Slideshow pics for accolades
Read MoreThe Lucent Ballet
Nothing is more soothing or mesmerizing than the dance of the jellyfish.
TheLucentBalletAbstractArtBeachesBlueCaliforniacalmCoastContemporaryDenise DubeEcologyFine Art PhotographyfishGrins and Goosebumps PhotographyJelly FishLifeLong beachLong Beach CALos AngelesMysticalNatural AbstractnatureNew AgeOceanSea LifeSoothingwaterWildlifeZen
From Sealife and Wildlife
B4B3359HDR1024x878Grins and Goosebumps PhotographyPhotography By Denise DubeUrbanCaliforniaFine ArtarchitectureNightLong beachLong Beach CALos AngelesMagic hourReal EstateReal estate photographyBelmont ShoreCalifornia HomesCalifornia Real estateDenise Dube Real Estate PhotographyDoors
From 123 Claremont
Natures Pallet
South Tufa Mono Lake at sunset
NaturesPalletAbstractAncient sitesAward Winning Fine Art by Denise DubeCaliforniaCoastDenise Dube Nature PhotographyFamous Landscape PhotographyFine ArtFine Art PhotographyFusiaGalleriesGrins and Goosebumps PhotographyHigh SierraHistorial landmarksHistorical PhotographyHwy 395LakeLandscapeLandscape PhotographyMono LakeMysticalNatural AbstractNatural LandmarksnaturePhotography By Denise DubeRocksSereneshorelineSierra NevadaskiesskySouth TufastillSunsetTravelTufaswaterscape
All About Scale
I love how this massive container ship dwarfs the trucks who's wheels are nearly twice as tall as the tallest man on the dock. I like how this print show the importance of scale. This print has been selected to be on exhibit at MOLAA in October 2015. This Long beach Port #POLB is a rare inside look at the highly restricted and rarely photographed workings of the Port of Long Beach. I was invited for a third year to shoot the restricted areas Port of Long Beach at night,. Not an easy endeavor. On a moving boat, shooting moving boats at night and no tripods. Loved every minute of it!
DeniseDubeAllAboutScaleAbstractBlack and White NoirCaliforniaContainerContainer shipContainersdarkGrins and Goosebumps PhotographyHistorial landmarksHistoricalIndustrialLandscape PhotographyLarge ShipsLB Port Authoritylight artlightsLong BeachLong Beach CALos AngelesLos Angeles CaliforniamonochromeNauticalNightPhotography by Denise DubePOLBportPort of Long BeachPortsreflectionsseaShippingShipsSouthern CaliforniaSurealTransportationTravelwaterscape
From Port of Long Beach
Stoneman Bridge Yosemite
Fall starts to set on the Merced River by Stoneman Bridge in Yosemite National Park.
StonemanBridgedigiArtCaliforniacalmDenise DubeEcologyforestgreenGrins and Goosebumps PhotographyHDRHigh SierraHikingHistorial landmarkslandscapeLifeNational ParksNatural LandmarksnaturePhotography By Denise DubereflectionsRiverSoothingSurealTravelTreeTreeswateryellowYosemiteZen
Sunrise Across The Sacred Land
This beautiful productive estuary was home to Native Americans as far back as 8,000 years ago. Between 6000 and 3500 B.C. a group of Native Americans lived in the area that are believed to be Hokan speaking and ancestors of the Chumash.
Spanish explorer Juan Cabrillo sailed the Southern California coast in 1542 in search of trade opportunities and a route to China. He met and befriended the Tongva living on Santa Catalina Island (Cabrillo had named the island San Salvador). Sixty years after Cabrillo explored the coast, Sebastian Vizcaino explored the California coast and also encountered Tongva. His reports said that the Natives he met were friendly and peaceful. Later accounts of the Native tribes were similar.
It wasnt until the early 1700s that the Spanish showed an interest in colonizing California. Conflicts with Russians and English led the Spanish to begin setting up missions, presidios (frontier fortresses) and pueblos (small towns). Father Junipero Serra arrived in California in 1769 and began the establishment of a chain of missions from San Diego to Sonoma. In 1771 a mission was established at the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains and was named Mission San Gabriel. All of the Tongva and Acjachamen were sent to these missions where many were killed by foreign diseases and smallpox epidemics. Those that survived lost much of their culture; their way of life was devastated. Subsequently, all native subjugates of the Mission were called Garbieli by the Spanish missionaries further damaging their unique cultural identities.
Promises to preserve this land to the American Indians has been repeatedly broken, contractors and politicians win.. There is only a small part that has been put aside as the sacred land for the American Indians and once again that is in jeopardy of devastation.. You only have to visit this magical place at sunrise to understand why the Indians stayed here and made this their sacred land..DawnReflectstheWetlandsBolsa ChicaCaliforniaCoastDenise DubeFine Art PhotographyGrins and Goosebumps PhotographynatureOrange County CaPhotography By Denise DubePlacesReligious meditave spritualshorelineSilhouetteSouthern Californiasunsrise duskwaterscape
Tug Club bw
This Print will be on Exhibit at MOLAA during the month of October 2015I was invited for a third year to shoot the restricted areas Port of Long Beach at night,. Not an easy endeavor. On a moving boat, shooting moving boats at night and no tripods. Loved every minute of it!
TugClubAbstractBlack and WhiteBlack and White PhotographyBlack and White NoirCaliforniaCalmdarkGrins and Goosebumps PhotographyHistorial landmarksHistoricalIndustrialLandscape PhotographyLarge ShipsLB Port AuthorityLong BeachLong Beach CALos Angeles CaliforniamonochromeNightPhotography by Denise DubePOLBportPort of Long BeachPortsreflectionsseaShipsSouthern CaliforniaSurealTransportationTravelwaterscape
From Port of Long Beach
Broken
Broken Please click here to buy on Crated-
`2014 Honorable Mention IAF New York. (Opening reception October 8th 2014) `On Tour 2014- 2015 with New York's Museums International Road Tour. `Showing in Museum of Russian Art. `Featured in the 2014 AIF Catalog. (Also for Sale in late 2014) A broken window behind the carriage house at the Beautiful Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills California. Built in 1927 by oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny and perched in the storied and scenic hills of one of the most elegant neighborhoods in America, Greystone Estate is a Beverly Hills and Los Angeles treasure, recognized since 1976 as a historic landmark in the national registry of Historic Places. The City of Beverly Hills purchased the property in 1965 and in 1971 the entire 18.3 acre site was formally dedicated as a public park by the City of Beverly Hills. Construction of the palatial manor home began February 15, 1927 and although Ned, his wife Lucy, and their five children moved into the residence in September 1928, the estate took three years to complete at a cost of over $3 million, an almost unimaginable sum in real estate at the time. The original cost to construct Greystone’s entire estate was $3,166,578.12, the Mansion alone cost $1,238,378.76. The extraordinary result became known as Greystone for its abundant use of stone construction and its rather somber gray appearance. In addition to the Mansion, originally located on the grounds were stables and kennels, tennis courts, a fire station, gatehouse, swimming pool and pavilion, a greenhouse, a lake, babbling brooks and cascading waterfalls. But on the night of February 16, 1929, only five months after the family had moved in, Ned Doheny was found shot to death inside the home, at the age of 36 and the victim of an apparent murder-suicide perpetrated by his longtime personal friend and aid Hugh Plunket. Lucy continued living at Greystone until 1955, after which she and her second husband Leigh M. Battson sold the majority of the original land to the Paul Trousdale Corporation, developers of Beverly Hills’ prestigious “Trousdale Estate” homes. The following year Lucy and her husband sold for approximately $1.5 million the remaining 18.3 acre parcel, including Greystone Mansion, to Henry Crown of Chicago-based Park Grey Corporation. Mr. Crown, however, never formally occupied the site but instead leased it out as a popular filming location, a legacy Greystone still maintains today. Please join my Photography Facebook page to talk photography at: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Denise-Dube-Photography-Grins-and-Goosebumps-Photography/212628132166237?ref_type=bookmark Twitter; https://twitter.com/itsDuber Google+ https://plus.google.com/+DeniseDubephotography/posts Pinterest http://www.pinterest.com/itsduber/ My work has been added to various collections and used by designers and set designers. My architectural work has been featured on MSN Lifestyle. This and more of my portfolio can be bought at my http://denise-dube.artistwebsites.com/ You are welcome to use my images for your own personal NON-COMMERCIAL use, personal blog posts, wallpaper etc. If you do so, you must: - Give clear credit to Denise Dube - Link back to my website: http://www.grinsandgoosebumps.com or denise-dube.artistwebsites.com Due to recent abuse all my photography is copyrighted and Digimarked to insure that this minor request is enforced. Thank you for taking the time to view my photographs. Feel free to contact me at grinsandgoosebumps@verizon.net
carriagehousebrokenwindowbwarchitecturephotography By Denise DubeGreystoneFine Art PhotographyGrins and Goosebumps PhotographyGreystone Beverly HillsGreystone MansionHigh QualityIn FocusTop shots all