Chris T wrote:
RE … "dragon queen breaker of chains burn down something or other" is the part I don't get, too - but then, I'm not into Video Games. But, I am into photography, and if it helps Karno win this game of his - by buying the Fuji GFX100S when it at last becomes available .. I'm all for him!!! … damned good choice of a camera - I'd say!
I find it difficult to fathom that I am the only one watching the Game of thrones but if so, so be it, it is nice to see I am not the only one eyeballing GFX,
My satire of watching HBO on a 100mp mirrorless camera is hilarious to me. For now I will watch it upon a regular so called smart tv ,and take my images on a separate device (dslr)
karno wrote:
If I ever buy a mirrorless camera I at least want to be able to watch the game of thrones on it
In fact this is why I am buying the Fuji gfx 100mp so I can watch the dragon queen breaker of chains burn down kings landing in 16 bit
If I ever buy a mirrorless camera I at least want to be able to watch the game of thrones on it
I shoot nikon and their dslr cameras are superior to their mirrorless iterations, and they are still making high end lenses for dslr, it seems to me that DSLR is still the way to go for awhile in my brand.
Retired CPO wrote:
WOW x 4. Is this a composite?
Photographed with setting moon then sky an hour after after stars aligned with mountain without removing from tripod then blended.
So not composit it is a blend.
Mother’s day morning at mount Shasta Ca
Venus and our galaxies core help a sliver moon to illuminate this historical wagon trail, just as it might have generations ago.
I can imagine the sounds of hoof to stone,
Wheel to groove, slowly carving deep ruts into lava cap.
When I imagine it, my mind turns to a past without cellphones or most of the conveniences that now clutter our world, at that moment I strangely feel at home within the simplicity.
once I put myself into our past and the minds of our ancestors I am brought back to thinking of the present and future just as the settlers and dreamers did upon this road.
Humboldt Wagon Trail
Chico Ca
martinfisherphoto wrote:
I would then point to the lens
Yes me too I am shelving my Zeiss classics, using my old 14-24 Nikon to see if that works, I used to only use it for night stuff but now it has front stage duty, unfortunately it does not take filters.
I will see if that works
Strodav wrote:
You might want to take a picture of a gray card up close to your camera without a lens at the shutter speed and ISO you are seeing the problem.
Very interesting concept! Did not know I could do that, I will try it.
Ken Owen wrote:
Have you tried shooting without filters to see if the color banding is still a problem?
It is definitely there without filters upon further observation
carl hervol wrote:
dido where?
This is difficult to see on computer but is there it come out in dramatic fashion upon exporting to jpg for print it is more difficult to see in tiff and when printing it is hideous as per example of Yosemite image with moon print. This I just remembered was taken with out Nd filter.
The water example I just shot the other day and is straight out of camera, I would get thes strange magenta and or green cast blobs in clouds sometimes water in some of my images, rendering them not printable, noticed this in some of my prints for clients bringing my attention closer to these artifacts
kymarto wrote:
Green and magenta artifacts are due to longitudinal chromatic aberration and depend on the lens. They are generally easy to fix. Go in the Develop module to "Lens Corrections" and enable "Manual". You will see two sliders that have color ranges--"Purple Hue" and "Green Hue". Set the ranges to match the color of your fringing and then adust with the "Amount" sliders. This should remove the fringing if you set it correctly.
I think it is more then fringing I may have used wrong term