View allAll Photos Tagged tree_captures
Even the golden leaves of this lovely tree captured at Lanercost Priory in Northumberland, UK several years ago cannot lighten the sadness that I feel today at the news that my favorite nephew has cancer.
"Autumn embraces change, even as she is falling to pieces."
~ Angie Weiland-Crosby
EXPLORE Worthy, Challenge 102 - Shades of Autumn (2018 Art)
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October Contest: "When Autumn Falls"
www.flickr.com/groups/handheldart/discuss/72157701615307995/
From a pano- style tree capture of mine, done on my tablet in Artista Oil by Jixi,and Pixlr.
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I end my safari experience in Madikwe, South Africa with this unusual tree captured at sunset. Marie, my guide, just knew I would be thrilled when i saw this unusual wild creation of nature. i am sorry to say that she didn't tell me the story behind how it was created. Maybe having it be a mystery is more appropriate for such a wild thing.
in future days, I'll start adding pictures of Mozambique and when they are completed we will return to South Africa with more safari scenes.
"Clash of the Seasons"
In my search for the ultimate Aspen tree capture, I headed towards Southern Colorado in the San Juan Mountains for these images. The colors started to pop towards the end of the trip and the only thing we didn't get was snowfall in the upper elevations. The first one is a wide pano of a grove of Aspen trees with some great colors in the foliage. We took Laci's Rav 4 on a few mountain passes and for the first time put the car in "trail mode" which was a lot of fun. Who else is a fan of these trees?
Here is another interesting tree capture from that same winter walk as my previous picture. It was a great atmospheric morning, just me and the freshly snow covered countryside.
Small stand of trees captured with the rising sun near the village of Kettleshulme. It's clear how the wind has shaped the trees.
An almost ghostly image of some trees captured after a fresh snow at Maffitt Lake in Polk County, Iowa.
Developed with Darktable 3.6.0. Two photos combined with the Hugin Panorama editor (free, open source).
I watched as this Red-Tailed Hawk grabbed a junco from under our birdfeeders. I went to get the camera and she was still up in a tree with her capture. She swiveled her head around to make sure I was not going to interfere with her lunch.
Nikon N80 with 28-80 lens and Kodak 400 color negative film. Scanned with Nikon Z6 and converted with Negative Lab Pro. Processed with Photoshop and DXO Photolab.
Image MKZ_1453_dxo
The orange color on this tree captured my attention while driving home. (Best in large)
Thanks for your visit and taking the time to comment so I can visit your photos, too... very much appreciated! Have a great day!🙋♀️
A variety of birds, including this Golden-Cheeked Woodpecker feed on the African Tulip tree. Captured while on vacation in Mexico.
An adjusted image, the original had a blue graduated filter which has then had the effect exaggerated in Lightroom
This pair of trees captures my attention each time I pass. Their trunks have split and opened, and their growth is strange and twisted, yet they bud and leaf come the spring. Captured here framing another tree behind.
Blenheim Park, Oxon. Pentax Spotmatic SPII, 35mm lens, Bergger Pancro 400 @400 in ID-11.
If you like my photographs, why not consider buying a print of one of my images at captures.life? Please note that I haven't yet finished building the site and putting in all of the terms and conditions and policies, but the bits that involve buying a print, having it delivered, and contacting me if anything goes wrong are working just fine...
During a wander around a local wood, on a misty moody morning, I came across this facade of a small house nestled into the root of this tree. It raises the question “who lives in a place like this?” Well, obviously from the sign on the door, Penny.
Colors in the clouds over the peaks, with some low light on the lone pine tree. Captured in Banff National Park.
Tree captured at Nature Conservancy Prairie Preserve on Nikon Z6 mirrorless. Processed with an airy high key image to accentuate the hazy conditions. Second image taken of same tree, taken with film camera to post tomorrow.
Image MKZ_5737.1
This is the drooping cherry tree captured in my back garden this morning.
Can I ask regular contacts not to fave old photos of mine please? Over a week ago I posted this ( in comments) in the Help Forum but still it hasn't been resolved so I'm having to make 3 whole 365 sets visible manually .😏 Many thanks.
☼My works are often BEST VIEWED LARGE☼
Created for a collaboration challenge with www.flickr.com/photos/cootiepie11/ (Denice)
Background blend using app.wombo.art/ with a grass and trees capture of mine.
More wombo for the castle
Knight=PNGWING
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I live near Portland, OR, and have been eagerly watching the Japanese Garden, waiting for the perfect moment when the fall colors hit their peak. Today, they may have not been at their peak, but I loved the variation in color! Despite the relentless rain, which soaked everything in sight, the weather turned out to be a blessing in disguise—it kept the crowds away, leaving me to enjoy the peaceful beauty almost entirely on my own. Here’s my interpretation of the iconic tree, captured in all its vibrant glory amidst the rain-soaked tranquility.
An old tree and Utah red rock and sand. I am attracted to old dead trees. Captured in September 2020, with a film era Pentax-F 50mm/F1.4. (K1AC8409)
I reflection of my favourite tree captured in the sunglasses of my wife. Taken in Norfolk, England between the villages of Barney and Fulmodeston.
Another large Oak tree captured in the early morning quiet.
This image was taken in the chill of February, many months ago; back when the earth was spinning on it's axis a little further away from the sun than it is right now, and temperatures were much cooler than they are today,
I love capturing a good 'lone tree' when I find one. Typically, they are very photogenic, and they don't move around a lot, or dart about annoyingly while I'm framing up a shot, which is always nice.
I have however found over the years that these lone trees can be quite cunning. They seem to slip into hiding when I'm out and about with my camera looking for pictures, only to reappear when I don't have any gear with me at all. It's quite frustrating,
But now I have a system I've developed to resolve this problem, and I use modern technology to combat these issues.
Now, if I spot a nice tree while out with no camera, I just use my smart phone's maps app to help me out. I'll drop a pin to mark the tree's location. That way I know I can always come back for pictures when I have my camera with me.
Then, as I've developed this system, I'll completely forget to put a name for the location I've just marked, or give it a description. That's because I'm always in too big of a hurry. Plus, I really don't know how to use my phone very well. So now, I have dozens of pins dropped in the app with just vague addresses and random GPS coordinates for a description, and not a clue what I was marking the locations for in the first place. Each pin could be a tree... or it could be that abandoned road grader I found and marked six months ago.
It's a great system, and it works well if you enjoy driving about on a mysterious scavenger hunt trying to find what you've really already found.
It's an adventure.
Olympus E-M5 MarkII
Olympus M.14-150mm f/4.0-5.6
Camera converted to 580nm
From this morning's drive: I spotted the Songdal River fog and darted down into this field where I walked a 90 degree arc around this tree capturing multiple exposures. These are then treated using my secret blend of herbs and spices and overlaid to produce the final image in Pep Ventosa style!
Our plans to visit the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge were thwarted by road work, so we pivoted to the Llano Seco Unit. On our way, something incredible caught our eye: a huge, empty nest perched by the Sacramento River. Right across from it, a magnificent Osprey sat atop a tree.
Capturing this moment was a challenge, as we were on a narrow bridge on a very busy road. We had to carefully time our stop, waiting for a lull in traffic to quickly pull over and snap a picture of this awesome find.
Eagle heads up into the branches with its fish in tow. The soft morning lighting and tracking by the camera made this pretty capture possible. Liked how the dead leaves and branches here combined to make a painted looking bokeh too as the eagle makes it way into the trees.
Captured at ISO 6400
The North Island's not so famous tree captured on the Minolta Alpha 9. Having photographed this 2 or 3 times previously on digital, I decided to try analogue!
Minolta Dynax / Maxxum / Alpha 9
Minolta AF 24-105 / f3.5-4.5D
Kodak TRI-X 400
Sony A7M3 / SEL90M28G Scan
Kaiser Copy Stand
Converted in Negative Lab Pro / LR Classic
Shot for Smile on Saturday, theme "capture the time"
As time passes, trees grow and build circles around the center every year. Based on these circles, the exact age of the tree can be determined. So, in a way, trees capture time in their inner system.
I have returned to my favourite, magical location, the secret little world enclosed by the lazy meanders of the river Adda just downstream the eastern arm of the lake Como (its real name being Lario), just before it begins to flow into the Padan Plain. It is a hidden gem under everyone's eyes - surrounded as it is by busy roads, towns, and productive sites, as soon as you get on the river's banks you feel like you have entered an entirely different world. I think that the wetlands nestled between the meanders have preserved the place, making it less than amenable to settlements (but very amenable to a sheer variety of birds).
At 5° C and a substantially clean sky, I would have bet on the place being very misty, as it almost always is at early morning. Luckily I didn't, since I would have lost. The air was crystal clear, the place devoid of its usual mysterious ambiance (visit my album Silent banks to get an idea). I was lucky enough that Autumn was extremely generous with its treasures, and my sunrise session was not to go wasted, after all.
I was walking downstream, almost convinced that it was time to go back home, when a couple of twin old, large plane trees captured my attention. While framing, in the most serendipitous way, I was abruptly aware of the interplay of lights and shadows that was quietly unfolding behind my back while I was walking, a perfect yin and yang of day and night at the boundary between the two opposite poles - and that golden, fiery speck of a young plane tree right at the center of the dance, set against the dark hillside. Since such light conditions can last mere minutes, I hurriedly set up my tripod to capture the drama, not caring about the grass in the foreground being decently sharp or not.
I hope that you enjoy this new post of mine and wish you a nice Sunday.
I have processed this picture by blending an exposure bracketing [-1.3/-0.67/0/+0.67/+1.3 EV] by luminosity masks with the Gimp (EXIF data, as usual, refer to the "normal" exposure shot), then I added some final touches with Nik Color Efex Pro 4.
Along the journey I tried the inverted RGB blue channel technique described by Boris Hajdukovic, which has contributed a lot to the rendering of the trees and reflections on the right side of the framing, enhancing the light transfixing the foliage. Raw files processed with Darktable.