View allAll Photos Tagged exploremore
This fruit tree was in full bloom by the end of march. The warm light of the setting sun was reflected by the scene and the blossom leaves of the tree. This fine situation was also used by a wedding photographer, taking her clients to this tree.
March 2019 | Niefern
© Max Angelsburger Photography
Thanks for your interest! Feel free to have a look on the other images of my portfolio as well.
Consider this photograph hanging on your wall? Contact me with your needed size to get advice regarding highquality photopaper, canvas and frame.
Please like, comment and share this photograph to support my work.
Become a follower as well to see my latest releases:
www.flickr.com/photos/153534027@N06/
www.instagram.com/max_angelsburger/
www.facebook.com/MaxAngelsburgerPhotography/
Music recommendation: ૐ Chillout News ૐ Vol.43 / 03 - 2019 (Downtempo Psybient Psychill & more) -
LOFOTEN FEBRUARY 2018
Another one of these days on our Lofoten Masterclass Workshop...and it feels just right for today...winter is back...also in Germany.
Have a good start into the week!
Follow me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/MichaelSchaakePhotography/
PRINTS FOR SALE!
More on www.flipbook.schaake.de
FANAL FORREST | MADEIRA
What a fantastic location. A forest of up to 500 years old laurel-trees, where you're not really hoping for fog... you more or less expect it to be there. The clouds are driven from the north up the mountains and tend to hang in this forrest.
For sure, you won't get this conditions every time, but we were lucky enough to get the perfect mix of clouds, a bit of wind and not too much rain up there.
And to top this, we stumbled upon this lonely bull, standing on a small clearing and feeding on the laurel-trees. We could hear the cows around us moo all the time, but in the thick clouds, we couldn't see them, until "his majesty" came into sight.
Most people living in the UK will have a good idea of what my home county holds for the visitor, even if they've never been here. "Hmm, Cornwall," many of them say to us when we're on our own travels. "Long way down the country to get there. Nice beaches. We went to Newquay one year," or "We like to go to Stein's in Padstow. Have you been there?" In spite of the fact that we have been in possession of an unused voucher for the place since July last year, we still haven't been there. It may be a statistical fact that half of the celebrity chefs in Britain have a restaurant somewhere within 30 miles of where I live. Personally I favour Greg and Lou's fish and chip shop in Redruth, two miles from home, or Manha Spice in Illogan. As far as I'm aware, neither of the proprietors of these establishments have held down a regular slot on prime time television, but then their prices don't involve parting with family heirlooms to pay the bill and their fare is more than good enough to please my simple palate as well. Nobody has ever mentioned Redruth or Illogan in one of those awkward moments on foreign soil when strangers attempt to engage us in conversation about where we come from. I like it that way. I should stress that I have no affiliation with either establishment and will not benefit financially or otherwise if you take this as a recommendation to visit them. Although they could do me a chip butty and a Chicken Jalfrezi if they like. Not at the same time though - I'm not entirely unrefined.
Still, one thing the wider world is right about is our coast. Surrounded by the sea on three sides and attached to the rest of England by a handful of miles in the north east corner it's stunning, whatever the season. Wild, windswept and remote it's a place that visitors have been coming to for far longer than any of us have been on the planet. Enormous sandy sweeps backed by dunes, small rocky inlets and coves, and pretty harbours filled with fishing boats draw them in their droves. Generally speaking, people know we have a coastline.
What we're less famous for is our rivers. The country isn't long, wide or flat enough to have many broad sweeping meanders plotting their way through sunlit meadows past nodding willows and sleepy villages. But some of the ones we do have are spectacular. The River Fowey (pronounced Foy - just to set you on the right foot with the locals) crashes down from the wilderness of Bodmin Moor, making its way southwards until it meets the sea at the town of the same name (also pronounced Foy). I can sit and watch it happily for hours.
And that's exactly what I did on Saturday at Golitha Falls. I was here a couple of months earlier in the same position, taking more or less the same picture. When I got home I was disappointed by the glare on the surface of the river and decided I must have forgotten to spin the polariser. Cursing myself for a schoolboy error I vowed to return, only to find that the problem persisted. I'd evidently done everything I could have the previous time, but failed to appreciate that the filter wasn't going to remove all of the glare. I guess it's something we're all just going to have to live with.
In a couple of weeks I'm going to head there again. While many of you live further north in the UK and are seeing the colours change already, the leaves are still mostly green down here in the far South West. I want them to be red, brown and gold, but it seems I need to wait a while longer. I love having a reason to need to go back.
BOYEEGHTER BAY | IRELAND
I believe a more or less classy shot at the beach. Find a piece of foreground, place your tripod, screw the ND-Filter on your lense and take some long-exposure with the waves rolling in.
Another classy part about it are the wet feet you get?!
Ponta do Rosto | Madeira
Tried to capture the sunrise here, but only got a test-shot at the ending of the blue hour.
Even so, everything looked perfect for the shot I wanted, only 5 minutes later the mist hit the coast and we were soaked by heavy rain.
Only 10 minutes later and the sun would have raised above the horizont and the shot would've been perfect.
Architecture the light #30
Hong Kong, 2021
.
內部採用井型設計,係佢奇特而出名嘅景觀。
内部は、その独特の有名な風景を形づくったデザインを採用しています。
The interior adopts a well-shaped design, which is its unique and famous landscape.
.
.
works by photomanm
discover more at photomanm.com
Palouse Falls, Washington
Here is the sunrise photo from my misty trip to Palouse Falls last weekend. Like I said, it was very difficult to get photos of the milky way with all the mist. But it sure did look sweet in the sunrise reel my buddy made with his drone!
While my mum and I were waiting for my sister's flight to arrive, the idea was to take some photos of the airfield during blue hour. Therefore, I used one of the viewpoints, which normally plane spotters use.
May 2019 | Stuttgart
© Max Angelsburger Photography
Thanks for your interest! Feel free to have a look on the other images of my portfolio as well.
Consider this photograph hanging on your wall? Contact me with your needed size to get advice regarding highquality photopaper, canvas and frame.
Please like, comment and share this photograph to support my work.
Become a follower as well to see my latest releases:
www.flickr.com/photos/153534027@N06/
www.instagram.com/max_angelsburger/
www.facebook.com/MaxAngelsburgerPhotography/
Music recommendation: ESCAPE | Pulse8 | www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFqw12Fxqnw
KRUGER NATIONALPARK | SOUTH AFRICA
Two young elephant bulls went heads on, measuring their strength.
Lions, a Zebra and an Elephant. What an encounter... late afternoon at the Tobiroen Waterhole, Etosha Nationalpark | Namibia
NTHAMBO TREE CAMP | SOUTH AFRICA
Seeing a lioness hunt from so close... it's really making you a bit nervous when sitting on top of an open safari vehicle. :)
There’s poetry in the untouched—a language written not with words, but with movement. Here, where the wind sculpts the snow and the mountains hold their breath, a single rider leaves their mark. A fleeting stroke on nature’s blank canvas, a whisper of speed and freedom in the vast silence of the Andes.
Valle Nevado’s backcountry doesn’t ask for permission. It only asks if you’re willing to listen. And today, the answer was a perfect arc carved deep into the powder.
Because some stories aren’t told—they’re ridden.
Architecture the light #29
Hong Kong, 2021
.
華富邨係香港其中一個有名和歷史意義嘅大型公共屋邨。
華富邨は、香港の有名で歴史的に重要な大規模な公共住宅団地です。
Wah Fu Estate is one of Hong Kong's famous and historic large-scale public housing estates.
.
.
works by photomanm
discover more at photomanm.com