View allAll Photos Tagged churning
We had a great sky day yesterday and as often happens, I had to sit and watch most of the action through a dirty office window. But, once 3:00pm hit, I was outta there with camera in hand. I drove out to one of my favorite country roads and sat for at least 45 minutes, just watching the pretty skies go by. They eventually all passed and I headed home but around 7pm, I noticed the skies turning all interesting again so off I went. The skies overhead were a gorgeous spring blue but off to the East, the clouds of drama were churning with darkness. I can't really explain it, but the drama of a developing storm makes me feel so alive.
Oh yeah, I have been doing some learnin' lately and to make a long story very short, I ditched my Skylight 1-A filter. The color difference was amazing and I'm kinda having to adjust my processing a bit so bear with me as I sort it all out.
Camera: Canon EOS 30D
Lens: Canon EF-S17-55mm f/2.8 IS USM
Focal Length: 17 mm
ISO Speed: 100
Aperture: f/7,1
Shutter Speed: 1/200 sec
Strokkur (Icelandic for "churn") is a fountain geyser in the geothermal area beside the HvÃtá River in Iceland in the southwest part of the country, east of Reykjavik. It is one of Iceland's most famous geysers, erupting about every 4–8 minutes 15 – 20 m high, sometimes up to 40 m high.
Polaroid Originals B&W SX-70 (expired)
Polaroid OneStep Land Camera
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©Christine A. Owens 10.24.18
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Watching the waves churned up by the cruise ship is mesmerizing and hypnotic. This is somewhere on the Adriatic Sea about half way between Venice and our first port of call in Corfu. Sea days (when there are no ports of call) are very relaxing and you can take all the time you want to just watch the waves - I guess that's why they call it vacation....
© 2011 Jill Clardy
Continually on the boil, one of the geothermal springs at the Mud Volcano area, Yellowstone National Park.
Reminded me of travelling to Devon or Cornwall for family holidays in the 70's seeing these churns. To keep us occupied, the game was to spot the milk churns on their platform by the side of the road first, whereupon you would sing out "churns" at the top of your voice. Of course, that was how the milk was collected back then from the end of the lanes to the farms, in the South-West.
A fully overhauled and recently painted D8188 approaches Hampton Loade on the SVR with a couple of vans - a repositioning move following a Gala the previous weekend. Saturday 29.3.14
This was the third of three becks to cross before I headed up one of the ridges to the higher tops. Having managed to cross all three without too much incident I stopped here for a bit of refreshment before the main ascent began.
I have taken my daily medication
To get inside my memory
Deepen within my potential
To where I rationalize and celebrate
Our systems continue to struggle
Our projects seldom achieve
But I have not lost hope
As we will never accept failure
Steeped towards belief
As an enterprise
Secure the conditions for lasting success
Honest, forthright and determined
Scent each risk to secure your claim
Read more: www.jjfbbennett.com/2019/02/nightcliff-churn.html
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In spite of being very busy with framing my upcoming show, I managed to process this guy from Devil's Churn.
Cape Perpetua really made an impression on me, when I visited it for the first time about a month ago. I feel like that in the few hours I was there I just scratched the surface of this fantastic section of coast.
A view of some rapidly changing storm clouds moving through Southern Wisconsin on on a warm summer evening.
HDR - 3 exposures tonemapped in HDR Efex Pro
A solar prominence rose up along the edge of the sun and twisted and churned for about two days before falling apart (Jan. 23-24, 2017). The dynamic action was generated by competing magnetic forces. The images were taken in a wavelength extreme ultraviolet light that observes activity close to the solar surface, perfect for capturing prominences, which are notoriously unstable clouds of plasma suspended above the sun. Credit: Solar Dynamic Observatory, NASA.
On a very moody morning at South Cronulla, the water from Port Hacking churned around this isolated rock.