Julia Cumes Photography

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio Galleries
  • Multi Media Stories
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • Upcoming Photo Workshops
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 14 images found }

Loading ()...

  • The sun sets over a dock on Mill Pond in Chatham, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-052.jpg
  • The supermoon sets over Chatham's Lighthouse Beach on Cape Cod.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle013.JPG
  • The supermoon sets over Chatham's Lighthouse Beach on Cape Cod.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-033.jpg
  • A colorful pair of rainbow lorikeets "kiss" on a log in the Jardin de Balata in Fort-de-France, Martinique.
    Animal_Affection_Julia_Cumes-023.jpg
  • An irridescent pair of hummingbirds keep each other company on a fan palm frond in the Jardin de Balata in Fort-de-France, Martinique.
    Animal_Affection_Julia_Cumes-022.jpg
  • Female infant chimp, Sara, is photographed at Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Animal_Rescue-011.jpg
  • Female infant chimp, Sara, is photographed at Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Ngamba_Chimps-22.jpg
  • Musician and Cape Wellness Collaborative founder, Sarah Swain, 44, is photographed in her Harwich home with her three children, from left, Jessie, 10, Lucy, 12 and Stanley, 4. Sarah's mother, grandmother and uncle all passed away from cancer which was the impetus for starting Cape Wellness Collaborative--a non-profit organization that provides integrative wellness therapies for people on the Cape and Islands facing cancer. "Ironically, I never got around to getting mammograms, I think they subconsciously terrified me due to my family history. After admitting this to my board members, they pretty much forced me to get one," she explains. While Sarah's mammogram showed no signs of cancer, she was urged to get genetically tested and discovered she had the CALP2 gene, a rare gene mutation that carries the same risks for cancer as the BRCA2 gene. 'What to do with this information is a very personal decision," she explains. "After losing my mother to cancer when she was 52, it came down to me doing everything in my power to help ensure I am here for my kids," she says. Weeks before this photo was taken Sarah underwent a prophylactic double mastectomy and oophorectomy (removal of ovaries and tubes). Around the same time that Sarah found out about her genetic mutation, her husband, Steve, had a heart attack and also discovered he has a genetic heart defect. "He had to have surgery a few months before me and it was a very intense time for the family," she recalls. "It really makes you aware of what you hold most precious in life," she says. Sarah and her husband decided they needed to decompress and reconnect as a family by taking some time away from their lives. "We took six months and went on a sailing trip down the inter-coastal waterway then through Bahamas and homeschooled the kids," she explains. "It was amazing---the best thing we ever did as a family!" she adds.
    Sarah_Swain.jpg
  • Female infant chimp, Sara, is photographed at Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Animal_Rescue-024.jpg
  • Ngamba's veterinarian, Dr Joshua Rukundo, examines female infant, Sara, after care givers noticed she had pox in her mouth that needed to be treated. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Animal_Rescue-023.jpg
  • Ngamba's veterinarian, Dr Joshua Rukundo, examines female infant, Sara, after care givers noticed she had pox in her mouth that needed to be treated. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Ngamba_Chimps-21.jpg
  • Female infant chimp, Sara, is carried by care givers after being sedated so Ngamba's veterinarian, Dr Joshua Rukundo, could examine and treat pox in her mouth at the  Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Ngamba_Chimps-20.jpg
  • Female infant chimp, Sara, is photographed at Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Ngamba_Chimps-09.jpg
  • Female infant chimp, Sara, is carried by care givers after being sedated so Ngamba's veterinarian, Dr Joshua Rukundo, could examine and treat pox in her mouth at the  Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Lake Victoria, Uganda. Sara, who has been on Ngamba Island since 2012, is a little chimp with a clear face. She was confiscated from a trader in Southern Sudan. At the time of her arrival, she was in a bad condition. Her eyes were puffy due to dehydration and she had a big hard stomach with no hair on it.<br />
She pretty much wants to own everything, she screams until she is given what she wants including sticks and all other small enrichment materials. When she is scared, Sara runs to her surrogate mother, Connie. She likes riding on Connie’s back. 03/15 Julia Cumes/IFAW
    Animal_Rescue-022.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x