Passionate about photography... A daily photo blog to showcase some of my favourite pictures from my growing portfolio. Landscape, Macro, Black and White, Travel and Street photography.
Showing posts with label Shoreline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shoreline. Show all posts
Thursday, 25 October 2018
Viewed from all sides
After visiting the park in Duluth I headed down to the lake shore to get a view of the lifting bridge which is really cool and I hoped to see it in action. Yes I know that's pretty geeky but then I'm a geek so what would you expect.
Anyway it was a rocky beach so I built a few pebble stacks and for today I am sharing four different views of the same stack partly to show how carefully it is balanced and partly to show how it looked against different backgrounds. One obviously has the green of the wooded shoreline and the last two have a mixed background. The first one has a view of the bridge which I think frames the stack nicely.
Labels:
Balanced,
Duluth,
On The Beach,
On The Rocks,
Pebbles,
Shoreline,
Stacked Up
Location:
Duluth, MN, USA
Monday, 8 October 2018
At Silver Islet
I may have said this before but Silver Islet is one of my favourite places. It is hard to say why exactly but there is something really special about this place, steeped in history and set on the shore of Lake Superior I felt a connection the first time I visited and each time I have been back. I cycled here early one morning a couple of years ago and in the calm of the morning I had seen deer and a fox along the road and a flock of waxwings chattering in the trees.
Years ago it was the site of the richest silver mine in the world, the mine itself being located on a tiny island out in the lake. Here on the mainland a small community of migrant workers, miners from places as far away as Cornwall grew up on the edge of the lake. Many of their cabins are here still used as summer homes and others are lived in year round even though in the winter conditions are harsh as the lake freezes.
On a warm and still day like this at the end of summer it looks idyllic and when I look at these images I just want to be there.
I love the old store and harbour (see my post from Sept 2016 here) which stands behind where these pictures were taken but I also love the cabin on the shoreline. It is a bit of a tumbledown place to be honest but with a little bit of attention it would be the perfect place to live. Just imagine the wonderful views through every season of the year and when it is too cold to go outdoors imagine how cosy it would be snug inside with logs burning on the hearth while looking out at the frozen lake.
In the first image I started to build a stone stack but it evolved into more of an Inukshuk (a traditional stone marker used by Inuit people for various reasons and often seen in Canada and all points North) I think this is a really nice image and I have deliberately used a wide aperture to blur the background and balance the overall image.
The second and third image are the same shot but with different treatment. I really like the split toning in the second image but I know that some people prefer a colour image so the third one is for you. Of course in the colour images you can also see how the leaves are beginning to change.
Can you see why this is one of my favourite spots?
Labels:
Beautiful,
Canada,
Dreaming,
Favourite Things,
Inukshuk,
Lake Superior,
Making Memories,
Miners Cabin,
Shoreline,
Silver Islet,
Stone Balance
Location:
Silver Islet, ON P0T, Canada
Tuesday, 13 September 2016
Superior Stack
On a walk along the short trail to see a rock formation known as the Sea Lion we stopped off at a lovely little cove and had some fun skimming stones and climbing on the rocks. At one point there is a rock wall adorned with pebbles each with the names of previous visitors scratched onto them. I left my own memento and then built this stack of stones on the edge of the lake.
I took a number of pictures with different backdrops because from different angle it looked good fitting into the landscape.
I have chosen this one for today because in most of the other shots the stack forms part of the landscape but here it is the focus of the image.
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