View allAll Photos Tagged ghosting
Website www.vulturelabs.photography
hope you all have a great week, many thanks for comments and faves, i will catch up with your streams later today.
Created for Marcus Ranum May Challenge
Model with thanks to Marcus Ranum:
mjranum-stock.deviantart.com/gallery/1854090#/d2hkvdt
Thanks to StockProject1 for this image:
StockProject1.deviantart.com/art/Inside-Monastery-7843511...
Thanks to SkeletalMess for this texture:
Built to remember a large factory on the East Side of the Hawthorne Bridge that went up in smoke many years ago, showing the importance of the East Side of Portland Oregon in the early years.
Testing out the Sony A7Riii at Rhyolite Nevada. Light painting was done using a green gel inserted into a fluorescent light bulb cover and then stuck on the end of a small LED flashlight.
This is a bike I have been seeing at the park near the beach every day for about 2 weeks. I even popped off a shot of it as I walked past it one day. I assumed it was someone who was also at the beach every day, maybe a lifeguard, surfer or fisherman. When I got my moon shots of a few nights ago I noticed the bike was also there at night. I thought this was bit strange. What kind of oddball would be out at this time of night, I mean besides me. I soon forgot about the mystery bike but a few nights later, I had that Schwinn tugging at the back of my mind. So, last night I went out after midnight with the idea to shoot this bike if it was still there and it was. Since there was not much light I did a long exposure light painting on this, hitting the bike the fence and vines from the front and then the back. As I was working around the bike I noticed that the vines were actually growing through and around the frame and spokes. The bike had not been moved in weeks. I had a chilling realization at that moment and I knew that something had happened to the owner of this bike. After I gathered my gear and started walking away I turned to take a last look at the bike. I couldn't see it very well so I turned my light on it and saw someone standing there! That startled me so that I fumbled the light almost dropping it and I may have screamed as well but just a small one I'm sure. Somehow I got control of the light and my wits and when I turned it back toward the bike, there was no one there. Just my eyes playing tricks on me maybe, but I believe it was something more.
© Image and story by Laurarama - All rights reserved. My Images and stories may not be used on websites, blogs or other media. Do not use, copy or alter in any way without my written permission.
Some quirky sculpture in the Nevada ghost town of Rhyolite, Nevada, This is is on the very edge of Death Valley, CA,
On the grid wide ghost hunt. I Always time to stop and take a pic! Ghost #65 - a place called Lazy Places. I love the rain in SL.
Outfit: Like Candy by lurveBite
Skin: JM:Mai (picked up at ghost 64!)
Hair: Irollic (also purchased whilst ghost hunting!)
A still from Glasgow's Ghost Peloton. I've written about this and shared some more photographs on my website's blog at www.tommygakenwan.com/blog
Glasgow, 2015.
A ghost spider, family Anyphaenidae, with a woodlouse snack. Cape May Bird Observatory near Lake Lily, Cape May, New Jersey. Night of September 25, 2017.
Experimenting with light painting (can be quite some fun).
Published on J-P-G Tumblr blog and reblogged by many..
Appeared in a fine collection presented by Kotyhoroshko Dec-09
Published in Seattle Events illustrating article on Jazz Legends Concert
Published in Earthpages, Aug-2010
Used in David Lanz contest video, Feb-11
Published on The Leading Tone 05-Mar-11
Published in DPS (Digital Photography School) article on 25 most spectacular light-painting images
Published on My Darkened Eyes Oct-2012
BE AFRAID BE VERY VERY AFRAID!!!!!
i know iknow your not scared but hey i could not find no real ghosts
happy halloween
Ghost sign in white glazed brick at the former premises of Godfrey William Bonson (1858-1932), cabinet maker and upholsterer, removal and storage contractor, Moss Lane, Altrincham. The business also offered mechanical carpet beating services.
The Ghost Town Trail totals 46 miles in Indiana and Cambria Counties, Pennsylvania. The trail was originally established in 1991 when the Kovalchick Salvage Company donated 16 miles of the former Ebensburg & Black Lick Railroad to Indiana County.
In 1993 the Cambria & Indiana Railroad donated an additional 4 miles from Rexis to White Mill Station known as the Rexis Branch. In 2005 an additional 20 miles were added to the trail - 12 miles in Indiana County and 8 miles in Cambria County. The trail is designated as a National Recreation Trail by the U.S. Department of the Interior.
Ghost
16.5k bricks
Don't mind the docking bay, I'm making space to properly display this. Till then it has to sit, oversized and all =p
based off icarus design
One of the ghostly figures at the Rhyolite ghost town in Beatty, NV.
Canon 5D mkIII, Samyang 14mm f2.8@14mm, f2.8@10 sec, ISO 1000
Early morning ghosts on the Grand Republic ferry from Port Jefferson, NY (Long Island) to Bridgeport, Connecticut.
For Sliders Sunday
Ghosts of yesterday
Parée Erica’s Texture Fun Challenge 39
Textures with thanks to Parée Erica
Background-staircase inside the titanic by notilus d5dn20d- deviantArt
Water- underwater partition 01 by tigers stock-deviantArt
Girls-frostblommor 5 and 9 by kechake stock- deviantArt
Rabbibrush blooms near a ghost forest of burned ponderosa pines, Mono Basin.
On a late-September morning I headed out into country near Mono Lake, eventually turning off the two-late highway to follow a random gravel track. This area is at the edge of an extraordinarily large ponderosa pine forest. This section within sight of Mono Lake was destroyed in a first fire years ago, and there are still lots of dead trees around the fringe of the forest. The stark beauty of the skeletal trees intrigues me, and I eventually found a place to stop and explore a bit.
This is an austere landscape. Even where the trees still grow there is a lot of space between them, likely due to the dry environment. In many places there is only sagebrush country, and in this spot the sandy soil supports even less vegetation. But it the middle of this — and against the backdrop of those dead trees — rabbitbrush plants were in full, colorful bloom.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.