View allAll Photos Tagged Wyndham

The Old Tree

 

Wyndham Vale

Frosty Green

 

Wyndham Vale

Apartment block in Southampton designed in a brutalist style by architects Lyons Israel Ellis and completed in 1969.

Truganina

Melbourne's outer west

The Peace Within

 

Wyndham Vale

Suburban Sprawl in Melbourne's Outer West

Williams Landing, Wyndham

263_0498

- and more... And it's not Manhattan, not Dubai, not Shenzhen... Globalisation has made even the most creative contemporary architecture somewhat of a cliché?..

Hiding In The Pampas Grass

 

Wyndham Vale

Grand Cayman, July 2022

Yateley Common, Hampshire. Multiple exposures in-camera, adjustments in Lightroom. Thanks for looking and your comments are welcome.

Drainage patterns as seen from an Helicopter. Such a beautiful place!

Among the beautiful drainage patterns on the mud flats are areas of sand, this was taken from an helicopter and if you look closely you can see the ripples on the water. Each time I look at these pictures I hope to see I crocodile - I haven't yet! The dark patches are cloud shadows.

The Wyndham Skybox has all the details of a luxury home with just the amount of space you need. It has one large bedroom, living room, dining room, bathroom and kitchen, but these rooms can be used however your imagination allows. The living room has a working, flickering fireplace and coffered ceiling with crown mouldings. The dining area has a tray ceiling with crown mouldings, floor to ceiling columns and wainscoting on the walls.

 

Your home can be customized by changing the wall colors individually in the bedroom, bathroom and central living areas with a choice of 9 different colors. The flooring can also be changed to any of four choices.

 

The control panel also has an option to open or close the windows if you prefer more privacy.

 

Lastly you can set who may access the control panel with the option of "group" or "list" and add/remove avatars on that list as you wish.

 

97LI

Approximately 20x25 meters

Copy/Mod/No Trans

Wyndham's Theatre, London - the Stalls, Royal (Dress) and Grand (Upper) Circles in the auditorium. Opened in 1899 and designed by W G R Sprague. The internal decor and plasterwork was done by J M Boekbinder. Very beautiful auditorium in Louis 16th style. Originally accommodating 1,200, the balcony (a continuation of the Upper Circle tiering) and Pit are now fully seated and spacing increased throughout to provide a total of around 800 seats. Grade 2* listed. Part of Delfont Mackintosh Theatres, and restored by them in 2008.

 

City of Westminster, London, West End, England - Wyndhams Theatre, Charing Cross Road

August 2024

Stockfeed factory from Hobbs Road

045-9572

Sales Office, Wyndham Vale

Melbourne's outer west

282-1684

We are reading the play Heartbreak House by George Bernard Shaw. He made notes for it at this house in the summer of 1916. They could hear the guns firing in France from this garden. The play was not performed until 1919.

I used to love reading John Wyndham's work. Here is a set of postcards that use the cover art from his Penguin editions.

I took this photo as part of a 24-hour photo contest for the 175th birthday of the City of Guelph. It was taken looking roughly SE at the corner of Wyndham and Woolwich. It didn't win a prize, but has been used extensively by the City in their publications and on their web site. Matching the shape of the building with the shape of the flower bed makes the photo, but it would be nice if the City would get that big garbage can out of the way! ;-)

Western Treatment Plant, Wyndham, VIC

Part 2 of our Kimberley Eco-Healing Adventure started with a road trip to Wyndham on the back roads. www.innatewisdomconnection.com.au

The ND5 group - Christian Fletcher, Michael Fletcher, Tony Hewitt, Les Walkling and I - agreed not to share our recent images from the Kimberley and Lord Howe Island until the exhibition, so I am thinking I will be in trouble with Christian. Mind you, he's in Iceland at the moment, so hopefully he doesn't have internet...

 

In any event, this photo isn't going into the exhibition. It didn't make the final cut (and I can hear Christian saying that's just as well - but I don't listen to him too much or too often), and so I figure I can post it. Besides, I have to let everyone know about the exhibition opening in Brisbane at the end of this month and the one day workshop.

 

The workshop is being repeated in Melbourne in mid-April, but the exhibition is not. However, we have another exhibition at the Monash Gallery of Art which features our earlier work and an amazing video installation by Michael. For more information about the workshops and accompanying exhibitions, visit www.betterphotography.com and go to our shop, or click the link at the end of this blog.

 

This photo looks easy enough to take and in many ways it was. The challenge was finding just the right angle where the surroundings looked as though this river system went on forever. I had fifty or so shots out of which just three or four were to my liking - and the one I like the most is in the exhibition.

 

The photos were taken from a helicopter using a Phase One 645DF with an 80mm Schneider lens and an IQ180 back. The colour of the mudflats in the middle of the day was less than exciting, so I thought of black and white and then moved to a 'lith film' effect.

 

The river itself has been lightened up using a mask and a curves adjustment layer, and then adjusted so that it stands out just enough, but hopefully not too much.

www.betterphotography.com/…/bpshop-sp-18927/workshops

 

Church front in Wyndham Place, London

Moored at Ferry Meadows - part of the larger ‘Nene Park’.

Looking up the valley from Ogmore Vale to Wyndham

St Peter's Estate, Bethnal Green

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