View allAll Photos Tagged SCOTT
Assistant coach of Quinnipiac university basketball team.
2 Profoto strobes on either side, slightly forward angled in.
Fired with pocket wizard
35mm Lens 1/60 @ F/13
Kind of a cool technique, if you overpower the ambient light with your strobes and close up your aperture you can black out the background. It was lit up clear as day in there.
The one in comments
Dragged shutter for .7 @ F/9.5
Taken in Joshua Tree National Park, California - March 2017.
I always see Scott's Orioles when I visit Joshua Tree National Park, but they tend to stick to the tops of Joshua Trees, making them somewhat difficult to get good photos of. I was thrilled when this bird came to some flowers in a lower part of a Joshua Tree, allowing for some photos closer to eye-level.
Canon EOS 7D Mark II | Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM | 1/2500 | ISO 400 | f/5.6
Did any writer ever have such a grand monument? This is Sir Walter Scott's in Princes Street, Edinburgh, the capital city of Scotland (a closer view is here).
It was created by the self-taught architect George Meikle Kemp and inaugurated in 1846, 16 years after Scott’s death. It has since become one of the most recognisable monuments in the world, and is totally synonymous with Edinburgh.
The Scott Monument is a Victorian Gothic monument to Scottish author Sir Walter Scott. It is the largest monument to a writer in the world. It stands in Princes Street Gardens in Edinburgh, opposite the Jenners department store on Princes Street and near to Edinburgh Waverley Railway Station, which is named after Scott's Waverley novels.
The tower is 200 feet 6 inches (61.11 m) high, and has a series of viewing platforms reached by a series of narrow spiral staircases giving panoramic views of central Edinburgh and its surroundings. The highest platform is reached by a total of 287 steps. It is built from Binny sandstone quarried near Ecclesmachan in West Lothian.
Scott (Eggz) shooting a giant tangle of kelp on Ocean Beach yesterday.
the odd thing about this is, kelp doesn't grow off of Ocean Beach, at least not that I know of -- I think the nearest beds are either down around Santa Cruz or up north around Bodega Bay?
The only shot I got off him away from the feeders.he was looking for insects under the loose bark. American lifer #457
Scott Falls
Alger County
Michigan
Nestled along the shores of Lake Superior near Munising, Michigan, Scott Falls offers a serene escape into nature's artistry during the summer months. The delicate waterfall cascades gently over a sandstone ledge. Framed by lush green foliage, the falls are a picturesque gem surrounded by the earthy scent of the forest. The nearby whisper of Lake Superior and the rustling of leaves in the warm summer breeze make this spot a tranquil haven for nature lovers and photographers alike. Scott Falls embodies the quiet beauty of Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
Scott Falls Landscape
Alger County
Michigan
Nestled along the shores of Lake Superior near Munising, Michigan, Scott Falls offers a serene escape into nature's artistry during the summer months. The delicate waterfall cascades gently over a sandstone ledge. Framed by lush green foliage, the falls are a picturesque gem surrounded by the earthy scent of the forest. The nearby whisper of Lake Superior and the rustling of leaves in the warm summer breeze make this spot a tranquil haven for nature lovers and photographers alike. Scott Falls embodies the quiet beauty of Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
Main Street on a dark, rainy afternoon. Scotts Mills, Oregon
Neg# TCOR 009. Mamiya RB67, 180mm, Yg filter, FP4 film. 1991
Scotts Peak from the Red Knoll lookout near the Scotts Peak Dam, South West Tasmania on a very bright day.
The body of water being Lake (Fake) Pedder - a 'recreational impoundment' created by the damming of the Serpentine River in the 1970's.
This shot from the M240/Elmarit 28 combination. My first real outing with this lens and body. Came home feeling quite flat about it really. This very bright, high-contrast scene took far more work than it should have done. Some of the pics from the following day were unusable.
After some dummy-spitting, some monkeying around and some googlising I realised that I hadn't dialled in the lens at all so the body was just making stuff up. Operator Error... Lost a lot of colour shots due to serious magenta fringing on the right of each frame. Clearly have been spoilt by Fuji and Sony bodies just working with whatever was stuck on the front!
Thems the breaks I guess!
M240 M-P, M-28/2.8, 1/250th sec at f/11, ISO 200
I flew out to Denver on April 22nd, 2014 on a "See Text" in order to be ready for the better setup the next day. But I still caught up with some rad storms in Kansas towards the evening. Here's a ragged shelf cloud approaching Scott City.
Starting to get stoked for storm season, so I'm digging through the archives looking for any images I missed that might be worth editing
. . . A more traditional picture of cute, little Scott Falls! Yesterday's picture was one where I risked it all for the sake of the shot, crawling deep into the earth for the shot looking out towards Penny and M-28! Not easy when you have a touch of claustrophobia!
Have a great weekend Facebook, Flickr, and 500px friends!
Scott's Oriole
©RGallucci Photography
Best Viewed Full Screen
So grateful to Tony Battiste of Battiste Bed & Breakfast for inviting me over to see this FOY Scott's Oriole. Let the spring migration begin.
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Image available for sale at: www.rgallucci.com/p751721854/ea5c2d346
Shoot Date: March 13, 2018
Canon EOS 5D Mark III
¹⁄₂₀₀₀ sec at f/5.6 Bias:0 EV
ISO: 400
Lens:EF400mm f/2.8L USM +2x @ 800 mm
Windows on the side of the old train station in the small town of Scott, Arkansas. The building is now part of a museum.
Some 800 feet high, Scotts Bluff is a striking landmark in the Nebraska plains located on the old Oregon, California and Mormon trails.
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The monument to the author Sir Walter Scott on Princes Street in Edinburgh. His statue sits underneath the Victorian Gothic tower.