Roadrunner wrote:
Now THAT is something, Sue
There are two houses built next to the creek that sustained considerable damage. I can't understand why anyone would build in such a dangerous location - it's not "if" but "when" a flood will occur!
lhammer43 wrote:
Your church is very well lit for your photo shoots. All very nice,Sue.ππ
Thank you! Actually, the lighting gives me fits - I have to use a fast lens and even then Lightroom's noise reduction feature gets a workout!
Last shot for the evening. I took this last Sunday after the luncheon with The Genevans and before they boarded their bus to continue their concert tour. I got a lot of flack from one of the sites I'm on b/c the young lady seems to be texting while in the sanctuary. Although texting during a service is a definite "no-no", this was hours later and I was struck by the peacefulness of the composition.
William wrote:
page #1 series is excellent lens/color/ideas
your on a roll with ideas man keep pumping
impressed and my minds/eye@@@@@
last frame gob/smacked/me/man@@@@@@
Thanks. I'm quite literally just screwing around in Photoshop with Neural Filters. It's all very parametric. The result is fascinating, but the effort is somewhat trivial. All the composition was there on film, years ago. Here's another one. It is an old fort near Charleston that was, in 1976, abandoned and used by teens and vagrants as a party spot. A local I went to school with invited me to come photograph the area with her. It was a surreal trip.
I took some Ektachrome Infrared slides there, too. Unfortunately, most are severely faded now, as the dyes in older Ektachromes were very unstable.
Stairway to Nausea Β© 1976, 2022 Bill Burkholder
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I don't think there are Feral Cat problems in gator land. πΏ
scallihan wrote:
I don't think there are Feral Cat problems in gator land. πΏ
I think every species is nervous around gators, or should be. They will eat any animal they can swallow.
burkphoto wrote:
Here are more of my derivations from old 35mm Tri-X B&W film negatives I exposed back in 1976, just after I turned 21.
These were taken at a condo complex my parents were renting for a week at Hilton Head Island, SC, with their bridge-playing friends.
This gator will forever give me chills. It ATE a little old lady's French poodle right in front of her as she walked the dog along the shore of the pond between the buildings. She was hysterical. I was without my camera, walking in from the car with suitcases. By the time I got back with my Nikon, the lady was on her second floor deck with her family, sobbing, and the gator was just swimming around as if waiting for another treat.
Here are more of my derivations from old 35mm Tri-... (
show quote)
#1 and #3 are gonzo to me ... page #1
worth the time to view like I ate a Sonic
I took my time to woof it down/time man
Bill@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
burkphoto wrote:
Thanks. I'm quite literally just screwing around in Photoshop with Neural Filters. It's all very parametric. The result is fascinating, but the effort is somewhat trivial. All the composition was there on film, years ago. Here's another one. It is an old fort near Charleston that was, in 1976, abandoned and used by teens and vagrants as a party spot. A local I went to school with invited me to come photograph the area with her. It was a surreal trip.
I took some Ektachrome Infrared slides there, too. Unfortunately, most are severely faded now, as the dyes in older Ektachromes were very unstable.
Thanks. I'm quite literally just screwing around i... (
show quote)
Kodachrome 25 school taught me exposure
Tri-X 400 taught me shutter me timbers@@
digital freed me to wonder/think/idea/now@
thing is we are there now@
party was 1999 or befor Prince #2
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