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The Luxury of being yourself
We have selected pictures on our website, but can always add more depending on the requests we do get and the current trend in the world of luxury fine art:
We do once in a while have discounted luxury fine art, please do keep checking:
Fine Art Photography Prints & Luxury Wall Art:
We do come up with merchandises over the years, but at the moment we have sold out and will bring them back depending on the demands of our past customers and those we do take on daily across the globe.
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We tend to celebrate light in our pictures. Understanding how light interacts with the camera is paramount to the work we do. The temperature, intensity and source of light can wield different photography effect on the same subject or scene; add ISO, aperture and speed, the camera, the lens type, focal length and filters…the combination is varied ad multi-layered and if you know how to use them all, you will come to appreciate that all lights are useful, even those surrounded by a lot of darkness.
We are guided by three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, our longing to capture in print, that which is beautiful, the constant search for the one picture, and constant barrage of new equipment and style of photography. These passions, like great winds, have blown us across the globe in search of the one and we do understand the one we do look for might be this picture right here for someone else out there.
“A concise poem about our work as stated elow
A place without being
a thought without thinking
creatively, two dimensions
suspended animation
possibly a perfect imitation
of what was then to see.
A frozen memory in synthetic colour
or black and white instead,
fantasy dreams in magazines
become imbedded inside my head.
Artistic views
surrealistic hues,
a photographer’s instinctive eye:
for he does as he pleases
up to that point he releases,
then develops a visual high.
- M R Abrahams
Some of the gear we use at William Stone Fine Art are listed here:
Some of our latest work & more!
Embedded galleries within a gallery on various aspects of Photography:
There are other aspects closely related to photography that we do embark on:
All prints though us is put through a rigorous set of quality control standards long before we ever ship it to your front door. We only create gallery-quality images, and you'll receive your print in perfect condition with a lifetime guarantee.
All images on Flickr have been specifically published in a lower grade quality to amber our copyright being infringed. We have 4096x pixel full sized quality on all our photos and any of them could be ordered in high grade museum quality grade and a discount applied if the voucher WS-100 is used. Please contact us:
We do plan future trips and do catalogue our past ones, if you believe there is a beautiful place we have missed, and we are sure there must be many, please do let us know and we will investigate.
In our galleries you will find some amazing fine art photography for sale as limited edition and open edition, gallery quality prints. Only the finest materials and archival methods are used to produce these stunning photographic works of art.
We want to thank you for your interest in our work and thanks for visiting our work on Flickr, we do appreciate you and the contributions you make in furthering our interest in photography and on social media in general, we are mostly out in the field or at an event making people feel luxurious about themselves.
WS-191-1224374-222367474-5249895-1072021221239
As you can probably guess from the title, I managed to get my hands on a "The Batman" set. The Catwoman chase one to be exact. Probably the only one I'm going to get, and boy is it a good one. But we're not here to review sets, we're here to talk minifig updates...again.
From the Batinson minifig I was able to revise the designs for two characters from the unnamed universe, Red Hood and Batman. It was originally only Batman, but nice as the leg printing is, I can't put it on a minifig with a grey torso, the black legs just look wrong. So what I did was swap the legs, Red Hood got Batman's, and Batman got Red Hood's dual molded legs, which look a lot nicer.
The result is actually a lot closer to what I've had in mind for Batman since I came up with him however long ago it was. Admittedly I'd rather the suit was black, but you make do with what you've got.
As for story....maybe there's a Catwoman/Batman type relationship going on, I don't know. There's probably not, cos of the whole "Red Hood is the son of 2/3rds of the crime syndicate" thing, but that's a whole other can of worms I'm not gonna open.
And with that thought in your heads, you're free to return to your scrolling.
There's something elusive and mysterious in the motion of water...
I took this using a B+W ND110. Because I was out with my family and my 96 year old fishing buddy, it was not possible to bring a tripod. Hence, this was taken by resting my camera upon a rock at an angle. It's also why I modified the exposure to limit the length of the LE. I'dve preferred pushing this to F8 or F11 and about a 10 second exposure, but sometimes you take what you can get and be thankful...
Explored at #285. Thanks all!
4 panel stitch.
2 with a fast shutter, 2 with very slow shutter (and 6 stop ND grad).
I climbed down off the path, set the camera on rocks and just hoped it didn't move too much as i had no tripod at the time).
My wife was patiently waiting ... got what i could get and kept it moving.
©Exodus Photography
Friday's Food for Thought
Let's face it.... life right now is very tough and it seem to be getting harder everyday. If you are waiting for someone to rescue you in these times you will be waiting for a long time. We all want to live on easy street but getting there is not a smooth ride. I learned a long time ago that anything worth having is hard work. You will find you will have to do work in areas you don't like but if it will get you closer to your dreams you have to swallow your pride and do it! Yes you will have to deal with people you just don't agree with but if it will get you closer to your destiny then get along with them!
When I was growing up I had my plans in life all laid out and it all fell apart. I was frustrated and wanted to throw in the towel. But I remember my mom telling me this, "Son, do what you have to do in order to get where you want to be!" Everyday I live by this. Yes you are right to feel it is not right you have to struggle but sitting around complaining and doing nothing is not going to get you closer. Get in there, do the hard or boring tasks, and you will find you will come out on top.
This little songbird was playing hard to get and was cleverly evasive.
Baja desert of San Felipe, Mexico
I’ll take what I can get, and rather than brace myself for the next visit from the mud-grain, accept it for as long as it needs to be. Someday, someday I will not be on its route.
It was feeling the heat during a rather hot, autumn afternoon... took this close to 6pm and it was 29 degrees if i recall correctly. This was the best angle i could get and i had to deal with backlighting so i decided to shoot in monochrome, pretty happy with what i got :-)
Make your Halloween Dreams come true with Glitter & Doom! 100s of things to get and do! maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Calintreau/45/74/24
After a long day of hiking on the way to Song Kol Lake, Kyrgyzstan, it would be a pain in the legs to continue without a good night sleep.
Fortunately, at some point, you don't need to move to witness a change in scenery. You can instead trust the clouds to move for you.
And that's what they did, bringing hope to see a spectacular thunderstorm with our daily yurts in the foreground. I got quite excited.
Unfortunately though, the storm, for as long that I was up, never got closer. That lightning in the frame is the only one that I could get.
And, in the end, it didn't really matter. At least, unlike the night that would come after this one, no gust was trying to unearth the yurts from the ground. I could have my good night sleep.
I took this shot on four different camera settings just to see what I would get. And then beefed up the colours in iphoto. I couldn't decide which I liked best. So feck it. Here they are - you choose!!
Lately I know in my mind that I was getting slightly disappointed that I wasn't getting as many comments as I used to, and it wasn't really apparent to me till I read Amy Spanos' description on her newest photo that made me realise. Maybe seeing someone else think the same way makes it clearer I dunno. Either way she wrote:
Recently I've been back in the phase of thinking the amount of views, comments, and favourites on my photos portrays how good a photographer you are (which is complete rubbish)
I got completely sucked into that mind set, and I think I was more concerned with getting comments and faves when I should be more concerned with what I set out to do and improve as a photographer. I need to stop being concerned with "popularity" and concentrate on improving my craft. Thats not to say I don't appreciate the comments and faves I do get, I just need to not be concerned with how many I get and appreciate whatever I do.
Bit of a ramble, I might read this in the morning and think Im being stupid, so don't be surprised if I erase the description :p
I do love those days when the sun is shining through the clouds and they're giving us a nice spring rain. The weather warming up, birds chirping... How much better can life get? :) And when else can I feel so good in all this rain gear? :)
All my details here:
Sometime around the 10th or 11th of December, an uncommon bird known as a Townsend's Solitaire was reported in South St. Paul. Typically, by the time I get around to chasing a rarity, I'm too late. But this bird was being reported consistently, nearly every day since. Strategically, I thought I would wait for a sunny day before trying to find it myself, and after many days of dreary weather, today was the day the clouds were finally supposed to clear. I got going early, with my sole intent of catching a decent photo of this bird –in the sun. As I left home, it was perfectly clear and I knew it would be a sunny day. But as I drove southeast, it appeared that St. Paul was STILL under heavy cloud cover! I continued anyway, thinking maybe it would clear by the time I arrived. There was actually one other birder already there before me but for some reason I decided to walk the other way first and check out the river for a bit. When I eventually came back, the other birder was leaving and I stopped and asked him if he'd seen it and he had, just 3 minutes earlier he said. So I staked out a place where it looked like he had been standing, and watched and waited. Nothing. Was I too late again? Finally I saw some movement in one of the cedar trees. Uggh, sparrows. Then I saw some other movement and when I looked with my binoculars I saw the back of a bird with dark wings with light edges. I found it! But it disappeared deep into the trees a second later. Just then, two loud, diesel locomotive engines lumbered up the train tracks right on the other side of the trees! "Great" I thought, "there's no way this bird is coming back out now!" The train crept up slowly and stopped in place directly behind the trees I was carefully watching, and I watched what looked to be a shift change as the current conductors climbed down the front of the engine and new ones boarded. It occurred to me the train engines were both painted a golden-yellow with red and black accents, and I thought maybe, maybe, if I could somehow see the bird higher up in the same tree, I could frame the shot with that yellow in the background. So I stood there, and waited, and waited. As I stood there inhaling diesel fumes, I realized the absurdity of the shot I was hoping to get, and the fact that the bird would have to come waaaay out in the open, in just the right part of the tree, close to me, and with two idling locomotives nearby. I was about to give up and had let my camera fall by my side a while ago already, when the bird popped up nearly where I had imagined it! I fired away with my camera as quickly as I could, but shockingly the bird stayed put for at least a minute if not longer, plucking juniper berries and repositioning itself to reach more of them. The sun was still refusing to show itself, but by this point I didn't really mind anymore since my timing and stroke of dumb luck had produced a more unique photo opportunity than I ever imagined when I left home. The experience was yet another lesson in the fact that you just never know what you're going to get while attempting to photograph nature. I'll share a cell phone pic in the comments showing a wider angle of the cedar trees and train. With only 2 days remaining, this will undoubtedly be my last "FOY" (first of year) bird for 2023. Kaposia Landing, Dakota County, MN 12/29/23
Mid-August is a great time for photographing waders [shorebirds]. Not only are there still some adults in summer plumages but the fresh-clad juveniles, which tend to be less wary, are also present. Just find the patch of seaweed they are feeding on and sit down a couple of hours before high tide. Get as low as possible, ignore all the insect bites you are getting and allow the water to push the birds close to you.
Using this strategy in Nova Scotia I once ended up with a small group of Least Sandpipers roosting on my out-stretched legs!
This Purple Sandpiper was an early return to the beach at Newbiggin from it high-Arctic breeding grounds
You know, once upon a time someone told me straight up that I didn’t deserve the ‘explores’ I was getting. And what could I have said to that?
But I realized something. The work that I’ve done where I’ve heard testimonials from others or people simply opening up about their life to me, were the moments that didn’t come with explores or people telling me they think I’m talented. Those moments came with numerous people working together towards the same goal, whether that was simply self-discovery or just liking a picture.
With that said, (and that is aaaall I’m giving you hint wise) I have big news. My oh my, and it’s exciting too. I’m gonna need all of you wonderful people and your help too, to make this work.
But I can’t tell you ;)
SO enjoy this summery picture that I posted forever ago in comments.
And remember, summer means no books and tests and lack of sleep. It means pictures and flickr and making little flickr friends for Hannah Martin. Which is always good.
PS - check her out. her stream just...aaah. i love it. and she's incredibly sweet
On my way to Lone Pine and the Alabama Hills recently I had to stop by the old Nevada ghost town of Rhyolite. It was early afternoon when I past through and the lighting was harsh and not what I would typically prefer for photography. But hey, you take what you get and make the most of it, right? I'm always amazed at the results that can be obtained with HDR in difficult lighting situations!
View the Entire - Buildings Set
View the entire Alabama Hills Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flicker.
Find me on instagram @andreafanelliphotography
I am pretty surprised by the result of this picture.
I was watching the Boston fireworks from the MIT sailing pavilion in Cambridge. I only had my small tripod, and the pavilion was so crowded that I didn't have any decent view of the skyline and the fireworks. The only place that was still free from people was the part of the dock that was floating on the water. Of course, I didn't have any expectation to get an image without blur.
Also, I didn't listen to my girlfriend who wisely recommended to charge the camera battery before going there.
This is the last shot I was able to get, and the only one that was usable.
I used the Live Composite mode of the camera. The combination of a set of 0.5sec exposures + the image stabilization of my camera allowed to get a pretty sharp shot, even if I was on a floating surface!
There's a person, place or time,
that brings you back and makes you feel alive.
explored.
I'm going to a Reading Phillies baseball game tonight with my dad. I'm meeting up with a few friends there. Ahhh, the joys of summer and baseball games. :)
(6 in comments)
[august 4, 2010]
259/365
Sunrise captured from a chilly floating pontoon in Emsworth Harbour looking out towards Thorney Island and the Solent.
This glorious winter sunrise produced such a wide range of colours which changed every few minutes. The harbour water was pretty much as calm as it gets and produced these mirror-like reflections of the sky.
Unusually for this harbour, the water was so exceptionally clear on the day that you could easily see down to the bottom through the reflections.
Thanks as always for your interest and support.
I promise that this is my very last Aurora photo of this season. As you can see this is as dark as it gets, and from now on we look forward to the midnight sun.
Today we walked the girls up to town as I had a prescription to get and so we walked behind the coop on the old railway line route. So 5 images on my ir converted xpro 1.
I used to visit Rapid City nearly every summer from the late 70's through the early 90'sand most often was able to work some railroad action into what was a family vacation built around the Black Hills. The CNW was fairly cooperative running towards Belle Fourche in the morning and returning in the late afternoon so I was able to shoot the morning job, do tourist stuff most of the day and return to Rapid and shoot the late afternoon eastbound. With the long summer days this worked out well but I doubt that the "schedule" was conducive to photography during the later fall/winter/early spring. In any case on a 2 train a day railroad you take what you can get and this eastbound was not lit well as it dawdled into town much later than "normal" near sunset. Way short of the usual amount of power found on this line 4308, 6602 and 6621 have 71 cars in tow on May 23, 1985.
I don't know how I ended up working in sewer maintenance beneath the biggest city in the galaxy: the pay's bad, the view is awful and it stinks. I suppose you have to take what you can get, and occasionally you do find something that has some real value. If you know where to sell it...
"For safety reasons all electronic devices must be stowed during taxing, takeoff and landing. Anything with an on or off switch must now be turned off."
...airplane shots are hard to get - and takeoff and landing is when you get the best shots. This is shortly after takeoff from Chicago O'hare heading south to Nashville...
Miss Nikki appears to be about ready to give birth yet again!!!! She needs all the help she can get and I am more than happy to make sure she is well fed!
I was laying on my stomach on the floor to get some good shots of her at her level!
I think it is pretty well known if you visit the Iron Range on the CN, crews tend to be not super friendly. Now I will never say its everybody, but there are a few choice ones out there. I was happy to see that children seem to break that mold. As is the case as Caleb gets and gives a big wave to an empty ore train out of Two Harbors as they run around a load at Allen Jct. The conductor and Caleb had a good time waving back and forth at each other at a few locations we shot at. Even though I know how working for the railroad can grow on a person, its the simple things in life one can still enjoy!
Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:
2 A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;
3 A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up;
4 A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance;
5 A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing;
6 A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away;
7 A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak;
8 A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.
Built for the "Light & Shadow" Category for the 2023 Summer Joust.
Prince John Sits inside his lonely castle with everything he could possibly want. Money, Power, Land, Loyal Servants. But he is unsatisfied, craving only the death of the bandit Robin Hood.
Meanwhile Robin Hood is enjoying a party with all his friends. He is an outlaw who owns nothing but the clothes on his back and his trusty bow. He gives away all the money he ever gets. And today he is happy, dancing with his one true love Maid Marion while all his friends dance play and sing around him.
My goodness this took forever to edit. Stupid Leaves.
To God be all the glory
Yes it would have been so much nicer without the fencing, but hey ho - you take what you can get! And fencing is a big part of the countryside these days: keeping sheep in and people out, that's how it goes ....
When a swan takes off, it's hard to ignore. The sound is attention getting, and it takes them a good while to get airborne.
Taken at Bronte Creek Marina in Oakville Ontario Canada
I only had PN Small and Medium bodies for a long while...then became curious and bought an XS that I have ended up really liking a lot!!! Now my curiosity extended to the 1/12 Picco Neemo S size...how CUTE is this little body!?! Although I have no idea what head it will get, and the feet are SO small!!
Thing that makes this so interesting is I shot it with a 1500 MM lens. I did not have to do much cropping, in fact it was at the bottom of the photo and it was to get garbage out of the photo.
The problem is the light, I'll explain ! I was using my canon 500 Mm mirror lens. It was made in 1982 for an F1 type film camera.
There is a cropping factor of 1.5 using this lens on a canon digital camera. That means that this lens is equal to a 750 MM lens on my canon cameras. ( 1.5 means that I have equal to my 500 Mm with 1/2 more MM. 1/2 of 500 is 250, add that to the 500 and you get 750 MM ) What I did is add a 2x tele converter to the mix and I come out with 1500 MM. Not only did I double the focal length of the lens, But all other things double as well. This was an F-8 aperture lens, now the effective aperture is f-16. Since the aperture is fixed at f-16 it's going to take a ton of light to get and exposure. You have to use your shutter speeds and ISO to make the adjustments. i am still using ISO 800 as my film speed. As a bench mark I would take a shot with a shutter speed of 800 and see what the exposure looked like. If it was to under exposed, ( dark screen ) I knew I would have to use a slower shutter speed. ( lets in more light ) If the screen was to bright I had to increase my shutter speed to 1000 or even 1200. ( lets in less light ) It works inversely. So for this shot I was using a shutter speed around 160 and I could have probably gone to 125. ( which would have been a 4 stop difference ) using 800 as a bench mark shutter speed. In the case of the above photo it was only 3 stops.
Moral of the story is I can't use this lens in low light. Other that that restriction I can really reach out a grab things now as long as I have good lighting conditions. ( as a reminder you can't use this lens on a very hot day over long distances. Heat inversion will ruin you photo. Long focal length lenses have a tendency to magnify this atmospheric aberration. )
The Branch Line Society "The Vienna Explorer" approaches Heidestraße level crossing in Margarethen am Moos, with Regiobahn-owned ex-ÖBB 2143 033-6 at the head (and 2143 062-5 on the rear). The 19.7 kilometre post is immediately south of the level crossing.
This is on the line which runs from a junction west of Fischamend on the former Preßburger Bahn (the original line from Vienna to Bratislava, now truncated at Wolfsthal) to Götzendorf on the current electrified line from Vienna to Parndorf (where it splits to go to Bratislava or into Hungary). The visit to this line was a late addition to the itinerary (after other branches were removed from it), but it was not possible to travel all the way through to Götzendorf because part of it was out of use; this is almost as far as we got.
There are two freight facilities here, and the shine on the track suggested they were both still in regular use. Slightly north of this point, on the west side of the line, is a major manufacturing plant of AB DS Smith Packaging (yes, the Austrian subsidiary of the London-based company), while just south of this level crossing a line diverges east to AB EVVA-Schmiermittel-Fabrik. After that point, the line is out of use, overgrown and, a short distance further, with a stop board in place.
This was the last of four photostops as we ran south on this line (at the third, the train was moved from just before a level crossing into the station area while most of us were trackside but the light was pretty much straight down the track, so the photos aren't up to much), and had the best light of the entire day. After time for everyone to get their shots, the train was moved over the level crossing to the furthest point south we could reach (the leading bogie of the front loco was beyond the point for the siding into AB EVVA-Schmiermittel-Fabrik), where good photos were hard to get, and we all rejoined the train for the return journey.
After this, the tour covered almost all of the curves in the Kledering area (some added to the itinerary as a result of the late cuts), as well as the Inzersdorf triangle. It then headed via the Donauuferbahn freight line and west via Tulln to Tullnerfeld (passing through only an hour or so before a heavy rain shower caused a landslide which closed the line) in order to do the freight line to Michaelhausen - the old route before the Neue Westbahn was built through here, but which involved a new connection (the bit required by me, as I'd done the old route). While there were photostops at Michaelhausen (at the end of the line, and then again at the former station), it was now extremely overcast (and about to rain). We returned to Korneuburg directly - which involved a reversal at Tullerfeld station and the Tulln and Absdorf-Hippersdorf avoiding lines (both required curves).
Visit Brian Carter's Non-Transport Pics to see my photos of landscapes, buildings, bridges, sunsets, rainbows and more.
I've been enjoying and photographing this tree for a while now, so I'm always looking for slightly different compositions. (I generally try to resist the voice in my head telling me that I've already made every photo there is to make.)
For this photo I got about as low as I could get, and even though I had taken the low approach in the past. Lying on my belly on the ground, I was struck by how heroic the tree looked from my lying-at-its-feet vantage point. Rather than the twisted Yoda figure I was used to shooting, the tree transformed into something that stood proudly in the face of incredible adversity, like a Boris Vallejo movie poster. (Think of the image of a muscle-bound Chevy Chase standing proudly over two women while clutching a tennis racket in the movie poster for "National Lampoon's Vacation.") That image is still all I see when I look at this photo.
This was a single exposure, taken about half an hour after sunset. Surprisingly, some of the low clouds still had some color in them. The pine tree itself really soaked up the sunset's diffused, reddish light during this long exposure. Also worth noting is the brightest "star," nearly straight above the whitebark pine, is the planet Saturn.
Taken at the Rollin' Jokers Friki Tiki Kustom Car Show which was held in Sycamore Park in Batavia, Ohio.
I enjoy taking pictures of men with beards I happen to see although it's been a little while since I've done so as we've been ducking crowds because of Covid. This guy and his friend both had amazing beards, but I have to admit that I was a little intimidated. Still, I had to give it a shot. Actually they turned out to be very nice friendly guys (don't judge a book by it's cover) and were willing to let me take some shots of them. Besides being a car freak, it turns out that this guy is also a pretty serious photographer. He got into photography because he was tired of paying others to take pictures for his business. After I was done taking the shots I wanted, he pulled out a serious Sony SLR camera and asked me to take some shots of the two of them. Unfortunately it was a very sunny day and I didn't see a good shady place nearby where the lighting would have been better. You just take whatever you can get and hope for the best.
_(7026x3257)_
Look at the video of the post-processing here on flickr =>
I was just chilling on a walk yesterday, i knew it will be the last adventure with my Nikon D700. So i took few shots around me - waiting for last week to get another equipment - and i have to say that this location is pretty damn gorgeous. You may recognize these 2 mountains way further, deep behind me, you've already seen them before on my photo called "Outline"
The basic photo is so simple, but i had already in mind to make this kind of post-proc to get this "curved line" so the shooting lasted not more than 15minutes, for 30 shots. I'm not used to it but when you have an accurate vision of what you wanna get and how you'll manage to do it, everything's simple.
Be around for my next shot : ) See ya
The local out of Owosso bound for the Ann Arbor begins the grueling 4 hours task of switching out over 110 car outbound. This would prove to somewhat ruin the day for getting them to come back north out of Howell. They would also sit in Bermuda Triangle at Howell and wait for CSX's local D709 to get and setout cars for the GLC. Would be way after dark before this job would see Owosso again.
By Keith Gall, this artwork in timber in Imbil, Mary Valley, Queensland is dedicated to the pioneering timber getters and cutters in this region.
And one of the very nicest things about birthday is how we celebrate with wonderful friends, great food and laughter!
As we observe your birthday today,
Your cake and gifts don't matter much.
These common things aren't really you,
Ribbons, paper hats and such.
We celebrate a person who
Brings happiness to everyone,
Someone who gives more than she gets,
And fills our lives with joy and fun.
So Happy Birthday, and many more!
We hope you make it to a hundred and two,
Because we always want to have
The special pleasure of knowing you.
Happy birthday, Virgie !!
The little burrowing owlets get down low and spread their wings to catch the falling rain. It is so cute to see how excited they get and how much they appear to love the rain. Definitely going to miss these little cuties and hope to see them again next year!!!!
Wishing you a very lovely evening and a very blessed one too !!
Something new for me to try....I dont usually shoot into the sun. These were fun to get and I liked the results.
Another sunflare photo below :)
The Luxury of being yourself
We have selected pictures on our website, but can always add more depending on the requests we do get and the current trend in the world of luxury fine art:
We do wedding photography and videography:
We do once in a while have discounted luxury fine art, please do keep checking:
Fine Art Photography Prints & Luxury Wall Art:
We do come up with merchandises over the years, but at the moment we have sold out and will bring them back depending on the demands of our past customers and those we do take on daily across the globe.
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We tend to celebrate light in our pictures. Understanding how light interacts with the camera is paramount to the work we do. The temperature, intensity and source of light can wield different photography effect on the same subject or scene; add ISO, aperture and speed, the camera, the lens type, focal length and filters…the combination is varied ad multi-layered and if you know how to use them all, you will come to appreciate that all lights are useful, even those surrounded by a lot of darkness.
We are guided by three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, our longing to capture in print, that which is beautiful, the constant search for the one picture, and constant barrage of new equipment and style of photography. These passions, like great winds, have blown us across the globe in search of the one and we do understand the one we do look for might be this picture right here for someone else out there.
“A concise poem about our work as stated elow
A place without being
a thought without thinking
creatively, two dimensions
suspended animation
possibly a perfect imitation
of what was then to see.
A frozen memory in synthetic colour
or black and white instead,
fantasy dreams in magazines
become imbedded inside my head.
Artistic views
surrealistic hues,
a photographer’s instinctive eye:
for he does as he pleases
up to that point he releases,
then develops a visual high.
- M R Abrahams
Some of the gear we use at William Stone Fine Art are listed here:
Some of our latest work & more!
Embedded galleries within a gallery on various aspects of Photography:
There are other aspects closely related to photography that we do embark on:
All prints though us is put through a rigorous set of quality control standards long before we ever ship it to your front door. We only create gallery-quality images, and you'll receive your print in perfect condition with a lifetime guarantee.
All images on Flickr have been specifically published in a lower grade quality to amber our copyright being infringed. We have 4096x pixel full sized quality on all our photos and any of them could be ordered in high grade museum quality grade and a discount applied if the voucher WS-100 is used. Please contact us:
We do plan future trips and do catalogue our past ones, if you believe there is a beautiful place we have missed, and we are sure there must be many, please do let us know and we will investigate.
In our galleries you will find some amazing fine art photography for sale as limited edition and open edition, gallery quality prints. Only the finest materials and archival methods are used to produce these stunning photographic works of art.
We want to thank you for your interest in our work and thanks for visiting our work on Flickr, we do appreciate you and the contributions you make in furthering our interest in photography and on social media in general, we are mostly out in the field or at an event making people feel luxurious about themselves.
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