View allAll Photos Tagged crashingwave

Number 3 in the ' Craster ' set. I can't wait to go back here. Hopefully the weather at home won't mean we have to leave early this time!

The Jurassic Coast is a World Heritage Site witch runs for ninety five miles along the south coast of England, This shot was from West Bay on a windy day.

Shot in Aruba. The light was heavenly and the water ferocious.

 

Canon EOS XSI

Canon EF-S 10-22 USM

1/8, 1/30 and 1/2 sec (EV 0, -2, +2) at F22

ISO 100

 

Processing in Photomatix Pro and CS4.

 

Please do not use this image without my explicit written permission. © All rights reserved.

© All rights reserved, don´t use this image without my permission. Contact me at debmalya86@gmail.com

Sea swell crashes against a cliff-face at De Pria, northern Spain.

 

The cliffs here are around 20 metres high, and the crashing waves are reaching the tops of the cliffs!

Yachats is a town on the Oregon coast just north of Cape Perpetua which is know for spouting horns. In this photo you can see the large wave breaking white and hitting the rocks with some power, sending impressive spray into the air.

 

Thornwick Bay, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK

An image from a series of captures from Porth Nanven (Cot Valley) showing the sea breaking over the dinosaur eggs on the beach. In the background, the twin peaks of the Brison rocks sit on the horizon.

As the sun approached the Brison rocks any hope of a hero sunset image began to fade. The clouds hiding the sun, started to change shape and blow wispy trails across the sky. The 3stop medium grad filter showed the clouds in their true glory.

Stokes Bay in Gosport on a very windy day

A windy day for these paddlers and high waves beyond the jetty; Morro Bay; CA; USA; Sony a9; Sony 200-600mm lens at 600mm; ISO 500; f/6.3; 1/1250 sec

A long exposure image taken in Marineland, Florida with coquina rocks on the shoreline in an overcast morning.

 

I want to thank everyone below for your wonderful comments. Hope everyone enjoyed your weekend.

This is another of my favorites form my trip to Santa Cruz. This is from Bridges State Park taken just before sunset and well before my last post. There was still enough light that the birds were still on the rock and the sailboats were out. I took this photo planning for the sun to be low enough to create some different lighting and to light up the sailboat up as much as possible. If you didn’t notice; look closely at the center of the bridge, there is a sailboat in the center. In the color version you can barely see the boat because there isn’t enough contrast. I wanted a good black and white of the bridge to pair with a good color version, so this worked out very well. I timed it with a crashing wave to add some highlights in the foreground. I was hoping this would help draw out the sailboat. I also used a much faster shutter that my previous post to capture the crash of the wave but still slow enough to create a large white wall of water. I knew from some practice shots before the boat got to the center that about a 1/3 second of a shutter would give me what I wanted. Hope you enjoy the series. Feel free to let me know what you think or ask any questions.

Marineland, Florida

 

Hello, I want to thank everyone below for your wonderful comments, and I hope everyone is enjoying the weekend.

Nothing captures the heartbeat of Havana like the roar of the Atlantic meeting the Malecón. Here, amidst the golden light of the setting sun, a single moment of pure, youthful defiance and joy is crystallized in an explosion of sea spume. It’s more than just salt water; it’s a baptism in the city's wild spirit—a reminder that on this crumbling sea wall, life is at its most vibrant when the waves are at their highest.

This is the one that I thought I had uploaded. This was later in the morning when the tide was at its highest and the wind had picked up. Problem was the light was naff

Colours of the ocean at Bantry Bay, Capetown, South Africa

Torrential rain and Gusty winds made it almost impossible to take out my camera... but the crashing waves were too hard to resist. So thank you mankind for putting camera on a cellphone... :-)

 

© All rights reserved, don´t use this image without my permission. Contact me at debmalya86@gmail.com

Normally I don't go out during the middle of the day to capture waves however I was learning my ND filter so I was able to capture this moment in time. I was, and still am, happy with the capture.

A photo showing the power of the sea

Sunset over Pt Lobos Bird Island. Pelicans streaming home for the night.

Taken at Formby point.. This is the location of Anthony Gormleys "another place" but today the ironmen were battling the elements

If you are interested in my works, they are available on Getty Images and 500px; prints on Photos.

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Follow me also on Website | 500px | Portfolio | Facebook | Facebook Page | EyeEm | Instagram | Blog | Wix |

If you are interested in my works, they are available on Getty Images and Adobe Stock; prints on Photos.

.

Follow me also on Portfolio Website | Instagram | 500px | Facebook Page | EyeEm | Wix |

 

Rough seas with waves crashing onto Cornish rocks, Dollar Cove, The Lizard, Cornwall

How did it get so late so soon? Its night before its afternoon. December is here before its June. My goodness how the time has flown. How did it get so late so soon?

~ Dr. Seuss ~

 

www.facebook.com/FreshairphotographybyJanisMorrison

 

This Road had the storm barriers closed but the cars still came through.

With the front of Storm Agnes approaching, I had two shots in mind at Mullion Harbour, however, both shoots had proved to be trickier than I had anticipated.

This is the first, and although this is albeit what I had in mind, trying to compose it so the waves played a major part of the image was tricky with the net store in the foreground.

Stormy weather-large waves rise to meet

dark skies.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Waves rolling and breaking against the retaining wall at the R.C. Harris Water Treatment Plant in Toronto. Captured on a windy afternoon by Lake Ontario, where the lake met the structure with relentless rhythm and force.

 

Blog Post:

www.ashleylduffus.com/blog/room-for-movement-artist-s-note

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