View allAll Photos Tagged Timeless
My interest in photography started many years ago when I took a black&white photography course while in university and learned to process film in the darkroom. Although I have always been attracted to photography, for over 25 years I was too busy with work and family to pursue it. Three years ago I purchased my first DSLR and it has quickly become a passionate hobby. Since I mainly enjoy landscape photography I always try to plan trips around being at locations during the golden hours of sunset and sunrise. Although it is immensely rewarding when conditions come together and you catch that magic light, it can also be frustrating since many times you put in a lot of effort into photographing a place and things just don't pan out.
While scouting the rim at Toroweap for my sunset and sunrise shots, I came across an older gentleman with a large format camera (the big old-style ones on a tripod) happily snapping away photographs in the blazing sun and a plain blue sky with no clouds. I asked him if he would be around for sunset and he said "No, I am working on black&white".
That rang a bell with me and although I knew no color shots would be keepers with the light conditions as they were, I decided to go back to my origins and take some shots as I walked around which I could later look at in B&W. This one turned out to be the best, and to me it has a distinctive timeless feel which is different than what you get with color. I will work on learning B&W processing and going forward hopefully I will be able to capture some images that otherwise I would have missed.
Toroweap is a National Park on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. It is the only viewpoint in the Grand Canyon from where the Colorado River can be seen vertically below. It is a relatively remote area only accessible by a 60 mile drive on a dirt road. The last stretch is rough and more suited for those with a high clearance vehicle.
Landscape in gelderland, The Netherlands. It feels timeless to me, this view. I'm glad I captured it on a polaroid.
I don't feel like new uploads or taking pictures. I haven't felt very good lately, out of place. (I have to take photos on Saturday for school, those I will share.)
Perfect time to upload some archive photos, then.
I've got a little project coming up involving polaroids. I'll keep you posted.
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Copyright © Karin Elizabeth. All rights reserved. This photo is public only so you ("the public") may view it; it is not to be used as free stock. Use without written consent by the author (that would be me) is illegal and punishable by law; I will take action. This goes for blogging, as well. So, contact me beforehand if you are interested in using this image or any of my others (non-)commercially.
I block assholes
Devoid of any link to civilization or time, two crows stand sentinel on a tree stump lying in this tidal flat.
1/13 sec., f/22, ISO 200, focal length 17 mm
The historical depth of a city, captured in a black and white street scene that emphasizes the timeless beauty of architecture and urban life.
just needed some color today. It's still grey and cold.....
Camera Sony DSLR-A200
Exposure 1/250
Aperture f/5.6
Focal Length 200 mm
ISO Speed 400
and some creative work (texture)
What a great weekend working with a fabulous team of women! The models all looked incredible and with the most alluring eyes. Hair and Makeup beauties Michelle Mink and Steffanie Tulk really tocked it for this one!
Strobist 411: Shot them in a simple beauty style with just a 16" maxi-lite reflector centered above as a beauty dish with elinchrom quadra and a 16" reflector below for a little fill. Used a couple of sb900s behind to camera right and left to light the background. Triggered by skyports and SU4.
Model: Evelyn Smesh
Photographer: Peter Tsai
MUA: Michelle Mink
Hair: Steffanie M Tulk
Taken at Portland, Victoria.
Black and gold !
www.youtube.com/watch?v=eHuebHTD-lY
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I suppose if a clock's hands have fallen of the piece is timeless. Someday soon analog clocks will be collectors items. I know many already who are unable to tell time with them.
Just another frame of this scene for a late Steam Sunday entry. Because rendered in monochrome it has an timelessness to it as if pulled from a boom of photos taken during railroading's golden age.
I hadn't got a steam fix in a while, and since I was down by the shore for family reasons this weekend and only 40 min away from New England's premier tourist railroad I figured it was the perfect time.
In years past steam went cold here after the end of December and wouldn't be fired up until the riverboat runs began in the late spring, with diesels handling the wildlife trains and other specials. But this year they are running lunch trains on weekends behind steam so I took advantage of the low winter afternoon light.
This classic location just north of their departure point at Essex station has long been a photographer favorite, but I'd never bothered to make the short hike in. Here is the 2:30 PM lunch train departing north seen passing beneath the old wooden Dennison Road overpass and then over the short bridge crossing the Falls River and entering the open field near MP 4.5 on the old New Haven Valley Line. In charge today putting on a good show is Valley Railroad #3025, a China Railways SY class 2-8-2 that was built in 1989 by the Tangshan Locomotive and Rolling Stock Works for Pennsylvania's Knox & Kane Railroad where it spent its life until that railroad's demise following the collapse of that lines signature attraction, the Kinzua Viaduct. It was purchased by the VRR in 2008 and was rebuilt as a functional replica of a New Haven J-1 'Mikado' locomotive like the type that once plied this line in local service and re-numbered 3025, one numer above the last of the original class on the NYNH&H.
To learn more about the history of the Valley Railroad check out this link: essexsteamtrain.com/about/history/
Essex, Connecticut
Saturday February 26, 2022
This old clock is sitting on main street in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Several of us, who do not live in Arkansas, take a trip to Fort Smith to take photography lessons.
Although shot in the 21st Century combination of dress, location and processing give this image a classic, timeless appeal. There are clues that it's not a 1950s photograph but they're not immediately obvious.
...♪♫♪♪
the only thing that survive
the time [and the distance]
is that thing
which is renew... day after day
i love you
܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇܇
lo único que no perece en el tiempo
es aquello
que se renueva... dÃa tras dÃa
te amo
₪₪₪₪₪₪₪₪₪₪
(unknown / desconocido)
Municipalidad de Cayma - Arequipa
৹
i want to dedicate this shot to my geometrical friend :) Randi
hey..
i hope you like
.
Philippi was established by the king of Macedon, Philip II, on the site of the Thasian colony of Krinides or Crenides.
Philip II endowed the new city with important fortifications, which partially blocked the passage between the swamp and Mt. Orbelos, and sent colonists to occupy it. Philip also had the marsh partially drained, as is attested by the writer Theophrastus. Philippi preserved its autonomy within the kingdom of Macedon and had its own political institutions (the Assembly of the demos). The discovery of new gold mines near the city, at Asyla, contributed to the wealth of the kingdom and Philip established a mine there. The city was fully integrated into the kingdom under Philip V
Source: Wikipedia