Dianne Sharp: Point to Point
View of Birkenhead Point looking from Northcote Point.
View of Birkenhead Point looking from Northcote Point.
I never get tired of this view.
Chelsea at it’s finest.
Coffee break, Chelsea
I caught this shot late afternoon down by the wharf. I loved the light and how it backlit the people and just caught the fishing line in the late afternoon winter sun.
My family’s favourite walking place.
The Factory is upside down.
A dark fog rolled across the harbour just as the sun’s morning rays kissed the beautiful, bright sugar ship.
The recent fog made the BIrkenhead Ferry Building appear ghostlike and otherworldly. Somewhat prescient at the time given AT’s announcement about suspending the ferry service. Fortunately, a new operator ensures continued ferry operation.
Catching the last rays at Kendall’s Bay.
A foggy morning at Chelsea Sugar, the air was still, the sea was calm and a lone moored yacht juxtaposed, sits undisturbed while the peaks of the city peer through the low-hanging clouds.
After the rain.
Kendall’s bay at sunset.
Taken where the pond meet the sea, fall, as the leaves and the water and the colours reminded me of that season.
Taken at little shoal bay.
Chelsea Bay at its finest.
Sometimes pausing during the rush to work can make your day.
I took this from our balcony in Maritime Terrace just before the fog lifted over the harbour bridge – the clouds added to the drama. Seeing the harbour bridge and the sea from Birkenhead is a real bonus of living here.
Early morning shot of Little Shoal Bay taken at sunrise.