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The Grevelingen (now the Grevelingenmeer) is a former sea arm of the North Sea and is located between the islands Goeree-Overflakkee and Schouwen-Duiveland on the border of the provinces of South Holland and Zeeland.
As part of the Delta Works, the Grevelingen was closed off by the Grevelingendam (1965) and the Brouwersdam (1971) from the sea.
The Grevelingenmeer is the largest saltwater lake in Western Europe, and is especially important for water sports and recreation.
Made with Sony A99m2, Sigma 12-24mm f/4.5-5.6 DG II HSM, LEE SW150 medium grad 0.6 and LEE SW150 Superstopper.
Exposure: 181 seconds f/4.5 ISO 50 by Triggertrap app for IOS
Is there such a word?, if not, then there should be.... This place was built for the Crossrail project and resembling a scene from Star Wars or some Sci-Fi movie this new addition to Canary Wharf makes quite a striking feature and seemingly made for black and white photography.
You can view my most interesting shots on Flickriver here: www.flickriver.com/photos/pete37038/popular-interesting/
Explore :-) Thank you all!!
Last Thursday I went with Eddy www.flickr.com/photos/eddyblokhuis/ and Elvin www.flickr.com/photos/25228175@N08/ to Scheveningen, we had a lot of fun, made a lot of LE's.
Walked for hours with our camera and tripod.......
Thanks guys for a fantastic day!
This HDR is made out of 5 images.
Symmetric, thanks Eddy ;-)
Northern Shovelers
Kallar Kahar Lake, Salt Range, Punjab, Pakistan
Canon EOS 50D
Canon EF 400mm f/5.6 L USM
@ f/5.6 1/1000 ISO 100
Here’s that old cement mine again, this time with a nicely symmetrical reflection on the water that fills the place. And with Canon’s newest, least-expensive prime lens.
A symmetrical wildflower, made even more symmetrical with some post-processing. A submission to Sliders Sunday, where too much processing is encouraged!
www.erikschepers.com/architecture/impossible-symmetric-ar...
Images of impossible symmetric architecture. Inspired by modern cities, I’ve created these impossible symmetric images of buildings hanging in the sky. Soporific & exciting architecture alike, become intricate structures of concrete and glass. Sometimes they turn out looking like a spaceship, sometimes the image is completely abstract. I leave it too your own imagination to find the spaceship amongst them.
A bright mult-coloured apartment complex in Split, Croatia, close to where we stayed whilst on holiday. The composition of this is SOOC, no adjustments or crops made. We walked past it daily, so it was a case of waiting for the right light to show off the colours.
I don't know why I like this photo...But I do.
Edit: wow! Explored! I still don't know why I like this photo, but I'm glad that apparently a lot of other folks like it as well. If you feel inspired to share your thoughts, I would love your feedback.
Note: it has been pointed out that this image bears more than a slight resemblance to Henri Cartier-Bresson's "Derriere la Gare Saint-Lazare" and I agree that it does. While I am familiar with his work, and of course know this photo, it never actively made its way into my consciousness when I was shooting or processing this image. I was mostly shooting the shorebirds and waiting for them to do something when the runner came by, and as she did a huge wave came in, she jumped, I clicked, and then I more or less forgot about the photo until a couple days ago. Oddly, this is my third black and white image in a row. And I keep thinking about medium format cameras, and even shooting film.