Photography Prints

Capture memories with our photography prints. Explore stunning images to adorn your space or give as thoughtful gifts.

57 Search Results Found

Fine Art Print on Quality Archival paper
Dingle Peninsula, Co. Kerry
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
Beehive Huts, 6th-century Christian settlement on Skellig Michael
Beehive huts, Skellig Michael, Co. Kerry
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
Fine Art Print on quality Archival paper
Skellig Michael, Co. Kerry
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
Néifinn mountain, Co. Mayo
Néifinn mountain, Co. Mayo
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
Keem, Achill Island, Co. Mayo
Achill Island, Co. Mayo
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
View of Clare Island
Westport
Clare Island sunset
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
The Reek (Cruachán Aigle) Croagh Patrick
The Reek (Cruachán Aigle) Croagh Patrick
From:
€50.00
Caroline Hopkins Landscape Photography
Our photograph was taken from the Boardwalk in Carrick-on-Shannon, Co. Leitrim as the sun set in the West.
Boardwalk, Carrick-on-Shannon
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high, and the dreams that you dream of,  once in a lullaby.

Jamestown Bridge, Co. Leitrim
Jamestown Bridge
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Pol an Eas means waterfall bath or bathing place in Irish.

Locally the old saw that the waters could “pull an ass” which  is pure Leitrim vernacular. The two waterfalls are separated by a water pool where locals swim when the weather gets warm.
Pol An Eas
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Corry Strand lies at the foot of Corry Mountain on the northern shores of Lough Allen, in Co. Leitrim.
The strand is a noted area for boating, angling and swimming opportunities, with space for over-night camping and caravaning.
The strand is infamous for a boating tragedy, which took place on Good Friday, April 2, 1831, when 14 people, four men and 10 women lost their lives.
On that fateful morning 18 people set off for the market town of Drumshanbo at the southern end of the lake.
They arrived safely at the market town, planning to leave on the return journey in the mid-afternoon.
Laden with oats and potatoes purchased at the market, the boat sat considerably lower in the water than on the southerly leg on the journey.
Two members of the party decided against making the journey.
As darkness descended on the lake a gale blew up and the boat capsized. The bodies were located the following morney and buried in a mass-grave in Kilbride Cemetery. A large stone was erected over the grave.
Corry Strand
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Turlough O’Carolan, that well known Irish Harper-Composer, was born in the year 1670 near Nobber, County Meath, where his father was a blacksmith.
In 1684, when he was 14 years of age, his family moved to Ballyfarnon, County Roscommon, where John Carolan – Turlough’s father – was employed by the McDermott-Roe family who lived at Alderford, Ballyfarnon.
Mrs. McDermott-Roe took an interest in him and had him educated. When Turlough was 18 years of age he contracted small pox, a disease which was usually fatal at the time. His life was spared but he was left permanently blind. Turlough’s blindness, in a way, was a blessing because it awakened in him a hidden gift for music.
It was then that his patron, Ms Mary McDermott-Roe, saw to it that he was trained in the Irish Harp. She had him apprenticed to a harper who was a relation of hers. She maintained him during his three years of study and when he reached 21 years of age provided him with a harp, a horse, a guide and sufficient money to begin his professional career. He started on his way as an Itinerant Harper.
At first he was not considered to be a great musician, mainly because he was an adult when he started studying, and when it was suggested to him that he try his hand at composing he did so and composed Sheemore and Sheebeg.
It was then his fame spread throughout Ireland and his career took off. The way Turlough made a living was to travel from big house to big house and from castle to castle, entertaining the households and the friends of some of the most famous and wealthy people in Ireland at the time.
Often as a special favour he would write a tune in honour of the man of the house or his wife or daughter. He called these tunes “Planxties”. He was very successful and people would delay weddings and funerals until he could be present to play the appropriate tune.
In 1720 , Turlough Carolan married Mary Maguire. He was then 50 years of age. Their first family home was a cottage on a parcel of land near Mohill, Co Leitrim, where they settled. They had seven children, six daughters and a son. In 1733 his wife Mary died.
Turlough Carolan was one of the last Irish Harpers who composed and a significant number of his works survive in single line melody. He started playing the harp when he was 18 years of age and became very skillful at it, but his .fame developed from his gift for composition and verse. When
Turlough Carolan was a very young man, before his blindness, he met and fell in love with a young woman named Bridget Cruise. Bridget was part of a noble family and Turlough’s family was of skilled labourers, so a match could never be made.
And even though he went on to live a very successful life, he never forgot Bridget and wrote three “Planxties” in her honour. He met her again near the end of his life when he was on his way to a Religious Retreat in County Donegal.
In the year 1738, feeling ill, he returned to the home of his patron, Ms Mary McDermott-Roe. It is said that his ‘final composition was to her Butler who brought him his last drink. He died on the 25th March, 1738, aged 68 years.
He was buried with much ceremony in the cemetery at Kilronan. A plaque in Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, honours him as “The last of the Irish Bards”, the man who brought to a close the centuries-old tradition of the Wandering Poet/Minstrel. Carolan’s wake is said to have lasted for four days. Harpers from over a wide area attended the wake and played their harps continuously. His funeral was also impressive with a large number of Priests taking part in the ceremony.
Turlough O'Carolan
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Our photograph was taken during the first Lockdown, on the longest day of the year, 21st June, 2020 at Drumsna, Co. Leitrim. The statue, known locally and affectionately as “Sna” depicts a swimmer ready to dive in to the Shannon.
Drumsna Quay
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
The river Shannon, at Jamestown Weir, Co. Leitrim at dawn, on the shortest day of the year, 21st December, 2019.
The Shannon at sunrise
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Glenade Lough, meaning “lake of the glen of jealousy” is located in the Glenade Valley in Co. Leitrim.



Glenade Lough is situated between the Dartry Mountains to the west and the Arroo Mountain range to the east.

The lake is located about 9 kilometres northwest of Manorhamilton and 12 km south of Kinlough.

It is 1.6 km long from northwest to southeast and covers an area of 0.74 square kilometres.
Glenade Lough
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
The homestead of the 1916 leader Seán Mac Diarmada in Kiltyclogher, Co. Leitrim is the jewel in the county’s historic crown.

The Sean Mac Diarmada Cottage  is located in Corranmore, a few kilometres outside the village of Kiltyclogher and is maintained in its original condition as a National Monument by the OPW since 1964.

The homestead consists of three buildings, the cottage, the dairy and the byre and commands an impressive view across the valley. The interior of the MacDiarmada family home is an impressive example of a traditional Irish cottage and is incredibly atmospheric.

 
Seán Mac Diarmada Cottage
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Acres Lake Floating Boardwalk is an an iconic floating boardwalk around the lake, which extends the walking and cycling trails all the way into Drumshanbo, connecting it to Leitrim Village.
Acres Lake Floating Boardwalk
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
The Quay in Carrick-on-Shannon, Co. Leitrim as captured by local photographer, Lisa McGowan
The Quay, Carrick-on-Shannon
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
Albert Marina, Co. Roscommon at dawn, on the shortest day of the year, 21st December 2021
Albert Marina
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie
The river Shannon, at Jamestown Weir, Co. Leitrim at dawn, on the shortest day of the year, 21st December, 2019.

 
Jamestown Weir
From:
€10.00
LeitrimExperience.ie

 	Universal clip for smartphones
 	Screw thread for cameras
Flexiable Tripod
€12.00
Gadget Man
Compatible with phones and cameras up to 85mm using the clip or devices that fit on to the 2/8" inch thread.
Octopus Tripod
€15.00
Gadget Man
Pea pod photo digital download 10"x 8" portrait orientation. Please note: this is a downloadable product, not a physical print.
Pea pod photo digital download 10"x 8"
€8.00
Arrazone
Bee on thistle photo digital download 10"x 8" Please note: this is a downloadable product, not a physical print
Bee on thistle printable digital download 10"x 8"
€8.00
Arrazone