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One of the entry points to Cockle Bay.
On the western, Novotel Hotel, side of Darling Harbour.
This image was taken from beneath the Pyrmont Bridge, a heritage swing bridge, first opened in 1857.
This walkway is located right near the Sydney Maritime Museum, and the HMAS Vampire II Destroyer. See
www.sea.museum/en/whats-on/our-fleet/hmas-vampire
Straight ahead and across the water is the ubiquitous W Hotel. See
www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/sydwh-w-sydney/overview/
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f4L IS USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom.
Over the last couple of years, this is a structure that I have visited on a few occasions. If I am in the area and I have my rig, I run into the alleyway for a few frames, regardless of the time of day.
The structure really presents some nice opportunities; the shadows in the alleyway coupled with the fact that there is no glass in the lower panes, taken in conjunction with where the sun just happens to be in the sky...
I still lean towards the contrast provided by the hard, mid - day lighting, and the 1:1 ratio is becoming more of an interest to me.
Isn't this a peaceful and lovely hobby?
Completed in 1958, this former building now houses the Yerevan Marriott. It is located on the main square of Armenia's capital, Republic Square.
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Light reflections on the front of the Marriott Hotel at Seaburn, Tyne & Wear, England.
Sundown in Yaletown. BC Place peeks out from behind JW Marriott Parq Vancouver. Up on the Cambie Street Bridge, a sign directs traffic onto Pacific Boulevard. Below, people sitting on the grass in Cooper's Park along the False Creek Seawall. Bottom left, Quayside Marina. Bottom right, a cool art installation called "Time Top" that looks like a 1940's style space ship. A clouded Mt. Seymour far in the distance. Captured from Charleson Park in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada ~ May 22, 2020 🏦🏢🏪
I only spent one night in Montréal, and wished I had a few more. It's a great city to visit- complete with a medieval-looking area that is one of the oldest and most European-like cities in North America. I stayed in the Marriott downtown, and this was the view from my room.
This is from my 1998 Maritimes provinces vacation, where I visited all the Maritimes in Canada. This was taken on film and scanned in, with scanning edges left in here for effect, giving it a bit of an "old feel".
The pathetic dribble is Marriott Falls (the north side).
In the middle of summer, these falls are nowhere near the majesty of some Icelandic ones but the walk along the Tyenna River is very, very peaceful and on a nice summer day it doesn't really matter :-) The falls are right on the southern boundary of the Mount Field National Park.
The falls themselves are in a lovely bit of nearly untouched cool temperate rain forest. The large Tree Fern on the left is one of our Ice Age survivors (Dicksonia antarctica) and the tree at right is a Sassafras (Atherosperma moschatum).
Tyenna is further west up the Gordon River Road from Maydena in the upper Derwent Valley west of Hobart, Tasmania. The local Landcare group have done quite a bit of work regenerating the landscape following successive fails with farming, forestry, railways and fires.
Large tree fern on the left is one of our Ice Age survivors: Dicksonia antarctica and the tree at right is a Sassafras (Atherosperma moschatum).
Sony A7Rii, Contax Zeiss N Series 24-85/3.5-5.6, 1.3 secs at f/11, ISO 80.