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beautiful blue waterfall / Iceland
Nikon D810 with 14-24mm f/2.8G ED AF-S NIKKOR
Lucroit Filter System
Nikon D5000
Nikkor 18-200
HDR 3 scatti
Dati Scatto
Aperture: f 11
Speed: 5.0 s
ISO 200
Focal length: 18mm
☠ ℍⓐℂⓚ¥
This is a deceptive pond of open water...although it looks still, it really isn't, so it remains unfrozen. This just off the forestry trunk road wast of Sundre, Alberta.
I had a good day of shooting recently on the coast of Fife near Elie. Well, good up to a point.
I particularly like shooting Lady’s Tower as a subject but there is also the lighthouse and quite a lot of nice beaches and rock formations. This is obviously a photograph of some of those rocks and the wash of what was quite a strong swell.
If you follow my stream you may have read about the tsunami that soaked me and my kit that day and this shot was about half an hour after that washout. I’d rung myself out, my kit was wiped down and continued to work perfectly but I can’t say the operator was still in the best of conditions. Saying that, you can’t just give up because of a bit of water. You need to show some perseverance in this game if you going to get that winning shot.
This is one of my first photos with my new Nikon D800.
Taken in San Juan de Gaztelugatxe (Vizcaya) with the famous rock formation known as the Cathedral of the Sea in the background.
Hitech ND 3 stops + Hitech reverse GND 2 stops.
one particular evening this year, the water flowing over the rocks at Burns Beach looked like desert sand streaming down through each crack and crease...
ISO 100 | f/16 | 1.3 sec | 16mm | Reverse GND Filter
Getting down on the wet and slippery rocks of Pemaquid, Maine :))
(HTWMAMFF) Happy This Wave Made A Momentary Fence Friday ;)
The complete waterfall (called Sjávarfoss, in Hvalfjörður - Iceland) is very beautiful by itself, and it even has a U shape, which you actually realize only when you get close to it.
This stone however, kept calling my attention. It was standing there by itself in perpetual shower - so I thought of devoting a closer frame just to it. All that water around it acts as a reflector on the green moss, and the wet rock. It was shot late at dusk.
Exif: ISO 100 ; f/5.6 ; 6 sec ; @55mm
Taken at the point Mill Beck enters Crummock Water during another peacefull evening.
ISO 100; f/22; 2.5s; 17mm; Lee soft NDgrad:
Reflections of Brothers Water, Lake District....
A beautiful morning on the way to Ullswater......with mist and a bit of light.
This is a composite of two shots. I brushed through the color onto the monochrome image to get the look and feel of the sea when I was there.
Church Bay, Anglesey, North Wales, UK
I’d love it if you could check out my new photography blog, Seeing the Gorilla. Thank you!
One of my favorite songs, the seductive, soothing sound of falling water. This particular small falls was music to my ears, and eyes.
Taken near Sol Duc Falls.
The full tumbling falls below:
Hope you're enjoying a wonderful Winter weekend.
A shot from a few years ago that I just found. Maybe, I was looking for it as I can't wait for another colorful fall.
Falling Waters of the middle and lower Yosemite falls.
Thank you for all your comments and favs.
Have a wonderful day.
Coniston Water in Cumbria, England is the third largest lake in the English Lake District. It is five miles (8 km) long, half a mile (800 m) wide, has a maximum depth of 184 feet (56 m), and covers an area of 1.89 square miles (4.9 km2). The lake has an elevation of 143 feet (44 m) above sea level. It drains to the sea via the River Crake.
The lake was formerly known as "Thurston Water", a name derived from the Old Norse personal name 'Thursteinn' + Old English 'waeter'. This name was used as an alternative to Coniston Water until the late 18th century.
In the 20th century Coniston Water was the scene of many attempts to break the world water speed record. On August 19, 1939 Sir Malcolm Campbell set the record at 141.74 miles per hour (228.108 km/h) in Bluebird K4. Between 1956 and 1959 Sir Malcolm's son Donald Campbell set four successive records on the lake in Bluebird K7, a hydroplane.