Dixiegirl wrote:
And the very same to you and yours, Macro2009.
Thank you Dixiegirl, all the best to you and Dook for 2014; and continued success in your management roll.
steve1oshea wrote:
Have a great 2014 Michael and look forward to seeing your images.
Thanks Steve keep the good work up in 2014.
Tis the season to be Jolly
To all our worldwide friends past, present and potential have a safe and peaceful Christmas season and a tremendous 2014 photographic Year.
Tis the season to be Jolly
You have a unique perspective at looking at objects Steve.
steve1oshea wrote:
nice to see B/W . Excellent capture.
:thumbup:
Thanks Steve appreciated.
LoneRangeFinder wrote:
Beautiful bird! I might suggest cloning out the "ankle bracelet".
Somewhere I have some of these on slides....
Thanks for your comment the image was never meant for competition, just a conversion excercise.
Georgie wrote:
WOW - Excellent. Thankyou for shareing it.
Thank you for your kind respnse.
St3v3M wrote:
That is an impressive animal. Do you like the black and white more than the color?
I like to transpose colour images occasionally.
Welcome to the group Carter, hope you enjoy yourself.
Harvest Time
Apple Pulper
Fruit Juicer
Flour mill Guide
working model
Watermill History
mill #1
Wheat grinding (hard stone)
Bob M wrote:
The first 4 shots are natural light, high sky, hot and bright.
The 2nd 4 shots are same time of day but with flash fill.
CC welcome.
No 5 is not fill flash
Camera Maker: Canon
Camera Model: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XSi
Lens: Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS
Image Date: 2013-09-11 01:31:57 (no TZ)
Focal Length: 28mm
Aperture: f/4.0
Exposure Time: 0.0063 s (1/160)
ISO equiv: 400
Exposure Bias: none
Metering Mode: Spot
Exposure: shutter priority (semi-auto)
White Balance: Auto
Flash Fired: No (enforced)
Orientation: Normal
GPS Coordinate: undefined, undefined
Software: iPhoto 9.4.3
No 6 Yes
No 7 Yes
No 8 No
Hello Peter,
It meets the criteria perfectly in the downloaded format.
Although many will disagree with me.
You are now at liberty, now to submit whatever your own judgement of a close up is. This excellent visual experience will be a stupefaction to all who take the time to view.