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How do you commemorate the trip of a lifetime? Our client toured the full length of Route 66, the Mother Road in the US, and then commissioned us to produce this iconic montage of around 30 of their photographs. Many of the images are fully masked from the original background and seamlessly blended together. The Corvette car was photographed in a motor museum, but has been put back on the road at an unreasonable speed to create a striking centre-piece for the montage.
Typical Price:
Montage (printed at any size up to 16"x12"): £150.00
Mounting & Framing: price on specification
Salt marshes, cranberry bogs, artist's studios, history dripping from the trees, historic cemeteries....
On the stretch heading west from Seligman (on our return to Las Vegas from South Rim of the Grand Canyon"
Holywells Park, Ipswich
I live on cycle route 51, and the mile or so that I do along it several times a day is the journey that I know best in the world.
It is a dramatic journey. Between my house and the centre of Ipswich the route goes through rolling Holywells Park, the most beautiful of all the Ipswich parks. It also goes through the middle of the Ipswich Docklands regeneration, the biggest building site in the east of England.
I began to think that the route marker signs, if taken in conjunction with their immediate surroundings, might tell a story about the route, and about my daily journeys.
This photograph manipulation came about because of a typo. I was looking through my photos to find one to play with and noticed one titled "Route 666" instead of "Route 66." Nothing dramatic, just a tweak of colors and a number added here and there.
Sunday 18 November 2018: Sama Gaon / Samagaun (3500 m) - Samdo (3860 m)
Manaslu Circuit Day 11
Route: Sama Gaon / Samagaun / सामागाउँ (3500 m) - Birendra Tal / बिरेन्द्र ताल (3460 m) - Samdo / संदो (3860 m)
Camp: Chez Karsang Lodge
After swinging Sama’s cheekiest little monkey to school, we made a side trip to Birendra Tal, following the path that leads to Manaslu Base Camp and dropping down to the lake from the moraine wall, quite a steep path in places.
Down at the shore line we added our own stone towers and took lots of photos of the turquoise lake with Manaslu and Naike Peak towering above.
As the clouds gathered we followed the Budhi Gandaki up the valley to Samdo, letting the ungrateful trail runners overtake.
Chez Karsang Lodge was our Samdo base and after sorting out our tents and lunching in the lodge we had the afternoon free. Samdo’s a small place, but growing fast, and it was full of trekkers and trail runners.
After a stroll around “town”, Steffi and I decided to walk up the side valley that shelters the village, climbing up to a dry lake and getting good views back down into Samdo. This is the older side of the village, not on the trail to the Larke La, and was a cluster of stone built houses with byres below, livestock pens outside and crops drying on the roof. Lovely.
Just time before dinner to head out with Val to deliver an LED solar light and to arrange further distribution of lights and school supples once we’re back from the Yak Kharka.
Read more about my November 2018 trek in Nepal on SparklyTrainers: Manaslu & Tsum with Val Pitkethly.
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