View allAll Photos Tagged Row
Middle Row in Stevenage Old Town.
Fed 2 camera
Industar 26M 50 mm lens
Ilford HP5+ film (accidentally over-exposed 2 stops)
Lab develop & scan
000011250030_0001
The often photographed Mormon Row at Grand Teton National Park. In fact, I would say that this scene is one of the most photographed in the western United States. I have at least 4 different photos of these barns in my photostream, including two slightly different panoramas. So why keep shooting this scene?
Because it's a lot of fun!
To begin, it's very beautiful. The Tetons are absolutely majestic and such impressive mountains, the the dilapidated barns in front of the Tetons are so Americana it's almost appropriate to eat cherry pie while shooting this scene. The spring was very wet and the lush grasses and trees compliment everything so well.
Yes, there were other photographers there. There is almost always going to be. Yes, we were all shooting the same scene that morning. But who cares? The minute I'm too good for a beautiful but "cliche" landscape scene, that's the minute I'll give up photography. Shoot cliche scenes! Do your best and use your creativity to try to do something new with those scenes! Go shoot Tunnel View, or Maroon Lake, or The Golden Gate bridge from the Marin Highlands!
Rows in a harvested field lead the eyes into an abandoned homestead under stormy skies. Centra Montana - May 2020
Portra 160 4x5, 135mm lens
1 second at f32, no filters
Chester Rows is a unique architectural feature in Chester, England. The Rows are a series of two-tiered medieval buildings with covered walkways on the first floor, dating back to the 13th century. These walkways, known as "rows," provide access to shops and other premises, with another set of shops located at street level, often accessed by descending a few steps. The black and white half-timbered buildings are believed to be built on top of Roman ruins. The exact reason for their construction remains a topic of speculation, with one theory suggesting that the Roman walls limited space for commercial expansion. Today, the Rows are a popular tourist attraction and shopping destination, housing a variety of shops.
Undercrofts or "crypts" were constructed beneath the buildings in the Rows. The undercrofts are made from stone while most of the buildings in the Rows are timber. Today about 20 of the stone undercrofts still exist, but at the level of the Rows very little medieval fabric remains. Many of the buildings containing portions of the Rows are listed and some are recorded in the English Heritage Archive. The premises on the street and Row levels are used for a variety of purposes; most are shops, but there are also offices, restaurants, cafés, and meeting rooms. Chester Rows are one of the city's main tourist attractions.
The building housing Mollie's Sweet Shop is a black and white timber-framed structure, characteristic of the Tudor Revival style. The shop's exterior is decorated with a red and white colour scheme and features two tin soldier statues flanking the entrance. Mollie's Sweet Shop is a chain that sells traditional British sweets and American candy. The shop in Chester is situated in a Grade II* listed building at numbers 27, 29, and 31 on Northgate Street, within the Dublin Packet passage.
Next to Mollie's Sweet Shop is the Dublin Packet pub, located at 27-31 Northgate Street, which is also part of the historic Chester Rows. The Dublin Packet is a Grade II* listed building, noted for its black and white timber-framed architecture, typical of the Chester Rows. The pub itself is a traditional British pub that dates back to the 1800s and is named after the packet boats that used to travel between Chester and Dublin. For 16 years after World War II, it was run by former Everton footballer Dixie Dean.
Cockle Row Cottages, Groomsport, Northern Ireland. The cottages illustrate life for a fisherman and his family at the turn of the last century. Also houses a local Visitor Information Centre and shop.
Path along the small river in my hometown, when I like to walk with my dog, as it looks now :)
Ścieżka wzdłuż rzeczki niedaleko mojego osiedla, gdzie lubię spacerować z psicą, w jesiennej odsłonie :)
A row of trees beside the Federal Highway, in New South Wales, that runs from Canberra to Sydney. It had clearly been a dry year with low rainfall that turned everything brown.
Jellybean Row, the colourful houses in the city of St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, are amazing!. These homes appear as boxes and are all in line on a straight street. This 180 degree view is made from 13 images. I chose it because no cars were parked in front. The power lines have mostly been removed in PS to show more of the houses themselves.
A row of buttons on my business handcuffs. Simple window light with a Nikon D700 and Samyang 24mm lens.