View allAll Photos Tagged Views
Dresden From the Right Bank of the Elbe Below the Augustus Bridge
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dresden_From_the_Right_Bank_of_the_...
From this vantage point, we could see all the way to Bryce Canyon in UT.
White Pocket Recreation Area, Vermillion Cliffs National Monument
The confluence of the river Derwent and stonethwaite beck in borrowdale. Well grazed fields and oak woodland contrasts
A view of Kathmandu, the Capital of Nepal at the end of the day.
If you want to look at more of my photography you can check my website and social media links below:
www.facebook.com/geraintrowlandphotography
www.instagram.com/geraint_rowland_photography/
Taken at Cei Llydan Station of the Llanberis lake railway tourist line.
Ex Dinorwic quarry Hunslet Dolbadarn looks good in the sun,it has had a 10 year major overhaul in Jan/February and a new coat of paint as well.
HWW! There must be a whole story here. Someone painted the inside of the window to block the view. Someone else has scratched away part of the paint so that he/she can see out. A heavy drape has been pulled aside, so that the "scratch-a-view" can be used.
This is a window of an elegant old home, with a view onto its back garden and the Mulhouse section of the nice navigable canal and lock system which connects the Rhine and Rhone rivers.
Location: Mulhouse, Alsace FR.
In my album: Dan's Windows.
It's sometimes surprising what's hiding behind a dreary winter sky. This was taken at the Black Butte Dam overlook. Visibility was limited due to the weather but I was intriqued by the position of the rock facings and the trees and decided it was worth a shot. Backlighting and layering helped bring out the colors in the sky and then I used a texture called pink spotlight from pareeerica www.flickr.com/photos/8078381@N03/ .
of Rayleigh Tower Mill. There are many vantage points in the town to view the mill. This one is from the churchyard of Holy Trinity Church.
Wasserschlösschen, Hamburg.
RMC Tokina 24mm 1:2.8 (Minolta MD mount) @ ~ f/5.6
through Metabones Speedbooster Ultra MD-X-Mount
on Fujifilm X-E1
Check my album Adapted Manual Lenses for more...
the view from my window...
will you please take a minute to help me win a camera by voting for my photo here?:
all you have to do is enter your name and email address, pick 5/5 and press "bewaar" only once! (it looks as if it doesn't work, but it does!)
THANK YOU!!!xx
On the way back to our hotel I stopped at Valley View. I do it every time possible, maybe 20 times now. On this occasion I was headed down to the spot past about 20 other photographers. I slipped on some ice and landed on my back, on a rock! A few people around asked if I was ok, I acted cool and got up said "yes thank you" and dragged myself to this spot. My lens hood smashed and a kind lady gave me back a piece of it :). I took this shot (only one) and pulled myself back to the car with my tail between my legs. There I found I crushed my finger when I fell, it was in between the tripod legs which closed during the incident. This pic still isn't my vision for this place. I never seem to get the right conditions here.. I'll get you yet Valley View even if it takes me another 10 years.
P.S. I'm pretty much recovered
Another image taken from my visit to Bovisands,this time a view towards the fort.
Thank you for viewing and any comments
Las Vegas Valley at sunrise as seen from Red Rock Canyon. A single hot air balloon is visible in the valley.
View the entire Las Vegas Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
View from the south side of Eidfjord moorings across to the mountains of Skorsonen (1495m) & Hotienuten (1208m) on the eastern edge of Hardangerfjord (Fjord), Norway. Date: 8th July, 2023.
Here is another look back to that spectacular birthday weekend with friends in North Jersey and a chase of one of the most implausible trains to grace northeastern rails in recent memory.
After a great day touring North Jersey and getting some amazing bucket list photos with some great friends we headed to Norfolk Southern's Croxton Yard (the one time main New York metropolitan area yard of the Erie-Lackawanna) for a private photo shoot with the visiting Union Pacific locomotives and a tour of the stunning office car train. I was fortunate to tag along with Michael Sullivan who had been invited by the UP for his help in working through some of the logistics involved with planning the trip that would operate over a substantial portion of NJT territory. In addition Casey Thomason, then still serving as NS' company photographer, welcomed us and provided lighting for some night photography.
Here is a view out the dome window of dome-lounge City of San Francisco built by ACF in 1955 and the only dome-lounge in the Union Pacific Heritage Passenger Fleet that is still configured for end-of-train service. The car still has windows in the back wall, and the necessary exterior lighting so it can be used as the last car of a train. The view out the window is a far cry from the sweeping western vistas that this car was built to highlight. Gray skies, sodium vapor lights, tangles of wires, and black Norfolk Southern switch engines bely the fact that this car is far from home in a strange strange land.
If you wish to learn a bit about what this train was doing so far from home rails here in the Northeast check out this earlier image and the caption accompanying it: flic.kr/p/2jdqNum
Jersey City, New Jersey
Saturday June 2, 2018
The Devon Sunset Waves picture captures the breathtaking beauty of the white-tipped waves crashing against the jagged rocks in Ilfracombe, United Kingdom. The stunning contrast of the rocky coastline against the vibrant sunset sky creates a mesmerizing scene of natural wonder. The calmness of the sea juxtaposed with the ruggedness of the rocks evokes a sense of tranquility and adventure.
Photography © Jeremy Sage