Your photo of the week The previous winners of our weekly readers' photo of the week competition.
Note we sometimes have two photos of the week - a different one in each of our newspaper editionsPages: (2) |1| 2
 Michael Vaughan, of Darwen, sent in this picture looking staight up at the India Mill chimney, Darwen, after airliners left their signature across the sky.
 Neil Holt, of Blackburn, sent in this picture taken at the Dinckley Suspension Bridge across the River Ribble near to Ribchester. He said: "I think this shot manages to capture the symmetry of the bridge against the deep blue sky that greeted Lancashire before the fog descended that morning."
 Pam McFayden of Nelson took this stunning shot, showing Pendle Hill from the perspective of Downham
 This picture of the bluebells in the woods at Hoghton Bottoms was taken by John Lenehan, who says he could not believe the number of flowers as the whole floor of the woods was blue
 Andrew Allum of Darwen sent in this photograph of a song thrush nesting behind a satellite dish
 Barrie Holden took this atmospheric picture of Pendle Hill rising from the mist from Downham church yard.
 Ray Smalley of Oswaldtwistle took this shot of Tinker Brook in the town.
 John Lenehan sent us this soothing scene of a glorious sunset casting its beautiful light over the Blackburn canal.
 Proud mum Sandra Meyer sent in this stunning photograph taken by her daughter Gemma.
Gemma captured the colours of a motorway at night from a bridge over the M65.
Sandra, of the Fox and Grapes Hotel, Preston New Road, Blackburn, said: "She is a 1st year photography student at Blackburn College and I believe she has a real talent, but then again maybe I'm biased."
 "I'm shocked but very pleased!" said Ken Hacking after seeing his photograph of the lunar eclipse.
Ken, from Accrington, shot the picture in three stages.
The first part of the image is a pre-eclipse shot, the second is full eclipse and the third is 20 minutes after the full eclipse.
The images were taken with a Canon 30D with a Tamron 28-300mm lens at 300mm.
The camera was mounted on a tripod and Ken used a shutter release cable to eliminate movement.
The pre-lunar shot was taken at 1/400s at f6.3 ISO 100, the total eclipse was at three seconds f6.3 ISO 400 and the last shot was at 3.2 secconds f6.3 ISO 160.
Ken took the pictures from his back garden and said: "I thought I was going to miss the opportunity when the moon went behind a neighbour's tree, but luckily it re-emerged just in time for the total eclipse."
 Yvonne Finch took this view of rolling fog looking west from Pendle Hill.
 Kath Parker of Knotts Drive, Colne, sent us this picture of her children Thomas, Lucy and Alex on the edge of Pendle Hill.
 It was brrr rather than baa for these sheep on a frosty day, as Steve Holden, of Grange Road, Blackburn, captured with his camera.
 Mike Humphreys, from Blackburn, took this picture of grassland silhouetted against the setting sun, from the Sabden side of Pendle Hill.
 This amazingly colourful dusk sky brought Gayle Knight, of Mill Hill Cottages, Oswaldtwistle, to a standstill as she travelled from Burnley to Accrington.
 Andrew Livesey snapped this idyllic woodland scene on a very cold morning in Pleasington.
If you've taken a great snap out and about in East Lancashire, send it to us and we will consider it for publication in the Lancashire Telegraph newspaper.
Click here for the different ways of sending it to us. |
|
Lancashire
Search
| Powered by |
|
|
|
|  | | | | | FEATURES | Browse special features and supplements
|
| | MEDIA PACK | All the information you need about our great advertising deals
|
| | PHOTO SALES | Buy photos that have appeared in the Lancashire Telegraph
|
| | | |