering of light and illumination unto our present?

leaving a prosaic society aside, let your spirit touch it's potential

realise and embrace it, share and reach the four corners of your soul

such propensity of jubilant goodness within every heart existential.

 

by anglia24

13h35: 20/02/2008

©2008anglia24

This is my deepest ever Narrowband image of NGC7000, in part it has helped by having the use of some better equipment.

 

For starters I had a significant upgrade to my QHY11 Mono CCD which now has the new heating ring to combat the dew when we have very high humidity (most of the time it’s around 80% here in Western Michigan) and the new QHY Large 7 Position Filter Wheel. For this image I used the Chroma 7nm H-Alpha, SII and OIII Filters and I am extremely happy with the detail and contrast these filters have helped me achieve. For the focusing I am using the Optec Gemini Focusing Rotator and the precision of this Focuser goes beyond anything I have experienced to date.

 

The North America Nebula (NGC 7000 or Caldwell 20) is an emission nebula in the constellation Cygnus that resembles the shape of North America and The Gulf Of Mexico. It lies at a distance of approximately 1800 light years away from us.

It contains some very interesting areas such as The Cygnus Wall which is representative of Mexico and Central America and the nearby Pelican Nebula (IC5070) which is not usually referred to as within The American Nebula however it is part of the same cloud of ionized Hydrogen.

 

Image details

Location: DownUnderObservatory, Fremont, MI

Total Integration time 9 Hours

Filters by Chroma 7nm

H-Alpha 180 min, 18 x 10 min bin 1x1

OIII 180 min, 18 x 10 min bin 1x1

SII 180 min, 18 x 10 min bin 1x1

QHY11 monochrome CCD cooled to -20C

Optec Gemini Focusing Rotator

Takahashi E-180 F2.8 Astrograph

Rainbow Astro RST-400 EQ Mount

Image Acquisition Maxim DL

Pre Processing Pixinsight

Post Processing Photoshop CS6

 

Here is one of my older images of NGC7000 for comparison

www.flickr.com/photos/terryhancock/20568533905/in/datepos...

 

My deepest respect and greetings to all the photographers of the world.

 

About World Photography Day

 

Many people that have mentioned that they’ve never heard of World Photography Day. Why is that? World Photography Day wasn’t ‘created’ by a big brand as a marketing tool. Rather, it’s a day where photographers had started to come together to celebrate photography, just because they could. Any excuse to throw a party right? Slowly, groups around the world have started to get on board with the idea of World Photography Day and you will find traces of World Photography Day being celebrated over the last 20 years or so. Each year, World Photography Day has gained momentum and this year, we’re hoping to bring photographers together once again with an even larger audience.

 

Why August 19th?

 

World Photography Day originates from the invention of the Daguerreotype, a photographic processes developed by Louis Daguerre. On January 9, 1839, The French Academy of Sciences announced the daguerreotype process. A few months later, on August 19, 1839, the French government announced the invention as a gift “Free to the World.”

 

Another photographic processes, the Calotype, was also invented in 1839 by William Fox Talbot (it was announced in 1841). Together, the invention of both the Daguerreotype and Calotype mark 1839 as the year that photography was invented.

 

copyright © 2011 by Abrar Razzak,

Unauthorized reproduction is prohibited except where noted otherwise

Glacier-carved Lake St Clair is Australia's deepest lake, located at the southern end of the Cradle Mountain-Lake St Clair National Park in Tasmania's Central Highlands region.

 

Camera: Ricoh KR-10 Super.

Lens: ?

Fujichrome slide film.

Scanner: Nikon LS-5000 (by jetzt-digital).

Edited with Adobe Photoshop.

my deepest condolences

 

www.urbexery.com

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Find my new book Timeless2 www.urbexery.com/shop

Tiger Leaping Gorge is the deepest gorge on earth, formed by the ridges of two 5,000m peaks the Yulong and Haba Snow Mountains and the Jinsha River, a large tributary of the Yangtze River.

 

It gets its name from the story of a tiger cornered by a hunter. It managed leaps of 10m across the river using the above rock which is still there.

 

Recently the gorge was saved after the Chinese abandoned (for now) a plan to dam the river. Instead they make heaps of money by charging tourists to visit the place. The choice is stark: lose the beauty under a series of dams or else risk ruining it with extra roads and endless guest houses with accompanying ugly litter. At least this way it is still there to see and so are the ethnic Naxi people who can enjoy supplementing their meager living with tourism.

 

Hiking along the gorge is said to be in the top ten 'hikes to do before you die', about 20 miles there and back, or just there and a bus back. Sadly we decided it wasn't safe to do it with four small children who could easily fall down a precipice. So near and yet so far, maybe I will be able to go again one day, plenty of shacks with B&Bs and food to stay in along the way, and the most beautiful scenery. There is an upper road from which you can enjoy the views, and a lower road nearer to the river, which they are improving all the time (see above) but which is subject to landslides etc in the rainy season.

 

When we went the river was relatively quiet and low, come rainy season and it would have more of a roar to it.

The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has produced the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant Universe to date. Known as Webb’s First Deep Field, this image of galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 is overflowing with detail.

 

Thousands of galaxies – including the faintest objects ever observed in the infrared – have appeared in Webb’s view for the first time. This slice of the vast Universe is approximately the size of a grain of sand held at arm’s length by someone on the ground.

 

This deep field, taken by Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam), is a composite made from images at different wavelengths, totaling 12.5 hours – achieving depths at infrared wavelengths beyond the Hubble Space Telescope’s deepest fields, which took weeks.

 

The image shows the galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 as it appeared 4.6 billion years ago. The combined mass of this galaxy cluster acts as a gravitational lens, magnifying much more distant galaxies behind it. Webb’s NIRCam has brought those distant galaxies into sharp focus – they have tiny, faint structures that have never been seen before, including star clusters and diffuse features. Researchers will soon begin to learn more about the galaxies’ masses, ages, histories, and compositions, as Webb seeks the earliest galaxies in the Universe.

 

First, focus on the galaxies responsible for the lensing: the bright white elliptical galaxy at the centre of the image and smaller white galaxies throughout the image. Bound together by gravity in a galaxy cluster, they are bending the light from galaxies that appear in the vast distances behind them. The combined mass of the galaxies and dark matter act as a cosmic telescope, creating magnified, contorted, and sometimes mirrored images of individual galaxies.

 

Clear examples of mirroring are found in the prominent orange arcs to the left and right of the brightest cluster galaxy. These are lensed galaxies – each individual galaxy is shown twice in one arc. Webb’s image has fully revealed their bright cores, which are filled with stars, along with orange star clusters along their edges.

 

Not all galaxies in this field are mirrored – some are stretched. Others appear scattered by interactions with other galaxies, leaving trails of stars behind them.

 

Webb has refined the level of detail we can observe throughout this field. Very diffuse galaxies appear like collections of loosely bound dandelion seeds aloft in a breeze. Individual “pods” of star formation practically bloom within some of the most distant galaxies – the clearest, most detailed views of star clusters in the early Universe so far.

 

One galaxy speckled with star clusters appears near the bottom end of the bright central star’s vertical diffraction spike – just to the right of a long orange arc. The long, thin ladybug-like galaxy is flecked with pockets of star formation. Draw a line between its “wings” to roughly match up its star clusters, mirrored top to bottom. Because this galaxy is so magnified and its individual star clusters are so crisp, researchers will be able to study it in exquisite detail, which wasn’t previously possible for galaxies this distant.

 

The galaxies in this scene that are farthest away – the tiniest galaxies that are located well behind the cluster – look nothing like the spiral and elliptical galaxies observed in the local Universe. They are much clumpier and more irregular. Webb’s highly detailed image may help researchers measure the ages and masses of star clusters within these distant galaxies. This might lead to more accurate models of galaxies that existed at cosmic “spring,” when galaxies were sprouting tiny “buds” of new growth, actively interacting and merging, and had yet to develop into larger spirals. Ultimately, Webb’s upcoming observations will help astronomers better understand how galaxies form and grow in the early Universe.

 

Read more

 

Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

Anemone. Title borrowed from a best-of album of - guess who - Deep Purple.

 

16 pictures stacked in Helicon Focus (Method=B, Radius=4, Smoothing=2). 20 mm extension tube.

For my video; youtu.be/QX39x3mutOc?si=BUz4ne5BuwUZlQOZ,

 

Eden, New South Wales, Australia

 

Eden is a coastal town in the South Coast region of New South Wales, Australia. The town is 478 kilometres (297 mi) south of the state capital Sydney and is the most southerly town in New South Wales, located between Nullica Bay to the south and Calle Calle Bay, the northern reach of Twofold Bay, and built on undulating land adjacent to the third-deepest natural harbour in the southern hemisphere, and Snug Cove on its western boundary. At the 2016 census, Eden had a population of 3,151.

Spent a couple of nights down in deepest darkest Cornwall at the end of last week and based close to Godrevy, this pic taken early one morning just after Sunrise on a dull day before the rain hit, not what I was hoping for but you have to make the most of the hand your dealt! ;)

Looking out towards Godrevy Lighthouse and the Stones Reef to which the Lighthouse was built to warn shipping of the impending danger hidden beneath the waves.

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When thought is closed in caves, then love will show its roots in deepest hell. - William Blake

 

Inspired by heartache.

Hobart is the capital and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Home to almost half of all Tasmanians, it is the least-populated Australian state capital city, and second-smallest if territories are taken into account, before Darwin, Northern Territory. Hobart is located in Tasmania's south-east on the estuary of the River Derwent, making it the most southern of Australia's capital cities. Its skyline is dominated by the 1,271-metre (4,170 ft) kunanyi/Mount Wellington, and its harbour forms the second-deepest natural port in the world.

 

With our deepest thanks, to our dear friends: Veyot, for this amazing opportunity, Dhyezl for introducing us to Xaraz and that fantastic exhibit that preceded ours, and everyone (Lhoa, Max, Izumi and more) who attended our opening. We are truly grateful :)

 

Check out ours and future exhibits at Xaraz:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Clementina/99/159/34

 

Check out Veyot's blog at:

veyot368870036.wordpress.com/

The St Kilda Botanical Gardens are a very beautiful place to visit, not least for all for their wonderful array of roses found in the Alister Clarke Rose Garden.

 

"The Prince" is a David Austin old world rose from 1990 which produces the most exotic of all roses with masses of petals compacted into each bloom quartered and quilled of rich deep crimson in colour then turning to the deepest purple. When it reaches this point a rich fragrance exudes the blooms wafting and travelling through the air. This is the most beautiful rose the colours a mixture of blackberry colours to match the fragrance of deep rose and berries.

 

The site of the St Kilda Botanical Gardens were established in the 1800's. The municipal council petitioned the Department of Lands and Survey to make this segment of land bordered by Dickens Street, Tennyson Street and Blessington Street a Botanic Garden. The gardens were formally established in 1859 when a boundary fence was erected. By 1907 significant donations of money and plant material had led to the establishment of a rosary, extensive flower beds and a nursery. Exotic forest trees were planted during the 1870s and Australian species were included in 1932. In the 1950s the Alister Clarke Rose Garden was established and a Sub-Tropical Rain-forest conservatory added in the early 1990's.

Calders shadows and mine ...

 

ƒ/6.3 14.0 mm 1/30 1000

 

_DSC2925ab

Bergen is a city on Norway’s southwestern coast. It's surrounded by mountains and fjords, including Sognefjord, the country’s longest and deepest. Bryggen features colorful wooden houses on the old wharf, once a center of the Hanseatic League's trading empire. (Wikipedia)

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has delivered the deepest and sharpest infrared image of the distant universe so far. Webb’s First Deep Field is galaxy cluster SMACS 0723, and it is teeming with thousands of galaxies – including the faintest objects ever observed in the infrared.

 

Webb’s image is approximately the size of a grain of sand held at arm’s length, a tiny sliver of the vast universe. The combined mass of this galaxy cluster acts as a gravitational lens, magnifying more distant galaxies, including some seen when the universe was less than a billion years old. This deep field, taken by Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam), is a composite made from images at different wavelengths, totaling 12.5 hours – achieving depths at infrared wavelengths beyond the Hubble Space Telescope’s deepest fields, which took weeks. And this is only the beginning. Researchers will continue to use Webb to take longer exposures, revealing more of our vast universe.

 

This image shows the galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 as it appeared 4.6 billion years ago, with many more galaxies in front of and behind the cluster. Much more about this cluster will be revealed as researchers begin digging into Webb’s data. This field was also imaged by Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI), which observes mid-infrared light.

 

Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

 

#NASAMarshall #msfc #gsfc #jwst #space #telescope #jameswebspacetelescope

 

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More about the James Webb Space Telescope

 

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My most beautiful hiding places,

places that best fit my soul’s deepest colors,

are made of all that others forgot.

 

They are solitary sites hollowed out in the grass’s caress,

in a shadow of wings, in a passing song;

regions whose limits swirl with the ghostly carriages

that transport the mist in the dawn,

and in whose skies names are sketched, ancient words of love,

vows burning like constellations of drunken fireflies.

 

Sometimes earthly villages pass, hoarse trains make camp,

a couple piles marvelous oranges at the edge of the sea,

a single relic is spread through all space.

My places would look like broken mirages,

clippings of photographs torn from an album to orient nostalgia,

but they have roots deeper than this sinking ground,

these fleeing doors, these vanishing walls.

 

They are enchanted islands where only I can be the magician.

 

And who else, if not I, is climbing the stairs towards those attics in the clouds

where the light, aflame, used to hum in the siesta’s honey,

who else will open again the big chest where the remains of an unhappy story lie,

sacrificed a thousand times only to fantasy, only to foam,

and try on the rags again

like those costumes of invincible heroes,

circle of fire that inflamed time’s scorpion?

 

Who cleans the windowpane with her breath and stirs the fire of the afternoon

in those rooms where the table was an altar of idolatry,

each chair, a landscape folded up after every trip,

and the bed, a stormy short cut to the other shore of dreams,

rooms deep as nets hung from the sky,

like endless embraces I slid down till I brushed the feathers of death,

until I overturned the laws of knowledge and the fall of man?

 

Who goes into the parks with the golden breath of each Christmas

and washes the foliage with a little gray rag that was the handkerchief for waving goodbye,

and reweaves the garlands with a thread of tears,

repeating a fantastic ritual among smashed wine glasses and guests lost in thought,

while she savors the twelve green grapes of redemption—

one for each month, one for each year, one for each century of empty indulgence—

a taste acid but not as sharp as the bread of forgetfulness?

 

Because who but I changes the water for all the memories?

Who inserts the present like a slash into the dreams of the past?

Who switches my ancient lamps for new ones?

 

My most beautiful hiding places are solitary sites where no one goes,

and where there are shadows that only come to life when I am the magician.

- Olga Orozco, Ballad of Forgotten Places

 

Translated from the Spanish, Balada de los Lugares olvidados. www.poesiademujeres.com/2012/10/balada-de-los-lugares-olv...

  

Yannis Martynov Edit

See his work here:

www.flickr.com/photos/yannismartynov/

www.flickr.com/photos/yannis_martynov/

  

Izzie's Mainstore sim

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Izzies/115/125/31

 

Devil’s Dyke is a legendary beauty spot on the South Downs Way. Only five miles north of Brighton it offers amazing views over the Weald and over the English Channel. The mile long Dyke valley is the longest, deepest and widest dry valley in the UK and the legend goes that the Devil dug this chasm to drown the parishioners of the Weald.

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