View allAll Photos Tagged oldtree

This old tree might appear to be just another hollowed out tree, but that opening is suspiciously large and can accommodate a human body. Only the most daring adventurers will climb into that opening.

karl chilcott gold(s)worthy. a reflecting reminiscence

 

palmer sculpture biennial 2018, eastern scarp of the mount lofty ranges, south australia

Looking towards Beddgelert in the Snowdonia National Park with Birch trees on the lake shore. A brief spot of sunlight did eventually come through the clouds that day. It was a shame that the mountain tops were lurking in clouds throughout my visit but its definitely an area I will enjoy returning to.

I took four shots, focusing on the tree gradually extending the depth of field and then, I focus stacked them. Now the image is sharp front to back. The camera settings were pretty much the same as on the earlier shots.

Weird Bougainvillea Stem - Close-up

Film: Polaroid Originals 600 w/ND Filter

Batch: 10/18 Bad Pods

Camera: SX-70 Land Camera Alpha 1 Model 2 (Black)

 

Old gnarly tree near Steptoe Bute State Park in Eastern Washington

 

Eastern Washington road trip; September 2019

 

Day 2

Image 2

 

#roidweek

#polaroidweek

#polaroidweek2020

HDR panoramic image worked in Photoshop for hours

A photogenic tree in the ever misty area of Fanal on the Paul da Serra heights via 500px ift.tt/2oN8ptA

In the hills not far from Jerusalem, this quiet natural spring hides beneath the twisted limbs of a century-old mulberry tree.

Its cool, clear water flows gently, untouched by time or noise.

The only sound here is the rustle of leaves and the faint trickle from the spring — a hidden corner of peace that feels like it’s always been there.

Star trails behind a gnarled tree and rock formation at Arches National Park, in moonlight with illumination from a waning gibbous Moon.

 

This is a stack of 4 x 40-second exposures for short circumpolar star trails around Polaris at left, all with the 24mm lens at f/4 and Canon 6D at ISO 1600.

A late season now blankets a forest area in Bandelier National Monument, New Mexico.

Yorkshire Dales National Park, England.

Bronica ETRS with 40mm lens. Ilford Pan F film processed using Paterson Aculux developer. Originally printed onto Agfa Record Rapid chlorobromide paper.

Top of Plateau Mountain, Catskills, NY, USA, August 2014

© Iztok Alf Kurnik,

All Rights Reserved

www.showinmyeyes.com

 

Please fav this photo if you like my work.

 

Check out my other photos on my Photostream or start following me not to miss any of my work.

Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)

Lens: Carl Zeiss Tessar f/3.5 75 mm

Film: Ilford HP5 Plus 400

Exposure: 1/100 sec and f/11, hand-held

Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab

Edited under Adobe Lightroom

This aged fallen willow must once have been a huge, majestic tree, but now lies in ruins, trailing its limbs for many metres across the ground. This odd bit of branch looks like a reptile crawling on top of the lower part.

First Snow in Pointe Claire Village, Montreal, QC, Canada

Just something different.

Perhaps a fire weakened cottonwood that eventually snapped off in the wind. Steamboat Ditch, Reno area, Nevada.

An old tree alongside a 4 wheel drive road, Capitol Reef National Park, Utah

several neightbours living in harmory in a very old stump

Old cemetery located on Route 95/Mt. Gilead Road near Chesterville, Ohio in rural Central Ohio. The gnarly weathered trees in this cemetery captured my attention. This is farm country. It is amazingly beautiful in the springtime. Watch for some old barn pictures in the near future.

 

I have always liked this:

 

"Spring passes, and one remembers one's innocence,

Summer passes, and one remembers one's exuberance,

Autumn passes, and one remembers one's reverence,

Winter passes, and one remembers one's perseverance"

 

--Yoko Ono

 

Please view in large size.

The olive trees that captivated the famous Spanish poet Antonio Machado come from a variety that was cultivated in Palestine 6,000 years ago. This species spread West throughout the Mediterranean thanks to the Phoenicians, the Etruscans, the Greeks and the Romans. It is believed that they started to be cultivated in the Iberian Peninsula some 4,000 years ago.

The region of Maestrat. La Salzadella (Castellón/Spain).

Romantica visione di una via tra le più suggestive e panoramiche dei Colli Euganei

 

Romantic view of a street among the most evocative and panoramic Euganeanhills

Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta I B (532/16)

Lens: Zeiss-Opton Tessar f/2.8 80 mm

Film: Ilford HP5 Plus 400

Exposure: 1/100 sec and f/16, hand-held

Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab

Edited under Adobe Lightroom

 

Meanwhile, this camera has been repaired and CLAd by the well-known folder expert Jurgen Kreckel (certo6.com/). Jurgen did a great job: the camera is working like new. The contact with him is always very pleasing. He did the job rapidly and for a very fair price. The photographers using vintage folders (rather than collecting them) can be thankful for his excellent service!

 

This is my drawing for week 3 of Inktober. I used the ink pens in Autodesk Sketchbook for Android. She looks fairly harmless sitting (or is she floating) in that tree. But wait, is that red tree sap or something else?!?!

 

UNESCO World Heritage Site

----

Nikon Nikkor 18-200mm 1:3.5-5.6 G ED-IF AF-S VR DX

 

_DSC1478 Anx2 1600h Q90

~ Spanish Moss ~ Famous in Florida......

 

This set of images were taken in a remote park in Osceola County and is not widely known. I only saw about one third of it but you can bet I'll go back again.

Did I scare you, an old olive tree? Taken in Central Cyprus a while ago.

 

Dear friends, big thanks for your faves.

PS1R9786-L

LUMIX S1R

LUMIX S Pro 70-200mm F4 O.I.S

*

Old Tree by Pamela Rosenktranz on the High Line.

Old tree, Burke Lake Park, Burke, VA.

Longnan, Jiangxi, China 江西 龍南

All those things hanging from the tree are cloth cradles wishing for a child and the stones below are wishes for homes.

 

I scrambled up the steep rock slope to get behind this old, dead tree to use it as a foreground for the massive rock landscape leading up to the distant window in that massive white rock outcrop. It was not an easy climb for me, but I think it was worth the effort.

 

I considered calling this image "Red, White and Blue" in honor of the U.S. Independence Day, but decided the old dead tree represents a life's end and maybe the high window represents a hight point in life with the downslope followed by the upslope representing life's undulations.

1 2 ••• 28 29 31 33 34 ••• 79 80