View allAll Photos Tagged dappledlight
Scottish multicoloured Heather on the edge of part of the remaining Caledonian forest. Almost a feast for the eyes in such a huge sea of Green.
coast wetlands, Narrabeen lake, Sydney 2015. Yashica 635 TLR, Fomapan 100 120 film developed in Rodinal 1+50. V700 scan.
This is the place I hike to for a lot of my photos.
It is a 1/4 mile from our house and is in our valley. The light and reflections are so beautiful when we have water in our little creek.
The white arrow points to where Glenda was standing.
A young woman working at the camping place where we were staying. I whish to take more photos of her!
I like daisies. They are happy simple flowers and whilst I was staying with my Father in June I took a number of photographs of the daisies in the garden. Yesterday I came across a couple of image that I'd taken for texture but not yet used, and experimented with them (and several other textures ;-)) on this photograph. This is the result.
One of the aspects of playing with textures that I really like is that you can use the most unlikely textures and get interesting effects - Ice granules photographed on a dark January morning is not what springs immediately to mind when thinking of daisies, and yet ...
Textures:
I spent as a guide, taking a friend on a circular route out of Edale and up one of my favourite ascents in the Peak District; Crowden Clough.
The weather was very dynamic during the day, quick moving patchy cloud casted big shadows that moved across the landscape, with bright dappled light accompanying it.
This shot was taken looking across to Crowden Tower, a rock outcrop that sits at the top of the clough, which was catching the light as it danced across it.
Explore # 350 ...... many thanks :) :)
Sometimes things aren't clear right away.
That's where you need to be patient and persevere and see where things lead ~ Mary Pierce.
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Dappled light at Thomason Foss during a flying visit this week.
Memorial to the Reverend David Dickson, by Alexander Handyside Ritchie. You can just see this in the centre bottom of the previous photos of the church. I've snapped it before, but the spring light was dappled by the trees when I passed, giving this lovely effect, and I just had to take another pic.
If only we could bottle that light quality, the photos never really do it justice...
A more picturesque Leeds-Liverpool Canal at East Marton in North Yorkshire
©SWJuk (2015)
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My favourite time of the day is sunrise - there's a stillness about the air and often it's just me and the wildlife.
At this time of year, on a nice crisp morning with plenty of sunshine, I like to play with the light where opportunity allows. This adolescent stag was having a rest at the top of a hill. Only a small shard of light was coming through to his head, while the trees in the background were lit nicely showing green, yellow and orange. Combine that with the foreground in shade (both the branch above and the ground) and it made for a nice image - or at least I thought so!
Lovely lighting a couple of weeks ago gave an opportunity to take a dramatic image like this of a Great Spotted Woodpecker.
“There's something very enticing about an empty bench under a tree. And if it's facing a river, that's the bench for me.”
― Joyce Rachelle
Are you a coffee or a tea drinker?
I just realised why I should always stick to tea..
One caffeinated coffee today sees me bouncing off the walls!
Nothing like this relatively zen photo of me enjoying a cuppa at The Hacienda, London
Wearing a gorgeous kimono from All About Audrey - www.allaboutaudrey.co.uk
Styling & set design, modelling, photography & retouching by me
Title borrowed from an episode of "Tales of the Unexpected", a TV show aired in the UK between 1979-1988. The series began as adaptions of short stories written by the author Roald Dahl, probably better known for his children's novels.
The blackberry blossoms are out, and there are lots. If the rain stops coming and the days heat up, there should be a really good crop of blackberries for those willing to risk their defences.
Rainforest epiphyte fern in sub-tropical rainforest near Cunningham's Gap. These ferns attach to rocks or trees and survive on nutrients from decomposing plant litter and rainwater. Often called Bird's Nest ferns, they are Australian plants, native to Queensland and NSW.
Another shot of our secret trillium field. The mayapples seem to like to grow with the trillium. The morning light was just starting to stream over the mountain.
9" x 12" acrylic painting on watercolor paper.
I'd love to have you visit my website: www.CrabtreeOriginals.com
The ASQ Center Ivory Tusk Building -
ASQ is on the left side; Mariott Residence Inn is on the right, where the twin staircases are located.
The greatest question is what to call this magnificent building at Plankinton and Wisconsin Avenue, with its gorgeous neoclassical eastern face of Ionic columns, which grace the downtown Riverwalk. This location opened in 1887 as the first of Adam Gimbel’s (and sons) flagship stores. The Gimbel Brothers company would eventually build, tear down and rebuild a major and lasting department store location the city would rely on for a wide range of goods.
Over the first three decades, the structure expanded by seven sections and grew into a complex of floors. In 1923 alone, Gimbels tore down their building and began again with 60-ft. piles into the bedrock just to create the current eight-story structure. At the cost of$1.2 million dollars.
When the company faltered after 99 years, a London-based holding and management company sold the Gimbels name and Milwaukee buildings to Marshall Fields. That major department store chain then faltered a short time later and sold the building again soon thereafter — yet modern-day references after that short stint continue to refer to the “Field’s Building.”