View allAll Photos Tagged sunset
May the light of the fire keep you warm in the cold
May the love in your heart always stay a glow
May you feel the Christmas spirit and its blessings bestowed.
Merry Christmas to you and yours!!
Encore un coucher de soleil sur la lac Travis à Austin, deux bateaux semblent faire une course à travers le dernier reflet du soleil sur l'eau.
Another sunset on Lake Travis in Austin, two boats seem to make a run through the last reflection of the sun on the water.
Threave Castle Sunset, back at Threave last night, the clouds were looking good, but as quite often happens, just as the sun falls, the clouds evaporate. A warm glow in the was to be had, i had wanted to try for a long exposure, but a gentle breeze over the river meant tonight the boat was moving, so no long exposure.
Canon EOS 5D MKII, Canon 17-40mm, F11, 40mm, ISO100, Exp 1/25 Second
Hitech Reverse Grad 0.9
Raw File Processed in Lightroom, Edited in Elements.
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Sunset view from the “Kibo-no-oka” (Hill of memories, 1,935m), near Mt, Utsukushigahara in Japan
Foggy curtain made the fantastic scenery.
The sunset was so golden yellow, the camera tried to cool down and correct out the warmth with a white balance of 4100, but the result was still ultra warm.
#FlickrFriday
Happy Friday all, Have a super weekend, this is SOOC from a few years ago in Shoreham, UK.
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Yesterday afternoon I met up with the very talented local landscape photographer Lee Slabber... to shoot the sunset at Kommetjie's Slangkop lighthouse.
It had been raining for most of the day and I wasn't really expecting much. But bad weather is very often good for photography... if the sun does manage to break through the clouds for a few minutes... you're pretty much guaranteed to get some incredible light!
Although we both got completely soaked by a heavy downpour... the sun did pop out for a short while... and we did manage to get the amazing light that I was hoping for!
EDIT: My Flickr contact Mike Jones mentioned the one thing that was bothering me about this photo... namely the obvious distortion of the top of the lighthouse that was caused by the wide-angle lens. I didn't really know how to fix that yesterday... but I do now... so I've fixed the distortion and replaced the photo. Thanks Mike!
Nikon D800, Nikkor 14-24 at 14mm, ISO of 100, aperture of f/11, and a 1/30th second exposure.
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