View allAll Photos Tagged RISING
Wanted to post the last shot of the year. As always, fog, mist, dark moody goes with my shots or I prefer that way. Also, I am very happy to share that I finally created my own photography website. Please visit, when you get a chance
Wish you all a very Happy New Year 2016 and thanks again for all your love and support :)
Every picture that I share in this month will be my gift to you. You can freely download the high res image to make a print, or use it on your website, anything you want :)
Just link back to my flickr page, please.
Greetings,
András
NO images//awards//graphics please!
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I had to work hard on the different elements of this composition. The focal point is the rising mist in the distance, which was my starting point for the rest of the image. The framing of the trees and the sweep of the shoreline, in particular, formed crucial elements. The branches on the left compete a little with the background vegetation and I am slightly unsatisfied about not being able to see the vanishing point of the river. However, I think the mood of the image does go some way towards compensating for some of these shortcomings.
Yosemite Valley, California
Standing on the left (south) bank of the Merced, we see the Lower Cathedral Rock behind the trees, rising up among the clouds
Taken At Sandwell valley park,
The great egret, also known as the common egret, large egret, or great white egret or great white heron is a large, widely distributed egret, with four subspecies found in Asia, Africa, the Americas, and southern Europe, recently also spreading to more northern areas of Europe.
When I saw this scene I wanted to have some interest in the foreground but the deep forest created an exposure that turned the foreground into silhouette. When I walked back a bit I came to clearing on the right which gave sufficient light to keep the foreground out of silhouette. Haywood Lake Trail in Mission.
E-3, 14-54
This image was captured back in February when I headed to the hills of Wiltshire.
With my main camera setup and facing towards the hills and mist opposite. Whilst capturing the scene unfolding in front of me, I noticed the lone tree not far from where I was standing, along with the sun rising behind. I grabbed the next best camera, the phone, and captured this image.
The moon rising above Lake Tyrell with a reddish tone. I shot this at several exposures as it was a very faint moon given it was rising at 5pm into sunshine. I'm not entirely happy with this shot but here it is.
Haven't been around much as I have been having alot of shoulder and arm issues but did finally get out this morning for a quick drive...the fog was just too enticing not to go out to one of my favourite locations for sunrise which is just a km down the road and I don't have to carry my camera far :) This was a 5 vertical image panorama.
The moon is seen rising over the mountains as UP 1989 brings a problematic MSPRV over Donner Pass. The slow moving westbound was 99 cars this day which is much longer than its usual length of up to only about thirty to forty cars. However, just a handful of miles later this train would go into emergency at Blue Canyon as the train lost air. Due to this, the conductor had to walk the entire train. Meanwhile, me and some friends sat at Casa Loma only seven miles away listening to this situation over the radio. A manager ended up getting called out to their train meaning they would be halted for awhile. Due to this, we decided to head to Blue Canyon to try and get some final light photos of it. As we walked to the head end one of us caught the problem that somehow managed to go unseen, the air hose had snapped on the first car. After getting the engineer's attention we let him know about the problem so it could get fixed and it was obvious the hose had snapped due to it riding very low. The train would end up sitting at Blue Canyon until after dark before finally getting on the move again. By this point, we had already made it down the mountain to get some dinner before calling it a day.
Taken on a rising tide the sea was warm and took this shot with waves coming in and getting bigger as tried to delay to get the evening light.
My favourite beach in Portugal for photography.
B&W Polariser Lee 0.9s Grad B & W ND 106
f10 iso 320 35mm 1.5 sec
Preceding the sunrise, the stars at the core of the Milky Way Galaxy appear to rise above the horizon and arc in a clockwise diurnal circle around the south celestial pole as the Earth rotates under them. A magnificent and contemplative sight.
This is a screen grab from a timelapse i released today
When I started timelapse photography a year ago I thought it would be something I could just jump right into and master, as I've been taking stills for nearly a decade now. But I was quickly humbled by the medium as I struggled to put together worthwhile footage after repeated early attempts. This, I realized, was a whole other animal.
Over and above all the technical challenges — motion control gear, constantly changing light, aperture flicker — shooting a timelapse forces you to look inside: after setting up your shot, there’s often not much you can do for hours, but sit up there and ponder while the camera does it's thing. The relationship between the cold glass, steel and concrete below coupled with the often majestic clouds, sky and sun/moon never ceases to be a source of wonder. And so the purpose of what you’re doing becomes a frequent question in your mind.
With City Rising I wanted to bring others up to this perspective, and from here, show them the city as they have never seen it before — where the boundary between earth and sky is unclear and the placid beauty of the city lays spread out below, quietly humming along. City Rising takes the viewer straight through rush hour traffic to the highest urban peaks and the clouds above it all, all in under four minutes.