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A panoramic, long exposure, landscape image of Cullen Bay in Morayshire, Scotland, just after sunrise.
Whytecliff Park
West Vancouver, BC
Canada
(Wallpaper style image - best viewed in full screen :)
I invite you to view my 99+ (Fave) album:
www.flickr.com/photos/120552517@N03/albums/72157656422454792
Thank-you so much for all your views, comments and faves
So very appreciated !!
~Christie (happiest) by the River
Vancouver Photowalk
Lens: EF 100 f/2.8L IS macro (click to see all my photos with this lens)
1/200s f/4.0 100mm ISO 1250 tripod
Process: stitching/merging of several photos + manual editing
I must look clueless when I am out shooting and have sad puppy dog eyes were friendly people want to help correct my ways.
On this sunset, I was at Panorama Point in Capitol Reef National Park. The "view" is the opposite direction, and I was set up with my tripod looking in the opposite direction from everyone else.
Three separate people came up to me, letting me know where I was supposed to be shooting. I thanked them for their kindness and stood my ground :-)
A lone photographer on a ledge of Island in the Sky in Canyonlands, can give an idea of the proportions of the whole scene. The place is huge, vaste, endless.
A photographer sets up for images of a newly awakening day ....a moment of anticipation and freshness ....high in the Roan Highlands on the Appalachian Trail.
Have a nice day :-)
Street photo. The photographer looks towards the Red Square after the end of the military parade on May 9.
Dear guests of Moscow, I want to give you advice and I hope it will be useful.
Many people come to Moscow to shoot military equipment, which is involved in a military parade. People come to the podium of Red Square by special invitations (there are very few of them). Technique can be seen on the streets of the capital during the rehearsals of the parade or after it. The best place to shoot a narrow street near the metro station Barrikadnaya.
I took this photo on Raushevskaya Embankment, here the planes fly low. And military equipment on the other side of the river ... there is no sense in taking photos of it in this place.
A young lady setting up her Sony camera for a session in the late evening under the midnight sun of Yellowknife Canada, a time of the year when this regions enjoys almost 24 hours of daylight and the Golden Hour extends from 11:00 on until 7 am for any photographer that wishes to stay up for the night.
Frost at Grasmere (originally omitted)
Frost was prominent here and there in spite of the Sun, and this photographer caught my eye! :-)
Grasmere, Cumbria UK
Buy this image on : Getty Images
Red dress photographer of the Bøyabreen Glacier near Fjærland in Norway.
Retro photographer at the festival "Times and Era".Strastnoy Boulevard in Moscow. Theme - "1812 year. War and Peace"
"The camera is an instrument that teaches people to see without a camera."
- Dorothea Lange.
If you're like me you go through the day observing the little things - light and shade, line and form, identifying subjects that intrigue and tease. Thinking all the while, "That would make a great photo." Unlike Henri Cartier-Bresson, most of us can't carry a camera with us wherever we go. But that doesn't stop us taking photos with our mind. With such a mindset the world is filled with photo ops.
There has never been a time when more snapshots have been taken, and almost all of those hundreds of millions of pictures every single day are taken with a smart phone and posted on social media. Taking pictures is ubiquitous, and yet the art of photography remains illusive.
If you look closely at this image you'll observe some interesting things. That seagull we saw in the previous photograph (taken a couple of hours earlier) is still there, but this time he's been joined by another. In the sky on the far right we observe a jet's contrail that looks surprisingly like a comet. And if you look really closely, the ubiquitous contemporary photographer is silhouetted against the fading light. And of course his instrument of choice appears to be an iPad.
On a crisp, clear September morning the Kaindlzug heads south between Pfarrwerfen and Bischofshofen. The train is a photographers favorite due to its rare pairing of 1163 locomotives, normally only found on locals or on shunting duties. A proper photo line was assembled here for the trains passage.
As a note as others have already stated: If you are visiting this spot its best to park away from the farm house and walk in, the farmer was a little annoyed with us for parking close but were ok once we had talked to them. Normally I go by train and bike so don't have to deal with such problems. ;)