View allAll Photos Tagged Reflection.
This is the first time in years that I have visited Mt. Ranier and managed to catch a shot of Mt. Ranier reflected in Reflection Lakes. Usually, the mountain is smothered in clouds or the wind erases reflections. While it was windy, there were a few protected spots where Mt. Ranier succeeded in being reflected.
A fantastic view of Cave Run Lake in the Daniel Boone National Forest. Captured east of Windy Bay Fishing Point. Although mainly a fishing area, this location is frequently used for swimming and other activities. Beautiful and peaceful, this is one of my favorite sites at Cave Run.
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I thought I had better put a color photo out. ( but darn it, its not going to be very colorful !) Taking this photo I got caught. Down a quiet blacktop road in the morning I seen this house and knew that the still pond beside it would hold a reflection of the old place. I climbed 2 pipe gates to get there and a truck drove by and stopped at our car in the entranceway, so I quickly packed up and headed back and my wife was at the car talking to him. When I arrived I apologized, but I knew this was a special oppurtunity and he didn't mind at all. He was flattered that someone was even interested enough to take its picture. Got permission to return also with IR when the leaves fill out. Could of went the other way.This is in Lewis Co. Missouri.
Coloured reflections on the lake. I took this picture as an experiment to see how well I could get the reflections.
Abstract art of a four-way mirror image reflection of a photograph of white-veined dark green Aphelandra leaves. (Created using GIMP and G'MIC.)
Suffolk, VA - 28 OCT 2016
Reflections on Lake Drummond in the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge. So calm and tranquil on this day.
Went for a little re-edit of an old photo today. It has always been one of my favourites. I loved the reflection coming back, especially with the green of the trees. Felt it summed up the nervous excitement one feels before getting married and the green symbolised a natural unity.
This morning when I looked out of the window, I saw the reflection of these car's in the parking lot, and it was raining. I grabbed my camera ran out onto the deck, and shot this in the rain. I have a hood over the lens, so it was OK.
The reflections between the parallel pieces of marble make some of the background look transparent.
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When I look at this I think of the many photo "sessions" and dozens of photos before I finally got the shot I wanted
Reflections of Upper West Side buildings in central park reservoir. Low angle version of a similar photograph I posted earlier.
This shot was hard with the camera almost touching the water with no idea what I am shooting at. I need a swiveling screen now. Please, Canon...
Reflections in a wall of the Sponsor Village in Torino in the period of the XX Olympic Winter Games - Torino2006
Night Heron, Reflection. Sacramento Valley, California. January 8, 2016. © Copyright 2016 G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.
A solitary night heron perches on a snag above a reflecting pool
I have mentioned before that I came late to an interest in photographing birds — it only began a few years ago when I took a serendipitous trip to a California Central Valley refuge where I saw huge numbers of birds. Despite being a virtually life-long Californian living within a short drive of such areas, I barely knew they existed. (I had one prior hint on a drive to the Pacific Northwest some years ago, when I passed through the upper Sacramento Valley on a late-November evening and say many birds in the sky.)
That all changed during recent years. At first I "discovered" geese and egrets, the latter which I had seen before and occasionally photographed in the San Francisco Bay Area. Then I caught on to some of the other birds out in the Central Valley — ibises, cranes, herons, white pelicans. But the night herons continued to be a bit of a mystery, and frankly they still remain so to an extent. They are found at the location where I most often photograph, but typically off at some distance. That distance, along with their habit of roosting in thick grasses and plants, makes them hard to see and photograph. On this visit to a different location up in the Sacramento Valley I found a huge group of them in brush just across a canal, and I was able to photograph them from a closer distance, including this one that was atypically out of the brush and standing on a log.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, "California's Fall Color: A Photographer's Guide to Autumn in the Sierra" is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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this was such a magnificent reflection (wish you could have been there) that as I stood near the edge of it, my fear of extreme heights beckoned me to move away from the edge. It was, quite frankly, mind boggling.
Sailing with the Milwaukee Sea Scouts from Milwaukee to Michigan's West Coast and return for a week - Aug 2012
_BKS5061
This long-legged, S-necked white bird is found throughout the Americas and around much of the world. It is typically the largest white egret occurring anywhere in its range (only the white-colored form of the great blue heron is larger).
Great egrets are found near water, salt or fresh, and feed in wetlands, streams, ponds, tidal flats, and other areas. They snare prey by walking slowly or standing still for long periods, waiting for an animal to come within range of their long necks and blade-like bills. The deathblow is delivered with a quick thrust of the sharp bill, and the prey is swallowed whole. Fish are a dietary staple, but great egrets use similar techniques to eat amphibians, reptiles, mice, and other small animals.
A view on Rotterdam from the panorama deck of the Euromast.
(Indeed a reflection using one of the windows of the building)