View allAll Photos Tagged Structured,
Shadow and Structure - Sony A7S II, Fotodiox Nikon to Sony adapter, Nikon AF Fisheye-NIKKOR 16mm f/2.8D
Some bridge somewhere in Rome. What interested me more than the beautiful structure of the bridge was the dance of the early morning light on the tree. I wanted to use the leaves as a frame through which you glimpse the bridge and its reflection in the water.
Taken back in July of 1991, here's the dragger "Commodore IV", retired after several decades of fishing and scalloping. She appears to have been deliberately scuttled and left in place as part of a breakwater. The structure off the bow is one of several extending to the left (south, then east), offering some protection for the south-facing structures along the shore. A newer stone breakwater has replaced this improvised version, part of a two section affair that almost completely surrounds the wharf area and associated buildings.
Driving out to Cape Forchu on the Yarmouth Bar Road (Rt 304), about a half mile past the "Lost to the Sea Memorial" the road crosses a small steel bridge that spans a channel connecting Yarmouth Harbor (south), to the bay (north). I parked near the bridge and grabbed a few photos of Commodore IV, plus another derelict dragger fifty yards east of the bridge. This second boat was in worst shape than its companion, no name being visible anywhere.
Commodore IV was built at the A. F. Theriault & Son boatyard in Meteghan River in 1963, with a gross weight of 176 tons, and according to a marine industry information website... was listed in 1992 as being "out of service" (no longer operating?). Most folks looking at this photo would agree that at the time I shot this image, she was most definitely "out of service" a year earlier than listed.
This image is a copy of an Ektachrome 100 transparency shot with a Pentax 6x7. It was made using a Nikon D3500 camera, a 55mm Micro-Nikkor lens, with a Nikon 4T close-up lens, and a Sigma 1.6x close-up lens mounted on the 4T.
DSC-0860R
Macon Georgia isn't the most sought after railfan location but it is filled with lots of railroad and music history. This coal tower built by the Central of Georgia in 1910 is the last relic of a 22 acre lot that once was home to a car shop and a roundhouse for the Central of Georgia with nearby Southern Railway next door. As usual, I had to make a stop by Rose Hill Cemetery the following morning to pay my respects to the late great Allman Bros when I'm in the area.
This modern structure comes with an optional garden/pathway, and concrete pieces to add on.
Available now at Uber
East Kent’s famous Guyitt House is no more, following its recent demolition.
Dubbed by some as the most photographed house in Canada, the house was ordered to be torn down by the municipality of Chatham-Kent due to safety concerns.
The house, more than 150 years old, was owned by Pete Anderson.
His grandparents Roy and Ethel Guyitt purchased the once grand old dame located near Muirkirk, in 1908.
Cropped to show the structure of the feathers, which most interested me in the image. I find that the R7 creates quite noisy images when you need to use high ISO for birds. I have been trialling DxO pureraw for a couple of days. So far it has given me better results than Canon's DPP with Photoshop's AI Denoise.
KEEL BEACH | IRELAND
After hiking up a nearby hill, we saw the sun setting behind the far hills, so we headed down to the beach to get some good shots.
Those structures were the reward and even as I have quite a lot pictures of them... I now believe, I didn't took enough.
This odd little structure is located in the Landmark Sinkhole. Larger sinkholes like this one have been known to swallow up structures like houses, barns, and buildings.
The Orange Day Lily in all its glory at the George Pegg Garden near Glenevis, central Alberta, Canada.
This flower has been in cultivation for a long time, and it often outlives the structures that surround it and their inhabitants. This hybrid species is able to naturalize in the wild because the foliage is tall enough to compete for sunlight alongside other species of plants.
The George Pegg Garden was Alberta's first declared historic resource and is a protected site. It is managed by the George Pegg Botanic Garden Society. www.pegggarden.org
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