View allAll Photos Tagged markers,
Bridge over the river Olne. At the Rickmansworth Aquadrome (near London). Mitakon Speedmaster manual lens at F 0.95. Edited in macOS High Sierra.
Scenes from an tiny, community cemetery, just a couple of hundred yards from where I grew up in the village of Lower Nicola, British Columbia.
One of two lane markers at Frenchman's Bay, Pickering.
Both are still works in progress, however they should look really cool once both are completed!
5 minute Long Exposure
Canon 24mm TS-E, f16
Lee 105mm circular polarizer
Lee 0.9 ND Hard Grad Filter
Lee Big Stopper
The Day Marker looking great on the South Devon Coast
Taken using Kase Wolverine Filters. K6 kit and polarising filter, and Wolverine ND64 (6 stop filter) kasefilters.com/
At the Rickmansworth Aquadrome (near London). Mitakon Speedmaster manual lens at F 0.95. Edited in Luminar and macOS High Sierra.
An old broken groyne marker found at low tide at Kinnegar this morning.
Textures courtesy of SkeletalMess, Pareeerica and Texture Time. Thank you all :)
This shot was taken the night of the full moon down at Portarlington with the moon just peeping up on the horizon behind the green marker. The clouds were nothing like the night before and so I just concentrated on the markers instead.
The parades are over, the Politicians have gone back to bickering; but the tributes, memories and respect remain. Each memory a person dear to someone, forever frozen in time when they were last seen.
And sadly added to every year.
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At the Rickmansworth Aquadrome (near London). Mitakon Speedmaster manual lens at F 0.95. Edited in Luminar and macOS High Sierra.
... somehow these all got aligned there on my desk at work ... and had my camera around for a ... snap :)
The light on the desk from the computer monitor.
lol I get an idea and work it to death! Sorry. But thanks for indulging me =) I do love my colored markers! And the light was just perfect yesterday morning... I just couldn't resist one more.
Explore #350
A stake with coloured tape at the front of an empty block that is ready for construction. The stake marks the front edge of the property.
On its left and slightly behind is a bus shelter, complete with advertising. In the distance, to the right of the stake, is a traffic light showing amber, with a red do-not-walk pedestrian light. The red monolith is an Australia Post postbox.
Bay Marker. Morro Bay, San Luis Obispo County, California. Captured Nov 6, 2014. Captured with Canon EOS 5DIII, Canon EF70-200mm f2.8L IS USM +1.4x at 280mm, f 9 @ 8 minutes, 53 seconds, ISO 100. Tripod. Post Processing with CS5, NikSoftware ColorEfexPro 4.0 (Image Borders) and SilverEfexPro 2.0.
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My previous work has won a Merit Award in Black and White Magazine 2013 Portfolio Contest, Single Image Award in Black and White Magazine 2014 and Excellence Award in Black and White Magazine 2014 Portfolio Contest. I have also been honored with other local, national and international awards.
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:copyright: Copyright notice:
:copyright: James A. Crawford, All Rights Reserved
All photographs within my flickr account are protected under copyright laws. No photograph shall be copied, reproduced, republished, downloaded, displayed, modified, transmitted, licensed, transferred, sold or distributed or used in any way by any means, without prior written permission from me. This pertains to all my images.
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ABOUT THIS IMAGE
Marker 20
The bay of Morro Bay, California has many markers to show the way for sailors to avoid the shallows and direct traffic. This is one of those markers.
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This marker was dedicated in 1960 to commemorate the arrival of the first Japanese naval ship Kanrin Maru in the San Francisco Bay back in 1860. The monument, appropriately situated overlooking the beautiful San Francisco Bay, reads: ""Kanrin Maru Centennial Memorial, [from the] Osaka City Mayor".
Yellow cat's eyes, road studs or retroreflective raised pavement markers (RRPMs) are used to visually reinforce a yellow no-passing line. The painted passing line can be less visible when the road is wet.
Usually a white cat's eye is used in the centre of the road if overtaking is permitted. If yellow cat's eyes are present they are bi-directional if the line is applicable in both directions, or mono-directional if it's only applicable in one direction and spaced every 10m.
On unlit rural roads the markers are in groups of four, one metre apart, with 10m between each group. Only one of the group of four road studs is required to be reflective.
On no overtaking advance warning lines they are spaced 20m apart.
The yellow cats eyes are the same kind as used in the UK or Australia and they are used in the same manner.
The marker buoy off Derby Pool left high and dry by the retreating tide. This is using the NEX and one of my Pentax prime lenses via an adapter. These are perfect,for it as you can manually set aperture and focus easily using the rings on the lens This 50mm is arguably much better than the Sony kit. The Sony pancake is very nice though and I love the fisheye too. Lovely to have opportunity to use these old Pentax lenses more.
A 6 min long exposure of the first Marker on the Causeway to Coney Island off the coast of Sligo.
Its been over 2 years since I first tried to take this photo. Its taken a lot of visits since, to get an image close to what I imagined, some visits where I didn't even get out of the car and plenty where I got my feet wet! I needed a few elements to come together each time, the right clouds, moving at a quick enough speed, the right direction and intensity of light on the Marker, a high enough tide (but not too high).
This image from July is probably the closest to what I was after. I'm sure I'll revisit it again and end up with different versions!
The photo is part of a collection of black & white, long exposure photos of Sligo. See 'Sligo Exposed' album on the right hand side.