View allAll Photos Tagged Reflections
Waterscape with Reflections in the late afternoon on Tilligerry Creek at Lemon Tree Passage in Port Stephens, NSW, Australia.
Did you ever stare into the patterns and designs of glass? There are reflections captured that can serve as a catalyst for your imagination to take you to far away places where dreams come true. Take some reflection time today and dream a little dream of specialness just for you! :-)
EXPLORE: January 29, 2009 - #211
NOTE: Thanks so much for your visits, comments, and invites. A special thanks for dreaming along with me! Have a beautiful day! :-)
Ocracoke Lighthouse reflection after a rainstorm. Ocracoke Lighthouse is the oldest operating lighthouse in North Carolina.
Another part of an old house in Biala Rawska, this window. Rusty and crusty and the paint is peeling off. Love these old buildings.
This was my 2nd choice for the theme of reflections , leaves reflection on the river Lowther at Askham
i got my daughter to hold up the sun glasses while i tried to take a photo of the beard in the glass. this was really great fun to do
i am not good at the edges of the glasses yet you have to be real careful mine is a bit wobbley but i will try it again and hope to get it a bit better
i made the background by just putting a photo on pickmonkey and taking the picture off it so you just have only colour i save these as backgrounds in loads of different colours
then you just go to layers put you colour layer in first then put your photo layer in next . then use the paint brush and brush away all the bits of the photo you dont like or want .
i put the links in for all the people who ask me about pickmonkey
this is the group
www.flickr.com/groups/picmonkey/
and this is the lesson on how to do it if anyone want to try it out . it has easy instructions to follow
This is one of a collection of sunset photos that I have taken and then created this water reflection effect in Photoshop. Taken on the Isle of Wight at the South of England.
Get this as a print of Redbubble here: www.redbubble.com/people/mbphotography94/works/29307080-r...
Or on Society6 here: society6.com/product/reflection960534_print?sku=s6-835407...
High Crag and High Stile bathed in the early morning sun creeping through the clouds and reflecting in Buttermere
Photographed using my 10-22mm lens with Lee 0.6ND Grad filter. Rather than B&W I've applied some 'aged look' processing.
Rest area on I95 south reflected in my bike's chrome.
I ride both I95 north and south quite frequently in my roamings. This is one of my favorite rest stops on I95 south. Nice place for a restroom break, and then grab some candy and a soda and head for a picnic bench and sit and enjoy nature for awhile before mounting up and getting back on the road.
This is the marina on Clover Island in Kennewick. It was a pretty calm night which made for a perfect reflection in the water.
I now have a Fuji X10 which is much better to carry around. I thought I would try it out on this reflection while out for lunch!
This is a wonderful illustration of the historic/traditional Chinese garden architecture and how well environmental elements of nature are used and integrated into the setting to create sense of harmony and impressive visual appeal.
The location is in the Qing Dynasty's Summer Palace in the north west outskirt of Beijing, China. It was intended to create a scene inspired by the waterways that crisscrossed dwellings, markets, and gardens of a southern China city Suzhou.
Here the key elements are, water and reflections in the foreground; hill with dense trees and srubbs in the background; simplistic traditional buildings that lined up along the river bank; they even created a few elevated viewing spots to allow the visitor to enjoy the scene in awe in addition to being able to walk right into the scene - this photo was taken from atop a high bridge that crossed this body of water.
Reflections in River Liffey at Chapelizod, Dublin, Ireland
A number of Rowing Clubs are based at this location on the River.
It was one of those days when there were fantastic reflections on the water.
On a walk around Mona Vale with a Flickr freind May 2019 Christchurch New Zealand.
Mona Vale, with its homestead formerly known as Karewa, is a public park of 4 ha in the Christchurch suburb of Fendalton. The homestead and gate house are both listed as heritage buildings with the New Zealand Historic Places Trust (NZHPT). The fernery and the rose garden, and pavilion with the setting of the park along the Avon River, add to the attractiveness of the property. It is one of the major tourist attractions of Christchurch.
The land initially belonged to the Deans brothers, whose homestead is Riccarton House in Riccarton. William Derisley Wood leased the land and built what became known as Wood's Mill. The weir in the Avon River was built in the 19th century and forms the Mona Vale mill pond, which still exists today.
Frederick Waymouth and his wife Alice purchased four acres of land and had a homestead built in 1899–1900, designed by architect Joseph Clarkson
Maddison.Waymouth, who called the homestead Karewa, was the Managing Director of Canterbury Frozen Meats. Maddison was a well-known Christchurch architect, who amongst other buildings designed the freezing works in the Christchurch suburb of Belfast. It is thought that this connection between Waymouth and Maddison led to this commission.
The Mona Vale gate house in 2007
Waymouth sold the property to Annie Quayle Townend in 1905, who renamed it to Mona Vale after her mother's house in Tasmania. She was the daughter of a wealthy Canterbury run-holder, George Moore of Glenmark Station. She was his only surviving daughter and he had bequeathed her one million pounds, apparently making her New Zealand's richest woman at the time. Townend added nine acres of land to the property and had a gate house built just off Fendalton Road. After the New Zealand International Exhibition, held in Hagley Park, finished in 1907, she purchased the exhibitions fernery including its plants and had it reassembled at Mona Vale. The present collection of ferns were supplied by Landcare Research in Lincoln, the Christchurch Botanic Gardens and the private collection of the late Arthur Ericson. Townend also added the bathhouse to the property. She died in 1914.
The property was sold in 1962 to the Church of the Latter Day Saints. When the church intended to subdivide the property and to demolish the homestead, a public outcry resulted in community fund-raising. The Christchurch City Council and the Riccarton Borough Council bought Mona Vale in June 1969 for the purpose of turning it into a public park. The purchase of Mona Vale is credited to Christchurch mayor Ron Guthrey.
Until the 2010 Canterbury earthquake, the homestead was operated as a restaurant, café and function centre, often used for weddings. The building is currently closed due to earthquake damage.
Looking south the sky was blue, sandstone cliffs were reflected on the wet sand, the sea was calm.
This is Gore Bay, North Canterbury, NZ
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Back to the Silverburn for some more from my photowalk in August. The theme is water. Going upriver from the bridge I came across this pool-like area where the river was flowing so slowly I could see a building reflected in the surface. Its a rather large house undergoing a virtual rebuild. I think it has a rather nice outlook over the river.
Tweaked this a little in Topaz Clarity.