View allAll Photos Tagged NightDrive
driving home with the tripod wedged in the back, not very successful as it kept tipping over in corners
Driving westbound E Riverside Drive at the Parker Lane/Shore District Drive intersection, heading toward Downtown Austin at night.
Austin, Texas
Tuesday evening 14 March 2023
[Website]=[Facebook]=[Google+]=[Tumblr]
ALL of my images are copyright protected. DO NOT use them without my expressed permission.
G+ Selfy Sunday shot from yesterday.
Equipment:
Camera: Nikon D800e
Lens: Rokinon 14mm Ultra Wide-Angle f/2.8 IF ED UMC
Focal Length: 14mm
ISO Speed: 800
Aperture: f/6.3
Shutter: 1.6 seconds
Tripod: Really Right Stuff TVC-33
Ball Head: Really Right Stuff BH-55 LR
Filter: none
Processing:
Lightroom 5.3 [color balance, sharpening, etc]
CS6 [composite: 2 exposures blended...I liked the passenger mirror from a different image]
Its Friday night, raining and the music is perfect. I passed my exit, and kept on driving.
Enjoy your weekend. :)
The photo made in the tunnel. I was the passenger in the car and the shot was just what I was looking for.
I had never expected to see an aardvark in the wild - this was a marvellous night drive. We also saw aardwolf but too distant and elusive for a picture. The guide apologised for not finding black-footed cat - given the choice of one over the other the aardvark wins every time for me.
Aka Common Genet. One of three individuals observed in thicketed savannah woodland on a night drive from Tarangire Safari Lodge.
Tarangire National Park, Manyara, Tanzania, East Africa.
Driving eastbound I-70/Kansas Turnpike at night, around Mile Marker 190 (between the Topeka Service Area and the K-10/Lecompton interchange).
Douglas County, Kansas
Sunday evening 20 November 2022
Had to travel the Decarie Expressway tonight. Great to be able to stick your camera out the top of your car.
Driving westbound Interstate 44/Will Rogers Turnpike, less than a mile from the US-412/Creek Turnpike interchange (Exit 33A & 34).
Rogers County, Oklahoma
Friday evening 11 March 2022
If I showed any of you the first shot I ever took with each of my cameras, it would be quite the laughing matter. This is no exception but the first time I set up the camera, I was in Felicity's car, heading out to Vancouver.
I'll be honest and I'll say that this shot would not have been possible with my Rebel XT. One thing the Nikon D90 has that the Rebel doesn't is that it has a little AF illuminator to help focus whereas the XT would have to strobe the flash to autofocus in really dark lighting.
Dark blue sky, trees, blinking warning light, my car's dash and neon lights all come together to make this photo.
Renovated Kabuki-za reopens
no rules, no limitations, no boundaries it's like an art™
© All Rights Reserved by ajpscs
The Kabuki-za was originally opened by a Meiji era journalist, Fukuchi Gen'ichirō. Fukuchi wrote kabuki dramas in which Ichikawa Danjūrō IX and others starred; upon Danjūrō's death in 1903, Fukuchi retired from the management of the theatre. The theatre was then taken over by the Shochiku Corporation in 1914; the theatre is exclusively run by the company since.
Kabuki (歌舞伎 kabuki) is a classical Japanese dance-drama. Kabuki theatre is known for the stylization of its drama and for the elaborate make-up worn by some of its performers.
The individual kanji characters, from left to right, mean sing (歌), dance (舞), and skill (伎). Kabuki is therefore sometimes translated as "the art of singing and dancing".
From Wikipedia
Land Rover Experience Driving Days, Special Nightdrives offroad and cross country, showing off the best of the 4x4 facility. Pausing for a rest at one of the Experience Centres. Convoy through the water.
Life Is A Highway: Last 50 Miles Of 1250 Mile NY-FL Christmas Day Drive - IMRAN™
The final leg of my epic 1250-mile, two-day Christmas Day journey from my Long Island, New York home to Apollo Beach, Florida was something straight out of Murphy's Law.
Initially, it seemed like every possible obstacle presented itself—heavy rain in New York and New Jersey, bumper-to-bumper traffic in VA, SC, and NC, and endless, grueling construction on the South Carolina stretch of I-95. It all added up to nearly 2.5 days of relentless driving.
By the time I gratefully entered the last 50-mile stretch, it was almost 2 AM on December 27, 2024. The roads were eerily empty, a stark contrast to the chaotic journey that had unfolded.
Despite everything, I felt an overwhelming sense of relief knowing I was nearing the end of this arduous adventure. Finally, I made it back to my Florida home. It thankfully had been spared from Milton's wrath, despite suffering some damage from Helene just prior.
© 2024-2025 IMRAN™