Phil's photos with the keyword: Rust

HFF for dog-walkers (and certain football players?…

19 Mar 2020 5 3 581
The Quaker Bridge (just visible on the left) over Pendle Water at Brierfield, North-West England. HFF to all viewers :-) Camera: NIkon D500 Lens: Tokina AT-X 116 PRO DX II Processed with Nikon Capture NX2 and Pixlr Editor

"Paneful" work?

09 Mar 2020 2 2 480
Seen outside a building that was being renovated after a fire.....these workmen were installing new windows. Camera: Nikon D500 Lens: AF Micro Nikkor 60mm f2.8 Processed with Nikon Capture NX2 and Pixlr Editor

The fisherman. HFF

17 Jan 2020 6 3 369
Fishing for mackerel at South Shields pier in the North-East of England, photographed during the Summer of 2008. The rusty fence has since been replaced with a modern (but less colourful) one. We didn't have much luck.....I only caught a small eel and my friend Dave (in the photograph) caught nothing but it was still a pleasant way to spend a few hours. HFF everybody :-)

End of the line (3 of 3).

15 May 2017 16 15 663
An old shunting engine photographed near Haslingden, Lancashire, in the North-West of England. More photos / different views of this engine in my "Snapshots" album. Camera: Nikon D300S. Lens: AF-S DX VR Zoom-Nikkor 16-85mm f/3.5-5.6G ED Processed with Nikon Capture NX2.

Abandoned.

06 Aug 2016 8 3 650
Another test shot taken with my new Samyang 8mm "fisheye" lens. This lens produces a 180 degree (measured diagonally) full-frame field-of-view on a APS-C camera. This is a manual-focus lens (with non-Nikon cameras the exposure settings are also manual) and although it is quite difficult to focus...it took me three attempts to get this shot focussed as the bike was in the shade underneath bushes.....the results so far have been excellent. Camera: Nikon D300s + Samyang 8mm full-frame fisheye lens. Processed with Nikon Capture NX2.

End of the line (1 of 3).

09 Jun 2013 10 5 1038
Photographed outside Winfields (Outdoor Pursuits) store near Haslingden, UK. This old engine has been parked here for many years...it can be seen on the map in "Satellite View" if you zoom in close.