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Dee Why is a suburb in the Northern Beaches area of Sydney, NSW, Australia. The last decade has seen the former sleepy suburb well on the way to being a bustling urban centre in its own right.
Linked to the Sydney CBD by the Northern Beaches B-Line a fleet of express buses which makes the suburb attractive to families and singles alike living in the newly built 'Lighthouse" on the busy Pittwater Road.
Barmaid at work in the public bar of the Dee Why hotel, on Sydney's northern beaches, 1975.
Camera: Olympus OM1
Film: Tri-X 400
Developer: D76
Scan: Epson V700
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media, or reproduce it in any way without my explicit written permission. © copyright 1975Lynn Burdekin. All Rights Reserved.
Dee Why is a suburb in the Northern Beaches area of Sydney, NSW, Australia. The last decade has seen the former sleepy suburb well on the way to being a bustling urban centre in its own right.
Linked to the Sydney CBD by the Northern Beaches B-Line a fleet of express buses which makes the suburb attractive to families and singles alike living in the newly built 'Lighthouse" on the busy Pittwater Road.
This is a second photo of the surfer girl at DeeWhy beach two weeks ago. (The first one is here). I'm enjoying making frames with Photoshop!
Up again at 4:30am this morning for a shoot with Mario Bekes, Kellie Mafrici.
This will be first of a series of photos from this morning. If you have time please take a look at my some of my other captures in Bodies set & let me you what you think
Special thanks to Kellie for being a willing model & I hope you like the photos
PS. damn I wish I had asked Kellie to look more towards my right shoulder - mental note for next time
Life is a beach, you have to have fun with mates and be in the moment.
Taken at Dee Why Beach Sydney Australia.
As the tide goes out, the moss of the rocks of Dee Why beach are exposed. Taken just before sunset.
Canon 400d 18-55mm
So I haven't taken many photos of my Black Series 6" Stormtroopers in a while, and several weeks ago I aquired some Sandtroopers. Today I finally decided to take them out and try and find a backdrop I haven't used before.
Seen at Cabarita, (sometime in the late 1980s) sunk at her mooring, the Lady Edeline a wooden hulled ex Sydney ferry was tied up with 3 Hydrofoils awaiting disposal.
I can't remember how I found out about this, but I put some film in the camera, drove to Mortlake & took these pictures. It had been raining heavy & this is thought to have contributed to the vessels sinking.
Australian ravens in coastal wetlands, Sydney 2014. Nikon F80 AF Nikkor 50mm f/1.8D, Ilford HP5+ in D76. V700 scan.
From Set 9 of Snapshots of Sydney Harbour Bridge by Samuel Wood. 8 in Packet (cheaper than taking your own) - Showing s.s. "Deewhy", Manly steamer, in front of bridge.
Also from Envelope containing photos:
Clearance at high water for steamers, 172 feet.
Crown of Arch above water, 437 feet.
Width of Span (Arch), 1650 feet, 28 Panels.
Height of Pylons, 285 feet above mean sea level.
Two Footways, 10 ft. each. Two Rail Tracks, 26 ft. 7 1/2 in. each.
Roadway, 57 feet.
Total Width of Bridge, 134 feet 11 1/2 inches.
Weight of Steel used in Bridge, over 50,000 tons.
Bridge to be opened for traffic, 1931.
Built by Dorman, Long & Co. Amount of Tender £4,217,721.
Length of First Hangers, 192 feet; weight, 37 tons.
PHOTOS SHOW PROGRESS OF BRIDGE TO EARLY OCTOBER, 1930.
Dee Why is a suburb in the Northern Beaches area of Sydney, NSW, Australia. The last decade has seen the former sleepy suburb well on the way to being a bustling urban centre in its own right.
Linked to the Sydney CBD by the Northern Beaches B-Line a fleet of express buses which makes the suburb attractive to families and singles alike living in the newly built 'Lighthouse" on the busy Pittwater Road.