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Mānoa Stream, Honolulu.

 

From a growing body of work: Pinhole Chairs.

 

Le Bambole Mk.XIV, Pinholgaroid pinhole camera. Impossible Project B&W SX-70 instant film, Prod. Date: 3/14.

 

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Batten down the hatches!

 

August 7th, 3pm: Hawai‘i is currently under a hurricane warning and flash flood watch. I'll be un-plugged for a while. Stay safe, my Hawai‘i friends!

Ka‘a‘awa, O‘ahu.

 

The Kamani haole (Terminalia catappa) is very salt-tolerant and is often found growing along the shoreline. This large tree has branches that dips down into the ocean at high-tide or large surf.

 

A stiff breeze required that I leave a chunk of coral on my chair. As I tended my camera, gentle waves lapped at my feet. I enjoyed this cool respite during Holga Week.

 

From the body of work, Pinholes makai.

 

Le Bambole Mk. VII, "The PinHolga" Pinhole Camera. Kodak Ektar 100.

 

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Update - September 2014:

Two of my PinHolga images, including this one, were recognized in the Holga Week 2014 competition. Thank you to HolgaJen, all the sponsers, and judges! Check out all the winning photos here:

 

holgaweek.com/and-the-winners-are/

Zhangjiajie World Geological Park, Hunan, China 湖南 張家界世界地質公園

CameraCanon EOS 60D

Focal Length18mm

Shutter Speed3 secs

Aperturef/22

ISO/Film100

Beartownfoto and me were out looking for some moving water to try out long exposure. Mosquitoes were everywhere and I got more bites in one day than I have ever had. But it was all good fun!

Car park building reflected in a canal (the upper half of the building exposed to the settling sun).

Found this stream alongside the hiking trails at a nearby park yesterday.

 

View Large On Black

A Stream in Darjeeling Himalaya

Redwood RP, Oakland, CA

A stream in my hometown Eskilstuna, Sweden.

The view looking downstream from Looking Glass Falls near Brevard, NC.

at The Emory Conference Center Hotel

Atlanta, GA

I discovered this spot earlier this year in spring on a not-very-popular section of Ricketts Glen State Park and got a pretty good shot.

 

500px.com/photo/73159493/

 

Since then I've been wanting to go back to the same spot during fall and wasn't disappointment when I there last weekend.

Punta del Moral, Ayamonte(Huelva). Spain.

 

Canon 5D Mark II

20''

f/8

100 ISO

 

Photographer: Pablo Ronald

www.pabloronaldphotography.com/

 

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-Ahora podéis seguirme también en mi nuevo blog, en el que subiré fotos, fotos y más fotos!!!:

 

-Now you can also follow me on my new blog, where I upload photos, photos and more photos!!!:

 

pabloronaldphotography.blogspot.com/

  

This is a photo of patterns in the sand created by flowing water at Clam Harbour Beach. The image has been mirrored and copied twice to be symmetrical.

village of brod, dragash, kosovë, 2007.

Taken near Tryfan in Snowdonia

An archive capture from 2017 when we headed over the border into Scotland .

The shot does not do the scene justice , I have cropped the top as there was some chromatic aberration due to the bright sky . This is very much steeper and higher than it appears which at the time only added to the atmosphere of being in Glencoe .

 

Glencoe or Glencoe Village (Gaelic: A’ Chàrnaich) is the main settlement in Glen Coe in the Lochaber area of the Scottish Highlands. It lies at the north-west end of the glen, on the southern bank of the River Coe where it enters Loch Leven (a salt-water loch off Loch Linnhe).

 

The village falls within the Ross, Skye and Lochaber part of the Highland council area for local government purposes. It is part of the registration county of Argyll and the lieutenancy area of Inverness for ceremonial functions.

 

The use of the term 'Glencoe Village' is a modern one, to differentiate the settlement from the glen itself.

The village is on the site of the Massacre of Glencoe in 1692, in which 38 members of the Clan MacDonald of Glencoe were killed by forces acting on behalf of the government of King William III following the Glorious Revolution. Treachery was involved, since the Clan had fed the soldiers and given them shelter for nearly two weeks before they turned on their hosts. The glen is sometimes poetically referred to as "The Weeping Glen", in reference to this incident, although the Glencoe name was already in place well before the time of the massacre, as the Gaelic Gleann Comhann, the Comhann element of which may predate the Gaelic language, its meaning being uncertain.

 

The village occupies an area of the glen known as Carnoch. Native Gaelic speakers who belong to the area always refer to the village itself as A' Chàrnaich, meaning "the place of cairns". Even today there is Upper Carnoch and Lower Carnoch. There was formerly a small hospital at the southern end of the village just over an arched stone bridge. This has since been converted into an upmarket guest house, and the nearest hospital is now the Belford in Fort William, some 26 kilometres (16 mi) away.

Within Carnoch there is a small village shop, a Scottish Episcopal Church, Glencoe Folk Museum, Post Office, Glencoe Mountain Rescue Team centre, an outdoor centre, a number of bed and breakfast establishments, and a small primary school. The small Museum was started after a resident discovered "a cache of 200-year-old swords and pistols hidden there from the British Redcoats after the disastrous battle of Culloden".

 

Several eating establishments are around including the Glencoe Hotel, Glencoe Cafe and The Clachaig Inn. Glencoe is also a popular location for self-catering holidays; with many chalets, cottages and lodges available for weekly and short break rental. Also located in the village, but along the A82, is the Glencoe Visitor Centre, run by the National Trust for Scotland. This modern (constructed in 2002) visitor centre houses a coffee shop, store, and information centre. Nearby memorials sites are the Celtic cross at the Massacre of Glencoe Memorial, and plaque at Henderson Stone (Clach Eanruig).

 

The village is surrounded by spectacular mountain scenery and is popular with serious hill-walkers, rock and ice climbers. Travel writer Rick Steves describes the area as exhibiting "the wild, powerful and stark beauty of the Highlands ... dramatic valley, where the cliffsides seem to weep with running streams when it rains". The area has been seen in numerous films, including Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban as the home of Hagrid, and the 2012 James Bond film Skyfall.

 

In Ian Fleming's original novel On Her Majesty's Secret Service James Bond tells Sir Hilary Bray, a genealogist with the Royal College of Arms, his father was from the Highlands, near Glencoe and in Fleming's other novel You Only Live Twice M's obituary for Bond also mentions his father, Andrew Bond, was from Glencoe.

 

Well known residents include Hamish MacInnes, mountaineer and inventor of the MacInnes Stretcher.

Flat Lick Creek

Gray Hawk, KY

 

This was shot about 75-100 feet upsteam from Flat Lick Falls, one of my favorite Kentucky waterfalls. I could spend hours here. I think it's time I go back for another visit!

I've been out having another go at stitching images from my 35mm PC lens. I chose another familiar location, sorry about the repetition as I've done all these views on my small camera on workshops lately - I wanted to establish the compositions before the final photos today.

This was me just trying out some ideas. I quite like the fantastic nature of this shot. It's definitely a technique I will build on. It is worth seeing 'LARGE' to see the icicles & ice formations at the side of the stream. Not the easiest of places to go dashing about in the dark with the camera on timer!

My first attempt at using an ND filter

Candigliano river - Marche (Italy)

A small stream that flows into lake Elliðavatn, SW Iceland. I thought this looked better in b&w, the light was pretty grayish anyway :)

This stream wanders through a forest area behind the dunes at Weko Beach in Bridgman Michigan. This was a rainy day, which really saturated the colors of the leaves.

The most challenging part of the image was getting it without any other people in the frame, it was a popular weekend and parking was impossible. This is an HDR just because of the deep shadows.

"Dreamy Forest Stream" I shot this on the Roaring Fork Motor Nature Trail right outside Gatlinburg, TN

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