View allAll Photos Tagged iPhone15ProMax
Just a simple candid street style Snap captured of a quaint little street in Kent United Kingdom called "Sun Street"
THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to put amongst their "FAVES".
"THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to leave a "Comment" I'll do my very best to reply to you individually.
Just a simple candid street style capture of a young lady giving out booklets for some religious organisation.
THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to put amongst their "FAVES".
"THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to leave a "Comment" I'll do my very best to reply to you individually.
Image composée à partir de deux photos prises le même matin sur le chemin du travail.
Image composed from two photos taken on the same morning on my way to worké
Just a simple candid street style Snap captured a young lady looking as if she is possibly sharing something funny with her dad while both of them are sitting on a public bench.
I'm Just A Guy With A Camera From London And Some Place Else.
Many thanks for any "FAVES" or "COMMENTS" they're much appreciated.
A 10-second handheld photo of the May 10 aurora with my iPhone 15 Pro Max has a painterly look -- but you can tell it's an aurora. (The white blob on the left is the waxing crescent moon.) Amazing camera. ©2024 | John M. Hudson
These tall towers are both an interesting contrast to the blue sky and the smaller buildings below.
A picture of the surroundings, taken from the rooftop of a shopping mall.
C'est ma première tentative d'ajouter de la texture à une photo. J'ai combiné ici deux de mes photos que j'ai édité dans Pixelmator Pro pour créer cette image impressionniste.
This is my first try at adding texture to a photo. Here, I combined two of my photos that I edited in Pixelmator Pro to create this impressionist image.
The tall buildings in this place make everything else feel small in comparison.
A different version of one of my new pictures, A Busy Intersection II, taken with a portrait or vertical orientation.
Just a simple candid street style Snap captured of a guy sitting on a public bench appearing to be totally "Engrossed" with his cell phone and whatever he's listening to on his headphones.
I'm Just A Guy With A Camera From London And Some Place Else.
Many thanks for any "FAVES" or "COMMENTS" they're much appreciated.
Just a simple candid street style Snap captured some ladies tucking into a "Chish And Fips Lunch" outside a London fast food joint.
I'm Just A Guy With A Camera From London And Some Place Else.
Many thanks for any "FAVES" or "COMMENTS" they're much appreciated.
Just some of Perth's war heroes...
From such a small Perth population of approximately 280,000 (466,000 in the whole of Western Australia 1940), a great sacrifice indeed. They were, of course, mostly volunteers....
Perth War Cemetery. Perth, Western Australia.
The Perth War Cemetery contains 497 war graves, including 16 from World War One and four from the Vietnam War. A Cross of Sacrifice is part of the landscaped area.
The Perth War Cemetery is adjacent to the Western Australian Garden of Remembrance. It was established by the Army in 1942 for those who died on service during World War Two of wounds in the Hollywood Military Hospital after returning from operational areas. The remains of many casualties were also brought in from civil cemeteries and temporary military cemeteries so that they might lie among their comrades.
The cemetery was taken over by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission in February 1949. The writing desk in the Records Building at the main entrance was the gift of the Government of Western Australia on behalf of the people of the State. It holds the register of those buried or commemorated in the cemetery, and the visitors' book. In this building, too, is the Western Australia Cremation Memorial commemorating seven members of the Australian Forces who were cremated at Karrakatta Crematorium
This is a still from the video clip that I posted before this. The video of this scene was shot with my iPhone in 9:16. I created this 16:9 version with the ai tools in photoshop to extend the image to the left and right!
Intersections inside busy cities tend to be similarly busy as well.
One of my new photos, a simple picture of a busy intersection filled with cars.
Dulles Series No. 6 of 6: Once you're seated at Dulles in your own little pod -- they call it a Q-Suite -- in Qatar Airways' biz class, you needn't see another soul but the flight attendant until it's time to land in Doha. ©2025 John M. Hudson | jmhudson1.com
At the start of the main drive to Cliveden House which is the Cliveden Hotel is this impressive structure with various water fountains and spouts. To try to minimise the people around this I did a long exposure which was fairly effective unless people stood still !! Looks like the stonework could do with some pressure jet cleaning.....
This was from the Windsor Photographic Society social walk held on Saturday 5th October 2024, a lovely sunny day for the most part.
So the shot was taken by an iPhone 15 Pro Max on a little tripod and used an App called ReeHeld, shutter time set to 24 seconds.
A nice sunrise looking east from Hatherley Manor Hotel & Spa. Got to say the spa was fantastic ( I did go early in the morning without the busy time there was the night before !!) The log fires around the main rooms were perfect as well.
Jour 312
Au cours d'au moins vingt ans au début du XXème siècle, cet édifice abritait la poste et les douanes. On dit même qu'il y avait un prison et des petits commerces.
For at least twenty years at the beginning of the 20th century, this building hosted Mail and Customs. As the story goes, there was possibly even a jail and small commerces.
All hands on deck doing the change around, looks like the next load of refreshments being replenished and luggage being unloaded.
Good to get a close up of the action and a glamorous job in weather like this, but when it is snowing or pouring with rain……
But without these hard working people no one could travel anywhere by air.
Taken with iPhone 15 Pro Max.
Just a simple candid street style Snap captured of a lady passing me who was "Caught In The Rain".
THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to put amongst their "FAVES".
"THANK YOU KINDLY" to anyone who finds this shot good enough to leave a "Comment" I'll do my very best to reply to you individually.
The newly built Eglinton railway station. only 1 of 3 stations opened on the same day. Perth, Western Australia.
(Wikipedia)
Eglinton railway station is a suburban rail station on the Yanchep line in Eglinton, Western Australia. The station opened on 14 July 2024 as part of the Yanchep Rail Extension.
Description
Eglinton station is in Eglinton, a suburb of Perth in Western Australia. It is located south of Pipidinny Road and east of Marmion Avenue in an area undeveloped at the time of construction. The station is 46.7 kilometres (29.0 mi) from Perth Underground station and is in fare zone five. The adjacent stations are Alkimos to the south and Yanchep to the north.
The station consists of two 150-metre (490 ft) long side platforms sunk into a cutting. On top of the platforms is a ground level concourse, connected to the platforms by a set of lifts, stairs and escalators. It was designed this way to improve the experience of pedestrians, to lower the impact of noise, and to lower the visual impact. There are entrances on the west and east sides of the station, but only the west entrance will be open initially as the land on the east side has not yet been developed as of the station's opening. West of the station is the bus interchange with eight stands, and north-west is a car park with 436 bays. Other facilities include parking for bicycles and toilets. The station is fully accessible.
Public art
On the ceiling and entry screens are paintings of Grevillea preissii plants and western xenica butterflies by artist Ian Mutch. On the platform's retaining walls is a tiled artwork by Concreto representing Eglinton's "landscape through rhythmic colour sequences expressing the area’s natural environment".
History
The original stage of the Yanchep line, formerly known as the Joondalup line, began construction in November 1989. It was opened between Perth station and Joondalup station on 20 December 1992, and extended to Currambine station on 8 August 1993. An extension to Clarkson station opened on 4 October 2004 and an extension to Butler station opened on 21 September 2014.
To cater for continuous population growth in the northern suburbs of Perth, in 2017, the government initiated the Yanchep Rail Extension, an extension of the Joondalup line 14.5 kilometres (9.0 mi) to Yanchep, with three new stations: Alkimos, Eglinton, and Yanchep. The Yanchep Rail Extension was part of the government's wider Metronet project to expand and upgrade Perth's rail network, and was delivered by the Public Transport Authority (PTA). The PTA chose to put the Yanchep Rail Extension under the same contract as the Thornlie–Cockburn Link. The contract for the Yanchep Rail Extension and the Thornlie–Cockburn Link was awarded to the NEWest Alliance, a joint venture of CPB Contractors and Downer.
Earthworks for the Yanchep Rail Extension began in mid-2020. The design of Eglinton station was revealed in August 2020. From August 2021 to April 2023, Pipidinny Road was closed to construct a bridge across the railway line and for the construction of Eglinton station. The closure was originally meant to take nine months, but it was extended due to "additional works to accommodate utility services, the widening of Pipidinny Road, and challenging ground conditions impeding bridge works". Foundation works for Eglinton station had begun by the end of 2021. By March 2024, the building's structure was complete, with work focussing on tiling and internal fit-out. Landscaping and the installation of public art was also underway.
Opening
The Yanchep Rail Extension was originally meant to open in late 2021. This was first delayed to 2022. After the September 2021 state budget, the extension was delayed to late 2023. After the May 2023 state budget, the government said that the Yanchep extension "is due for completion at the end of 2023, with services commencing in the new year". At the end of 2023, the Yanchep extension was still under construction and services were planned to commence in the first half of 2024. The actual opening date was revealed in April 2024. The station officially opened on 14 July 2024 with an opening ceremony and celebrations. Upon opening, the Joondalup line was renamed the Yanchep line. Regular train and bus services commenced the following day.
Services
Eglinton station is served by the Yanchep line on the Transperth network. Services are operated by the PTA. The line goes between Yanchep and Elizabeth Quay station in the Perth central business district, continuing south from there as the Mandurah line. Peak headways are five to ten minutes, dropping to fifteen minutes outside of peak and on weekends and public holidays. A train journey from Eglinton to Perth takes 46 minutes. It is projected that Eglinton station will have 4,792 boardings per day by 2031.
The bus network has five bus routes serving Eglinton station. Routes 491 and 492 run south to Alkimos station. These routes have peak headways of 10 minutes, lowering to 60 minute headways on weekends. Routes 494, 495 and 496 run north to Yanchep station. These routes have peak headways of 20 minutes, lowering to 60 minute headways on weekends.
The trunks of a pair of giant old growth Coastal Douglas-fir trees (Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii) stand side by side dominating the landscape in Helliwell Provincial park, Hornby Island, British Columbia. They can grow up to 130 M tall and be over 1000 years old. Note the two little patches of snow on the ground.
19/03/2024 www.allenfotowild.com