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The formation on the left is Zion's Great White Throne. At 6744', it towers over Zion Canyon, and is perhaps the most easily identifiable landmark in Zion National Park.
Not from this angle, however. This is a view from the Kayenta Trail, which I don't believe I had previously hiked. The far more common view is from a pullout off the tram road a mile or so north of here, where you can get a straight-on view of the Great White Throne's face. Didn't stop there on this trip, however.
My cell phone's camera will never win any prizes, but New Zealand sure looked good from above during this flight I took last week. The area around Lake Tekapo and Lake Pukaki looked particularly spectacular.
Lil Sprout has a perfect view for watching snow fall...he doesn't care how many storms we have, each time is "like new" for him and he has the perfect spot for viewing..
The rest of us...enough is enough..
"Nature has no mercy at all. Nature says, "I'm going to snow. If you have on a bikini and no snowshoes, that's tough. I am going to snow anyway".
Maya Angelou
"Only the heart knows how to find what is precious."
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Beach View Photoshoot. Me enjoying the amazing view at Paradise beach in Kefalos, Kos island, Greece!
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A beautiful top view photo of a scalenohedral crystal formation of Rhodochrosite covering it's matrix of Mangonese a rare piece from an old collection measuring 6cm, CAN ANYONE ESTIMATE THE VALUE OF THIS PIECE ?
N'Chwaning mine
near Kuruman
North Cape Prov.
South Africa
... from the edge of the snow-covered Haldon Hills at Mamhead (Obelisk) viewpoint, Devon, England, looking to the largely snow-free coastal belt near Dawlish and the Exe Estuary mouth.
Haldon had been hit by a blizzard on Thursday night which trapped over 200 cars overnight and hit the national news; there was still plenty of snow there this weekend!
See my other Mamhead photos.
Claude Monet 1858
This is the first painting Monet ever presented to the public, in an exhibition in La Havre later in 1858.
View of Manhattan from the Empire State Building.
All rights reserved. Written permission required for usage.
Please do not use this photo on any websites or for personal use.
Thank you.
©2014 Fantommst
I got off at the wrong bus station and I was walking on the footbridge, so i don't really remember where exactly I was at that time. What I can recall is that it was not yet the rush hour so there weren't many cars on the road. I just like the view and took a snapshot.
I took this shot of Mount Rainier during a bike ride early last month up Cayuse Pass in Washington before the road was open to cars. I mentioned in a previous post that I couldn’t make it all the way to the pass because the road was blocked by snow. I’ve biked up the pass before so I wasn’t really disappointed that I couldn’t make it. This time I was there just to enjoy the views and get outdoors with my kids.
“Even to your old age and gray hairs I am he, I am he who will sustain you. I have made you and I will carry you; I will sustain you and I will rescue you” Isaiah 46:6
For purchasing, licensing, or more information you can find me at www.bSharpPhoto.com (or contact me through flickr). Thanks for looking!
View from inside a very nice room at a Reno, Nevada casino hotel.
We've stayed at this establishment when going to the air races since 1999, and this is the first time we've ever had anything less than a good view. We've had more than a few that were really beautiful, especially at sunrise or sunset.
One has to keep these things in perspective. We know that we're *very* fortunate.
I'd like to use this opportunity to thank everyone who regularly (or occasionally) visits my photo-stream to view and comment on my photographs!
Although I’ve been passionate about panoramic landscape photography for many years already (I started off by sticking 35mm prints together with magic-tape), I feel that ever since I joined Flickr (late last year), the compositions and quality of my photographs has improved tremendously!
You are all responsible for inspiring me to take better pictures… whether your specialty is portraits, macro flower-shots, sport and action scenes, or landscape photography (like me), you are all helping me to continually challenge my own sense of beauty and perfection!!
However, I would like to thank three people who have inspired me more than anyone else, and who are mostly responsible for the improvements in the quality of my images.
Firstly (and most inspirationally) there’s AndreinAfrica! Not only did he sponsor my Flickr Pro account, but his photo-stream is so gobsmackingly beautiful that anyone who isn’t inspired by what they see there… is dead!! Andre was also directly responsible for helping me to kick my HDR habit, and for changing my processing objectives from trying to recreate the scene as it could appear (at some time), to how it did appear (at that time). Thanks Andre, for everything!!
Then, the next most influential person for me at Flickr is a guy called Barkeater. This crazy dude hails from Saranac Lake, New York, and his specialty is cinemascape-format panoramas! You only have to see them to realize that I still have a long way to go before I reach that level of excellence!! Some months ago, he posted a tutorial that described the steps he takes to achieve his consistently awesome results, and when he mentioned layers and masks, semi-transparent brushes, burning and dodging… he inspired me to finally read the Paint Shop Pro manual and to learn about all these cool processing techniques! Thanks Aaron for helping me to take that step!!
Then last but not least, there’s Daniel Cheong from Mauritius. As far as I’m concerned, he consistently produces the best photographs that I have ever seen on Flickr!! Although he has quite a number of HDR processed images on his stream, most of his latest work has been processed using a new technique called DRI (Dynamic Range Increase) – which gives a much more natural result than can be achieved with HDR! Thanks Daniel for all the inspiration that your images have provided me with over the last couple of weeks!!