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“You can walk in a dream
while you are awake:
Just walk in the misty morning of a forest!”
― Mehmet Murat ildan
Own image 9971
Lil Owl and own textures
The Award Tree Challenge: September Days
© Graham Daly
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This image is less of a "Traditional Seascape" like the majority of my coastal work and more of an Abstract take on a Seascape.
While at one of my preferred coastal locations around West Cork, Ireland, a nice sunset was developing which was producing some nice colour tones of its own and so I wanted to try to capture the scene in a different way than I would normally instinctively capture it.
To produce this image, I simply applied a bit of ICM (Intentional Camera Movement) during a 2.5 second exposure. With the shutter open and secured on a tripod, I smoothly panned the camera from left to right and the resulting motion during the exposure was recorded.
I used a NiSi V5 Pro Filter System with a NiSi 5 Stop ND Grad to control the highlights and exposure within the sky while also using a LEE 0.9 ND Filter to lengthen the exposure time.
The Truman Track emerges on a coastline with cliffs, caverns, and an unnamed waterfall that plummets onto a rock-strewn beach, South Island of New Zealand.
A coastal transverse sand dune looks like a perpendicular wall viewed from the ground.
Sand dunes are mounds of loose sand that are formed as a result of wind movement.
Shot with a Canon EOS 700D from Ras Mohamed nature reserve.
A huge recent cliff fall can clearly be seen in this view of Seven Sisters cliffs east of Cuckmere Haven, East Sussex. This must have happened within the past 2 weeks. It was not like this when last visited in May - 2016.
2018 Road Trip to Tuktoyaktuk, NWT via Dempster Highway and the Inuvik-Tuktoyaktuk Highway or ITH (Tuk Highway).
This is a close-up photo of patterns on the surface of a coastal rock that have appealing shapes and textures, and suggest a pareidolia narrative.
This is a photo of patterns in the coastal bedrock near Clam Harbour Beach. The scrapes were made by the movement of glaciers 10,000 years ago.
Walking the shoreline waiting for sunset and I was struck by the textures in the rocks and crustacean shells littering the surface. The sky was also interesting with wispy cloud trails above the distant Plover Scar Lighthouse.
So I framed up a couple of shots. The area here is so open and vast it is quite difficult to make decent shoreline shots when the tide is this far in.
The rocks out by the lighthouse at low tide are much more substantial and interesting.
Anyway, I thought it was worth a post! You may also spot the man fishing in the sea, up to his waist in water on the left side of the frame.
The wind turbine stands above anything else in the locality. The foreground concrete defenses were designed to save our structures from the power of nature; the wind turbine was designed to help us by using the power of nature.