View allAll Photos Tagged Slopes
A beautiful Icelandic horse out standing in its field of lupines. The farm included this sloping area, that leads up to a mountain, which is in the background. The horse is lit by the sun above that mountain.
The glass wall panels of a covered roof terrace on the 6th floor of a store taken from the street. I like they look flat at a quick glance, but actually they are repetitive wedge-shaped windows.
In some way I got the image that the windows are running out of the frame...
On the slope of the Central Russian upland in the Northeastern Kaluga region. The lower area belongs to Moscow oblast across Protvino
A view from the slope of Stóra-Jarlhetta towards Innsta-Jarlhetta to the north. Jarlhettur (Earl's Peaks) are some 20 peaks on a 15 km long ridge, formed in a sub-glacial volcanic eruption in the last ice age.
i tried making a cyanotype with this image once before, but with the traditional cyan formula instead of Ware's -- this one works much better, i think...
Ware's cyanotype, HPR, bleach 20 seconds, no other toning.
Descending the mountain at Summerhill, PA, this intermodal train will arrive in Pittsburgh in a few hours.
A lone skier on a slope at Hochzillertal, Austria. In the distance you can see where the Zillertal (Ziller Valley) branches from the Inntal (Inn Valley).
Slope
Copyright 2005 Ron Diorio
Colorstalker flickr.com/photos/timconnor/ and I are in a holiday exhibition at the Positive Focus Gallery www.positivefocus.org/BlackAndWhite.html#show through the end of the month.
Here's my set from the show
www.flickr.com/photos/av_producer/sets/1536158/
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Churchyard of St Mary's, Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, sloping gently downwards to the River Gade. In geological time, everything will go down this slope, all the graves that were dug in here over the centuries and, finally, the church building itself. In geological time, the almost 800 years of St Mary standing here are just a blip. However, from within the boundaries of this moment we must reflect the beginning and end of time. Walking the slope is a good way of doing it. Sony A7iii plus Pentacon 3.5/30.
Last summer, there was a major fire that swept through my favourite mountain park, the beautiful Jasper National Park. The only town lost about 30% of its buildings.
This spring, I went to visit the park for the first time since the devastating burn. Many areas have had all organic material obliterated. Only rocks and sand are left. Like any area that burns, life will return, but it will take time.
The photo here shows a mountain slope that had burned. Dead trees are mostly upright and throwing long shadows as the sun gets lower in the sky. You will notice a good number of the trees are not black or grey. A hot fire burned through quickly. All branches and bark are gone, exposing the yellow wood underneath. In some areas, the fire lingered and the still-standing trees have been thoroughly burned and look like charcoal.
After cresting the grade inside the Moffat Tunnel, UP's Grand Junction slop freight is beginning it's descent down the mountain as they close in on Denver. Todays train is rather short, and consists of exclusively covered hoppers.