View allAll Photos Tagged SettingSun
No photoshop (just resized)
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Photographer:- Tim Large
purpleport.com/portfolio/timlarge/
Location:- The Res, Cheddar, Somerset, England, UK.
©TimLarge
Sometimes great conditions can happen in the right place but at the wrong time. I was having dinner at the hotel where I was staying for a few days and suddenly a thick fog rolled in from the valley below.
I left my wonderful kaiserschmarrn on the table and ran to get my camera and tripod. Once everything was set however, the fog reached the hotel and hid my view of the valley.
Luckily, the fog slowly cleared and revealed this nice composition of a distant church lightly lit by the setting sun.
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It had been a fun, but busy time looking round the Air Museum & visiting Beccles. I decided to finish the day in Nicholas Everitts Park near me.
This was the scene that greeted me when I arrived. It made for a very pleasant end to the day.
Thorpe Bay, Southend-on-Sea, Essex. England.
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Serengeti plains, Tanzania
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Porcupine Mountains, Western Upper Michigan
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The sun sets and leaves a colourful glow that is unforgettable. The glow fades away after a while yet it retains a part of our memory that’s everlasting. Remembering my friend, P C Sanjay, who went away for good leaving back the memories, the stories that shall remain vivid forever.
A real shame the tide was out on the day - the sky was fantastic, and I think had the tide been in I could have gotten some epic sky/reflection shots. Maybe even a long exposure or two.
As it was I had to settle on second best - but definitely going to return, its a lovely place (if you don't fall in the mud like I did).
After a rough day in the truck, the sight of the setting sun's show behind the mountains west of Willcox, Arizona this past Tuesday evening (6-28-2016) made the day more than just a little better, for the walk out into the desert was just what I needed. Much as I dislike being on the road again, I've had the opportunity to see some regions I've not visited before, even though there's been little opportunity to do any real shooting.
I had been wandering about Villa Borghese gardens in Rome for a while, when I found myself at the panoramic viewpoint of the Pincian hill - Mons Pincius in Latin, also called (quite aptly, indeed) Collis Hortulorum, i.e. the Hill of the gardens.
It was a beautiful sunset, and the Eternal City was bathed in golden light - as well as in golden, fitful rain. I recall that sunset as a long, lingering thought on the edge between day and night. I have taken many exposure bracketings, trying hard to capture the essence of the moment. This is a zoom-in detail view, featuring the majestic dome of St. Peter's basilica. But for all its greatness, a lasting monument to the wordly power of the Papacy, it becomes a mere nothing when one lifts up her eyes to the heavens, putting all our hurly-burly about power in perspective - when at last one realizes that we are just little inhabitants of this planet, living under too wide a sky :-)
This train of thoughts nicely illustrates why, looking at this picture, I cannot avoid repeating in the back of my mind the Luteran motto Soli Deo gloria ( = Glory to God alone").
If you are curious about the wider view, you may consider to take a look at my Glowing bond, a panorama taken from a little further away some 15 minutes earlier.
I have obtained this picture by blending an exposure bracketing (-1.7/0/+1.7 ev) by luminosity masks in the Gimp. As usual, Exif data refer to the "normal exposure" shot.
After all day rain last Sunday, it was a great relief to see some sun. Sadly it didn't last long, but there was an attractive sunset.
I got a few photos including this one of a group of trees at the end of my road.
Camaret-sur-Mer, Peninsula Crozon, Département Finistère, Brittany, France.
This road leads to one of the many exciting spots in Brittany. On top of that headland is a fortified area that hosts a lighthouse and a semaphore, used by French authorities to surveil the sea, specifically the entrance to the bay of Brest, the largest city in Finistère.
Popped over on the ferry to visit our friend Mark who has Leukemia currently in Southampton General Hospital. Just before his bone marrow transplant. It has been a long journey and hopefully this is the last tunnel he has to travel before finishing his treatment. There is a light at the end of this tunnel and everything is crossed at the moment.
HaPpY FeNcE Friday have a great weekend.
Got a new toy too, so trying out on the day, instant social media publishing.
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a lot of ppl have been talking about developing your photographic "style" I'm still just trying to develop the skills that lead to a style. ha! For this reason my photostream is eclectic. Enjoy :D
Strait of Juan de Fuca, Pacific Ocean - This is a look way back at the first sunset aboard the Star Princess as my wife and I cruised the Inside Passage to Alaska. This was certainly one of my best vacations and one that I'd like to repeat some day ...
A wish
Before thoughts perish
One moment of growing wings
One moment of breaking strings
One moment of open sky
One last for a calm goodbye
The Setting Sun
I just loved the way the trees were casting their shadows over the field. A nicely shaped grouping of trees at Dalswinton near Dumfries.
Camera - A7Rii
Lens - Sony FE28mm f2
Focal Length 28mm
Fstop - f11
Exposure Time - 1/50 second
ISOspeed - ISO200
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© Brian Kerr Photography 2015
Solitary bees don't have own nest, hence usually they sleep alone on a branch like this.
On facebook: Zoltan Gyori Photography
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