Bob Mevis wrote:
Those are excellent.
Hi Bob, I was born in Plymouth! Nice little town!
In some of the photos, in the middle/middle right areas the light changes from cool to warm. I think that kind of subtlety is just fabulous!
I like it! It's a little surreal. It's easy to perceive that the ducks are floating in the sky. The lurking eagle(?) adds some interesting tension to the shot.
The vaulting and complex arches are still amazing! Thanks for the images!
I feel for them... Oops did I just post this...
Anthony wins the second race as well. In the second race Malcolm has to run the entire distance. Anthony has to run further. But Anthony is running incrementally faster than Malcolm. The further distance that Anthony has to run will allow him to incrementally be ahead since he has 10 seconds more to increase his lead. Anthony won't win much, but he will win.
Shoot fireworks? Generally I just light the fuse...
I use a macro lens. I cut a negative mask our of heavy black paper and secure both the paper mask and the negative/transparency. I use a very diffused led light and a 2 second delay on my camera shutter. On a 35 mm image (slide or negative). I make 4 to 6 overlapping exposures and combine the images together in Photoshop CS5. I get some remarkably good results. This also works well for 120 and larger film sizes. It won't work well if you have tons of images to copy, however -- its time consuming.
Second take:
We don't all have mammeries, but we all have memories!
The ape child is just hungry...
A light weight set of wheels is the quickest way to turn your bike into a higher performance machine. Not really on general topic, but it might be helpful to some who want a nice bike without breaking the bank. It can transform your old bicycle.
Surreal; excellent! I admire that you took something so ordinary and found a way to make it beautiful.