View allAll Photos Tagged Streams
© 2011 Agata Staniak. All rights reserved.
This view has always reminded me of a Christmas tree with all the lights and sparkling colors, so eventually I got here with my camera :)
The alpine meadows in Mount Rainier National Park are perfect places to observe wilderness, natural environments that are not altered by man. Each year after the snow is gone and the days are long and mostly sunny, I backpack into them to study and enjoy this wilderness. Most times I secure wild zone permits to find peace and solitude and experience these areas on an intimate level. This allows me, I hope, to create images that capture this feeling.
Many small streams flow through the area of Upper Granite Basin making it ideal for long exposures.
Small Mountain Stream, originating from the glaciers surrounding Moraine Lake
Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada
The part of London I work in is quite a rough area, although it is being redeveloped. There's a park close by though, which offers lots of photo opportunities, especially infrared ones.
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Photo taken using an infrared sensitive film and filter:
camera: Rolleicord Va
film: Efke IR820
filter: approx 775nm
exposure: 1/30 at f/3.5
development: Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 for 14 mins at 19.4C
conditions: bright sun, some cloud
I've been out for a two hour trail run today. I crossed this fine stream and just had to take a photo of it.
#streamphotooftheweek #photographyoftheweek #photooftheweek #streamzoo #Ilovethephotography #GemsOfNature #nature #water
The first morning of the trip: Me & Polly woke up earlier than everyone else, so we went for a long walk across wet fields (jumped two deers), then through the woods until we came to this stream. Polly loves to play in water. She ran splashing though the water as she tried to catch the droplets she was causing to fly through the air.
Rocky Mountain National Park - this little stream eventually flows into Lake Estes and then the Big Thompson River.
I just got back from the Road Scholar/Elder Hostel trip today. (Well, actually I'm still in LA visiting my daughter) I was the assistant guide with a friend of mine from Denali. We traveled 1,245 miles in 7 days, and saw Sequoia, Kings Canyon, Yosemite, and Death Valley National Parks. Needless to say, I took hundreds of pictures. We all had a wonderful time, with perfect weather and breathtaking landscapes.
The intake manifold has been painted wrinkle black, the polished velocity stacks are in, and the injector harness is underway. So far so good.
Only one photo marginally worth posting from Saturday's (11/13) hike. A great day for a hike, but a poor day for photographs - bright and sunny, with lots of contrast problems.
Saturday's hike was with Bob Hamer, director of the Moosehead Chamber of Commerce in Greenville. Starting at 8:30 a.m., we were able to visit Secret Brook, Indian Stream and Vaughn Stream waterfalls, and still finished up by 2:30 p.m. Using Bob's GPS and in part by accident, we even managed to find a shorter, "cheat" route in to Vaughn Stream falls.
All three waterfalls need to have access trails developed, before they can become regular visitor spots. But the possibility exists to create a waterfalls itinerary that includes three great waterfalls, plus Slugundy falls, that could all be visited in half a day, on the way in from Greenville to AMC's Little Lyford camps and Gulf Hagas. Counting the main stream falls in upper Wilson Stream gorge, this would allow visitors to experience more than a dozen Wilson valley / Gulf Hagas area waterfalls in a single weekend.
Our "cheat" access to this particular waterfall brought us into Vaughn Stream a short distance above the falls pictured above. What became evident was that the falls above, while the largest on Vaughan Stream, are merely the exit falls from a gorge cut by this stream as it falls toward the Bodfish / Drew valley. The gorge above the pictured falls contains numerous other smaller waterfalls, a number of which may be well worth visiting and photographing in their own right.
Taken on the Appalachian Trail in Elliotsville township, Piscataquis County Maine.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don't_Trust_the_B----_in_Apartment_23
Don't Trust the B---- in Apartment 23 (often shortened to Apartment 23) is an American situation comedy series created by former American Dad! executive producer Nahnatchka Khan and broadcasted on ABC. The series premiered on April 11, 2012, following Modern Family, as a mid-season replacement during the 2011–2012 television schedule.[1] . . . James Van Der Beek as James Van Der Beek, a fictionalized version of himself, the former star of Dawson's Creek, who is a good friend of Chloe. . . .
made this cabinet for a flat screen TV. Customer bought the lift and television and asked me to make something around it. Some of the panels are removable to access the wiring and cable box. Also there is space to mount a surround speaker inside.
The veneers are walnut and rosewood all laid with the old technique of "Hammer veneering"
Top has a walnut burl with rosewood banding.