A foggy tree lined avenue, Mat...
A foggy tree lined avenue, Matlock, UK by Jon G Photography
An atmospheric scene taken during the recent fog in the Midlands. I stumbled across this increasingly popular location a couple of years ago, when it was somewhat low key. It seems to have gained a lot of popularity with photographers this year, as it has become more known and images widely shared. Unfortunately for me, living quite far away from it means it is difficult to visit it often in the right conditions. On this occasion I was happy to visit in the fog, albeit towards the end of the day when the light was fading quickly.
Jon G Photography: Photos
Merry Christmas by Marvin Dieh...
Merry Christmas by Marvin Diehl⭐️
Merry Christmas 2021!
INSTAGRAM: www.instagram.com/der_bergfotograf
Please support me on Instagram if you like this photo and my other work! 😊
Marvin Diehl⭐️: Photos
A cold sunrise with warm light...
A cold sunrise with warm light by Martin Podt
Check out my website if you are interested to learn my workflow: www.martinpodt.com/Workflow See my website for the most popular forest photography workshops in the Netherlands.
Martin Podt: Photos
Merry Christmas by Happy .Ms.L
Merry Christmas by Happy .Ms.L
圣诞快乐
Happy .Ms.L : Photos
Chrismas day in Slovania by Da...
Chrismas day in Slovania by Daniel Metz
Sunrise on the famous St tomaz chapel in Slovania and frosted trees and lawn in the first winter days.
Daniel Metz: Photos
Eye contact by Sudipta Chakrab...
Eye contact by Sudipta Chakraborty
A bamboo pit viper on the tree.
Sudipta Chakraborty: Photos
Frozen silence by carsten bach...
Frozen silence by carsten bachmeyer
carsten bachmeyer: Photos
Rookie by Rudy Serrano
Rookie by Rudy Serrano
This one is one of the very first landscape photos that I took. Editing tutorials available at: Rudyserranophotography.con Instagram.com/rsphotolog
Rudy Serrano: Photos
Matera by Greg
Matera by Greg
Matera … The oldest city in Italy and the oldest in Europe, Matera is a UNESCO World Heritage city that was also the European Capital of Culture in 2019. It doesn’t ascend a hill, instead it scrambles down a ravine, tucked into the folds of the landscape in an architecturally astounding feat of cityscape that is Matera’s attraction, called the Sassi.
Matera, Basilicata’s jewel, may be the world’s third-longest continuously inhabited human settlement. Natural caves in the tufa limestone, exposed as the Gravina cut its gorge, attracted the first inhabitants perhaps 7000 years ago. More elaborate structures were built atop them. Today, looking across the gorge to Matera’s huddled sassi (cave dwellings) it seems you’ve been transported back to the ancient Holy Land.
Old Matera is split into two sections, the Sasso Barisano and the Sasso Caveoso, separated by a ridge upon which sits Matera’s gracious duomo (cathedral). The sassi, many little more than one-room caves, once contained such appalling poverty and unthinkable living conditions that in the 1950s Matera was denounced as the ‘Shame of Italy’, and the sassi-dwellers were moved on. Only in later decades has the value of this extraordinarily built environment been recognised, and in 2019 the city was recognised as a European Capital of Culture.
Greg : Photos
Umbrella by Alberto Sorge
Umbrella by Alberto Sorge
Alberto Sorge: Photos