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For Macro Mondays- The negative space

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This is one of the walkways along a creek bed on the BYU campus. Lit with golden light reflected off the surrounding yellow leaves.

  

To enjoy my other creative project, please visit my funny short stories website: 500ironicstories.com where you can read or listen to new stories each week. I have also curated the stories into three different selections:

Stories for Kids - 500ironicstories.com/stories-for-kids Love Stories - 500ironicstories.com/love-story

Moral Stories - 500ironicstories.com/moral-stories

Groton, CT | www.peteyphotography.com

 

I got some awesome news to share with you all. I'm just waiting for the go ahead nod so that I finally can, but it's very exciting!

 

Here's a shot of my buddy's in Pathways. I think this was my 3rd time working with them and it is a great time.

 

This shoot was insane though, probably the coldest ever. 20 degrees combined with 30-40mph winds, made shooting difficult with modifiers, but we could only shoot for 5 mintues at a time before everyone got too cold, even my cybersyncs had a hard time keeping up in the conditions. But, we hopped in and out of our cars over the course of a few hours.

 

Then the sun peeked out for a lil bit and we snapped this while we could.

  

#ilovecolors

 

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Strobist:

B800 boomed bare w/o reflector above band

Triggered by cybersyncs

  

Another of my light painting experiments.

 

Tech info:

one sky image at 13 seconds, f2.2,iso 2000.

5 forground images blended, exif shown.

A sharp curve along the Middle Loop of the Minister Creek hiking trails in the Allegheny National Forest

One the way to Achtermann mountain (Harz, GER) with my old 550D and fisheye lens.

earthviews.de video archive

IMG_0368x5 PepVentosa method

Town of Ballston recreation area, Ballston, New York.

taken with Nikon Df and 24-70 f/2.8 Nikon lens

Schenectady, New York.

 

SMC Pentax-A 50mm f/1.2 manual focus lens.

A lovely sunny walk on Haughmond Hill, not far, but very pleasant.

Autumn is coming in the Devon woodland. A few pics taken during a fungi forage

Beautiful Catawba Rhododendrons line the path on the Cloudland Trail leading to the Rhododendron Gardens on Roan Mountain.

Seen on a walk across Holcombe Moor | Ramsbottom

Captured at Turimetta Head, pathway to the beach

Explore @ #181

 

Copyright© GlennDulay / Glenn Wesley A. Dulay

This image is protected under the Kingdom of Bahrain and International Copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without written permission.

 

• Camera: Canon EOS 40D + Canon 24-70 f/2.8 USM

• Standard Five [5] Bracketed Exposures [RAW] + Photomatix + CS3

• Location: Muharraq Corniche , Kingdom of Bahrain

 

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in an old growth redwood forest , a few hundred meters beyond the bright light is the beach

One of the many interconnecting pathways in the royal castle gardens in Fredensborg, Denmark

Fujifilm CLASSIC NEGATIVE

I liked how the bright colour and the reflected sky in the windows of this office building looked like pathways in the sky. Published in Issue 75 of DC Magazine.

 

© Andrew Fuller. This image remains the property of Andrew Fuller, and as such, may not be used or reproduced in any form, in part or in whole, without my express permission.

This birch-lined pathway was born from desperation. We had a real grungy section of grass on our front lawn, the only solution for which seemed to be to dig it out.

So, I dug it out.

Now what?

Well, why not extend it a little bit and make a path out of it?

Okay, done. It looks a little desolate, though. So, what's next?

It so happened we had a whole bunch of baby birch trees growing in little planter boxes, trees that were the offspring of two mature birches that were on the property when we bought the place in 1967. Usually, I just ran the babies over with the lawn mower, but at some point my wife Sammy started rescuing them. and in 1994 I planted 18 baby birches along side this path, and here they stand today. We also found space for 25 more birches in our back yard, and we don't have a big yard by any stretch of the imagination (6,600 sq. ft.). Our house faces west, so in the summer time, the shade from these trees helps greatly to keep our home cool, while in the winter, the bare trees let the sun in to help keep the place warm. Also, bordering the path are rocks and old fallen logs that we collected during our wanderings through the Sierras, so every part of this, except the pebbles that cover the pathway, is free of charge.

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