View allAll Photos Tagged Sutton
Sutton Trod may have been an ancient footpath between the adjoining parishes of Sutton on Hull and Drypool. The vegetation on either side of the path largely comprises hawthorn, ash, elder, ivy, horse chestnut, sycamore and snowberry.
Un de mes neveux adore le Parc d'environnement naturel de Sutton pour y faire de la randonnée, de la raquette et de la photographie…
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Vous lire est un plaisir. Merci de vos commentaires, votre visite, vos invitations et favoris!
To read your comments is a pleasure. Thank you for your visit, comments, invitations and faves!
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ATTENTION!
Pas d'invitations à des groupes dont les photos du pool sont inaccessibles aux non-membres!
No invitations to groups whose photos of the pool are inaccessible to non-members!
One from a wander around Sutton Harbour in Plymouth a few weeks ago.
I wasn't expecting much but there was a bit of high cloud which meant a good chance of some colour but in the end, it ended up being a bit dull.
So, I've gone for a bit of split toning with this shot and warmed up the colours a bit.
Sutton Bridge, standing on Bridge Road looking along New Road. Took me a while to locate this from google maps.
Asahi Pentax Spotmatic camera
Super Takumar 50 mm f/1.4 lens
Adox CHS100 film
Lab develop & scan
000097100027
It was a long day yesterday and heading back the sun was just about to set so got a quick shot of thie. The foreground stone is a distance marker though i can't make out the town which is etched on to the stone
Another morning shot taken in the Sutton Street park as the snow was departing
may be better on B l a c k M a g i c
The Lincolnshire Beaches can be a bit featureless, so unless you have the talent of a Martin Birks (check his flickr!) you have to make the most of any opportunity for a focal point.
This tree branch had been washed up on Sutton Beach. So inspired by Martin's recent photos from Mablethorpe (just down the road) I tried some long exposures to catch the wave wash. Not sure whether I prefer this colour version or black and white, so will post both.
Full disclosure. The waves may have gone way over my boots on at least one occasion during the shoot...
These modern buildings at the edge of Sutton Harbour in the centre of Plymouth perhaps serve as a reminder of the severe bomb damage suffered by the city in the Second World War. According to Wikipedia, in early 1941 five raids reduced much of the city to rubble. Attacks continued as late as May 1944 with two minor air raids in that month. During the 59 bombing attacks 1,172 civilians were killed and 4,448 injured.
The resident population fell from 220,000 at the outbreak of war to, at one point, only 127,000. In 1941 most of the children were evacuated and on any night that a raid was expected thousands of people were taken by lorry into the countryside, while others walked, usually to the fringes of Dartmoor.
Last shot from last Saturday evening at Sutton Harbour in Plymouth. This is a three shot panorama of the harbour just before sunset.
The Sutton Place Hotel, located in the centre of Vancouver, was completed in 1985 and is 67 metres tall.
4-frame stitched panoramic shot taken from Sutton Bank in North Yorkshire. I had a circular polarising filter on the lens to take some of the haze out from the distant landscape.
Sutton Harbour, formerly known as Sutton Pool, is the original port of the City of Plymouth in Devon, England. It is still a busy fishing port and marina and is bounded on one side by the historic Barbican district. It is famous as the last departure point in England of the Mayflower, the ship that carried the Pilgrim Fathers to the New World in 1620.