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Winter Icing
There is something about trees that as a photographer attracts me more than any other subject. It is hard to explain what it is, or why certain ones appeal more than others, but they do:) especially when they are dressed in their winter clothing.
The shapes of this one really drew my attention and made me turn around and come back to get a photograph, hoping you can see why;)
Greenhillstairs, Moffat
Sony A7RII
Sony FE24-70mm f2.8 GM
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© Brian Kerr Photography 2017
winter 2007 Kwintelooyen nearby Veenendaal At the end of december 2007 we had one Saterday morning like this. At the end of the day most was gone. But I could shoot some beautiful pictures. They are for the Christmas greeting cards 2008 I think.
There has been an especially cold spell over Britain in the last few days. When the air is bright and clear it has its own particular beauty.
The winter aconite are always the first out here in Vienna. They are about a week earlier than last year. Somehow I prefer them in black and white.
Die Winterlinge sind die ersten Blumen hier in Wien. Dieses Jahr sind sie ein Woche früher dran als letztes. Mir gefallen sie in Schwarz-Weiß besser als in Farbe.
shot in port de pollenca in winter whilst trying the voigtländer nokton 75mm f/1.5 glass on the leica sl2-s. as there is no 6bit communication the value for aperture should be wrong. the image is nearly not edited and shows the fascinating look of this amazing glass!
Winter - beautiful, stark, stoic winter - is the season of "revealment," of graphic exposure, and nowhere is the phenomena more grand than above, in the sky, in skeins of trunk and branch!
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Eibsee / Grainau
Drüben sieht man schon die kleine Sasseninsel
I find winter magical. In other seasons wildlife can be difficult to find one can think to themselves "there isn't any wildlife around here". However, in the winter you see all the tracks in the snow and realize just how much there is around you. When one sees all the activity and how many different species might be in an area you begin to realize just how important that environment is to the survival of those species.
Thanks to a flicker friend I now know they are on the threatened list. Feel lucky to have seen so many at once.
I had a stroll over Mam Tor and onto the Great Ridge for a nice winter walk. It was full on winter conditions and not much visibility to be fair. I wasn’t expecting much in respect of nice light or great photography opportunities.
But as I always carry my camera I took a few shots anyway.
This is a photo of the view out my window, taken with a one second exposure while intentionally moving the camera vertically, which conveys the essence of the winter landscape. Plato had the thought that the material world of observable phenomena is a manifestation of a more fundamental level of essence forms. In Hindu cosmology, the material world sits on the back of a turtle. What's below the turtle? It's turtles all the way down.
The way this image is displayed on my computer monitor, when I stand up and look at it from above, a neat optical illusion occurs. The light and dark areas in the image become reversed.
The River Tamar forms the boundary between Cornwall and Devon. Rising only 4 miles from Bude and the Atlantic Ocean, the it flows south, slowly at first, for nearly 50 miles to the English Channel. In its middle reaches, the River Tamar winds its way through steep wooded country.
This is also an area strewn with the relics of two centuries of mining and is part of Cornwall's and West Devon's World Heritage Site. On the Cornish side is Cotehele Quay, once a busy port on which the local community depended.
Feels like winter, a group of ponies standing in a cold snowy misty field. Image taken at Bowscar near Penrith, last sunday during a spell of winter weather.
A tributary of the Chena River is frozen over and fog hangs in the air. Spruce trees and dying grasses add color to the frozen scene. The ice has vent holes from the still unfrozen water below.
Winter in Alaska is a beautiful time of year. Most of the visitors have left and the locals remain. It is a time of quiet, a time of being alone. Rarely does anyone wander off the roads during winter, so when you get off the road, it is just you and the animals and the scenery.
As I have gotten older, the winter treks have become fewer. My wife and I do get out when we can but I have to be honest, it is not as much as before in our younger years. Old age isn't for the weak for sure. We both hope to be able to get out and enjoy both winter and the warmer months for years to come, just won't be as long and as often as when we were younger.
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This is a sunset view on the Lake Arni, a small lake from the Uri district in swizterland.
Last summer, I already visited this place, but I wasn't really inspired.
But in winter the landscape is totally different and much more interesting with a lot more of cool foregrounds to ehance the compositions.
As I type this, it is chucking it down with rain and blowing a gale, in complete contrast to 7:21 this morning when a frost had settled across the land and not a cloud hardly to be seen. Being a photographer, you tend to tut when there are no clouds as the sun is usually just a glaring ball, but this morning there was a little bit of haze, enough to soften the light and cause a wonderful orange hue to colour the sky and give a warmth to the landscape.
Taken at Wittenham Clumps, South Oxfordshire.
Robins in Winter. “Robins can withstand very cold temperatures,” Howard explains. “In most places you can see robins in the wintertime. You'll see them wandering around and yet it's not considered migration because basically they're moving in a nomadic way, following the food.”