View allAll Photos Tagged Reflective

Photo captured via Minolta MD Zoom Rokkor-X 24-50mm F/4 lens and the bracketing method of photography. Point Arena-Stornetta Public Lands: California Coastal National Monument. Coast Range. North Coast. Mendocino County, Northern California. Early August 2017.

 

Exposure Time: 1/250 sec. * ISO Speed: ISO-100 * Aperture: F/8 * Bracketing: +1 / -1 * Color Temperature: 4650 K * Film Plug-In: Kodak Portra 160 VC

 

*Truly have a passion for unique landscape and thought provoking shots?? Please be sure to check out my partner Slick 406's work at: www.flickr.com/photos/156943980@N03

A reflective selfie...just because.

Sarasota Bay, Sarasota, FL

Portmeirion, Wales

 

wiki extract: - The village is located in the community of Penrhyndeudraeth, on the estuary of the River Dwyryd, 2 miles (3.2 km) south east of Porthmadog, and 1 mile (1.6 km) from the railway station at Minffordd, which is served by both the narrow gauge Ffestiniog Railway and Arriva Trains Wales (Cambrian Line).

 

History[edit]

Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, Portmeirion's designer, denied repeated claims that the design was based on the fishing village of Portofino on the Italian Riviera. He stated only that he wanted to pay tribute to the atmosphere of the Mediterranean. He did, however, draw from a love of the Italian village stating, "How should I not have fallen for Portofino? Indeed its image remained with me as an almost perfect example of the man-made adornment and use of an exquisite site."[1] Williams-Ellis designed and constructed the village between 1925 and 1975. He incorporated fragments of demolished buildings, including works by a number of other architects. Portmeirion's architectural bricolage and deliberately fanciful nostalgia have been noted as an influence on the development of postmodernism in architecture in the late 20th century.

  

Castell Deudraeth

The main building of the hotel and the cottages "White Horses", "Mermaid", and "The Salutation" had been a private estate called Aber Iâ (Welsh: Ice estuary), developed in the 1850s on the site of a late 18th-century foundry and boatyard. Williams-Ellis changed the name (which he had interpreted as "frozen mouth") to Portmeirion: "Port-" from its place on the coast; "-meirion" from the county of Merioneth (Meirionydd) in which it was sited.[2] The very minor remains of a mediaeval castle (known variously as Castell Deudraeth, Castell Gwain Goch and Castell Aber Iâ) are in the woods just outside the village, recorded by Giraldus Cambrensis (Gerald of Wales) in 1188.

 

In 1931 Williams-Ellis bought from his uncle, Sir Osmond Williams, Bt, the Victorian crenellated mansion Castell Deudraeth with the intention of incorporating it into the Portmeirion hotel complex, but the intervention of the war and other problems prevented this. Williams-Ellis had always considered the Castell to be “the largest and most imposing single building on the Portmeirion Estate" and sought ways to incorporate it. Eventually, with support from the Heritage Lottery Fund and the European Regional Development Fund as well as the Wales Tourist Board, his original aims were achieved and Castell Deudraeth was opened as an 11 bedroom hotel and restaurant on August 20, 2001 by Welsh opera singer Bryn Terfel.

 

The grounds contain an important collection of rhododendrons and other exotic plants in a wild-garden setting, which was begun before Williams-Ellis's time by the previous owner George Henry Caton Haigh and has continued to be developed since Williams-Ellis's death.

 

Portmeirion is now owned by a charitable trust, and has always been run as a hotel, which uses the majority of the buildings as hotel rooms or self-catering cottages, together with shops, a cafe, tea-room, and restaurant. Portmeirion is today a top tourist attraction in North Wales[3] and day visits can be made on payment of an admission charge.

 

Shiny & reflective.. Looks like a world map on his back!

Moring walk reflecting on the start of another day-------------

Sunset Walk Tower Point May 24, 2008 085e

Camera - Mamiya 645 Pro TL

Lens - Sekor 80mm f/2.8

Film - Ektar 100 and Portra 400

Fukushu-En Park in downtown Naha, Okinawa.

 

Camera: Zenit 12XP

Lens: Practicon Practicar 28mm f2.8

Film: Fuji Neopan 100 (Legacy Pro)

Developer: Xtol

Scanner: Epson V600

Photoshop: Curves, Healing Brush (spotting)

Cropping: None

Self portrait

March 2010

Taken over a year ago and revisited.

Pretty nice. She made out of latex.

Midtown Atlanta. GA. iPhone4.

Empty room in the ticket hall at Piccadilly Circus, lots of reflective surfaces.....

Made in Deventer, The Netherlands. Using a homemade pinhole camera and Agfa photo paper.

 

Rocks in the Ijssel River.

  

www.analogfanatics.com

Kodak PixPro AZ522

 

4th Anniversary roadtrip to OKC to visit our friend and see the Oklahoma State Fair! It was a rainy way down...

100mm test, f/32, tungsten wb, reflective surface

Black headed Gull cooling off

These two women from the Winter Magic Festival had such stunning costumes that I had to make a work of art out of them.

 

Shot on a Canon A720IS, then retouched in GIMP.

Carlisle, Cumbria. 17th June 2014. Taken with Yashica ME1 with X2 yellow filter using Ilford XP2. Shot at box speed. C41 processsed and scanned at ASDA.

You get to see my HID Foglights (recently installed) :)!

The amazing visuals created by the weather. Taken with "cheapie" Kodak Easyshare C123 waterproof "sport camera" in black and white.

Paddling on a reflective surface. JackMtn.com

Rolleiflex SL 35

Kodak Tri-X 400

 

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