Thanks for pointing out the problem in the upper left corner.
I've fixed the image and will repost it soon.
Greetings,
Iâm very happy to see the Panoramic Section on this forum and to see the fine images that have been posted. This is my first posting and I welcome your comments. The shot is of a small collection of rodent bones and others arranged on a 1âx6â piece of foam core to make a 6â display. The finished image is a five frame panorama where each frame is a 7 image focus stack, for a total or 35 frames for the project. The print measures 13âx67â on the wall.
Jim
Hi Norm,
Please send me your mailing address, I would like to buy the lens.
Jim
714 898 9391
Will you accept a cashier's check from my credit Union?
Jim
No photos attached. Would like to
see your cameras.
I use Shutterfly without using their templates with no problems. They offer a custom mode.
I like the saturated colors of the second image. I see nothing wrong
with the artistic license used to increase the attraction of the image.
I'd like to buy the 50mm macro. Please send payment details.
James Utter
akaobscure@verizon.net
About 30 years ago I belonged to the Pictoralist Society. Don't know if it is still active. There are several
books published on the subject. They are most most likely found in university libraries or in used book
stores. Good luck!
Depending upon how many slides you are planning to scan, it may be more cost effective to pay a scanning service. Their are
many on-line sources for slide scanning.
To an experienced photographer, camera data reveals nothing more than the lighting conditions that existed
when the image was created. Given the many combinations of aperture and exposure time, including them is
superfluous at best. However, location information, is often insufficient or missing. If nothing else, I
would like to see longitude and latitude information included with the image. Today's cameras, wristwatches,
cell phones and automobile navigation devices all have such information available. Or, lacking one of those devices,
one could always use Google Maps to get the coordinates.
Digital solarization! What would Man Ray think?
I like the image as it is indeed about a tree. For
me nothing beats a walk in the forest on a
quiet morning. However, the image could be
printed more boldly. The light background seems
to draw my eye away from the tree.
Given the shape of the beak and the beard, I think the bird is a raven.
Nice images. We stopped at the restaurant in 1986. There was no road kill on the menu so we left.