View allAll Photos Tagged Tide
A long exposure, black and white image, of the incoming tide at Weston Super Mare in Somerset.
Thanks for looking folks.
Tony
It's amazing what is revealed on the sea floor when the tide is out. This is my last scene from Victoria-by-the-Sea for now. I miss those rich green and red hues and the smell of the fresh sea air. You can just make out some people walking in the distance to give you some sense of the vastness of this space.
The water was creeping ever further with each small swell. There is nothing anyone can do, except watch in wonder as the tide creeps in.
I wanted to walk into the water more to get another angle but it didn't take long for the tripod to sink deeper and deeper in the mud as the tide rolled in.
Madeira
Follow me on Instagram: instagram.com/douguerreotype
Follow me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/DougStrattonPhotography/
Buy prints, canvas and other products: dougstratton.com/shop
Tide/Gezeiten
Stuart Haygarth (*1966)
London 2018
flotsam from the British seaside in the entrance of the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg
10 million tons of plastic waste end up in the oceans every year. Mass products that serve to the convenience in our consumer society and are thrown away after use pollute the beaches and contaminate the one vital element for the survival of humans and animals: water. The luminous object "Tide" is to be understood against this depressing background. It was assembled from some 3,000 found objects that the artist Stuart Haygarth collected on English beaches, carefully cleaned, and sorted by size and colour, using them to create a sphere that takes the shape of the moon. The flotsam that was washed ashore at night by the tides is here tamed by the artist's hand to display order, symmetry, and beauty.
Over 500,000 objects are on display at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg, demonstrating 4,000 years of human creativity and ingenuity, from antiquity to the present day. What will one day remain of our current culture? Mountains of plastic waste? At the entrance of the museum, the chandelier is meant not only to delight visitors but to encourage them to interact with nature responsibly.
Bench overlooking Arthurstown beach & pier, a great beach for birdwatching in the Winter months with flocks of Curlew & Brent Geese plus the usual Gulls & smaller shorebirds HBM!
-Baja Tides-
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Aroma/163/149/22
Lucy :
Genus Strong Face W001 Mocap
Maitreya Lara body V 5.1
Skin E.Beauty Aideen head
Skin theSkinnery maitreya applier body
ADI bikini blue
AO Vista Animations
Hair Tableau vivant Cozy bun add-on
SB Genus Julia Fire Small SoftArch Ginger
Euphoric Bombshell lipgloss Applier Genus
FORMANAILS nails for Maitreya bento
YUMMY justine ring set
Euphoric Giselle eyes applier
Ears Mandala unisex Steking
St Ives is a very famous, beautiful fishing town in Cornwall. It has been attracting artists for decades. JMW Turner and Henry Moore came to St Ives in the mid-1800s and since then the town has homed painters, sculptors and ceramists who have been drawn here by the spectacular light and and the rugged coast line
It is one of my favourite places ..
Dawn at low tide at Spittal a week ago - no dramatic colour...but it's the sea and waves relentlessness which fascinates me.
As the tide
goes out it uncovers these stunning green coloured rock formations that glisten in the morning sun.
I just had to capture those clouds over the estuary and north Kent coastline. Only had the cellphone to hand.
A southbound HST crosses the Forth Railway Bridge on Saturday 3rd June, 2023, reflected in a tide pool on the southern shore. Another image taken from the south bank of the Forth on a visit to Scotland back in Summer.
The latest edition of the Phoenix Railway Photographic Journal has been published and you can read for free by copying and pasting this link into your browser:
online.fliphtml5.com/lnylv/nqzm/