What is your background, and what were program were they post processed with? Very nice shots
Very nice photos
What program (post processing) are you using to get these effects?
I think I would crop out some of the water in the foreground. It's really all about the sky. Just my opinion.
I like the color one better
Sorry - I meant to say - Alan Samiljan - he is the person I have dealt with at Hunts Photo. Great guy.
I am a member of the Carolina Nature Photographers Association - 1200 members strong in two states (guess which ones). Many of our members have bought equipment from Hunts. Gary is top notch and will give you a good deal. He is honest and answers all my questions. Very knowledgeable. I have recently changed all my photography equipment from Canon to Olympus and 5 lenses and other STUFF and bought it all from Hunts.
Great suggestion. Thank you for that information. Anthony has s ton of great stuff on his Youtube site as well as his web page. What an outstanding resource for Luminar, ON1-RAW etc.
If you don't want to spend a lot of money - here is a program that I got for $29.95 it is called Smart Photo Editor. The web page link is:
http://www.smartphotoeditor.comIt has lots of free (presets) and are updated by users. Take a look and see what you think. Does just about everything Adobe Lightroom does, but a whole lot cheaper. It's a one time payment not a monthly subscription.
I have Luminar but I think ON1-RAW is going to beat it. It's going to replace Lightroom on my computer if Adobe doesn't stop changing its programing. Firsts it's CC then it's Classic - then they want you to store your photos in their cloud, just so they can charge your more. ON1-RAW is running a special - the one time fee of $69.00 for the program and lots of other video and ebooks. Worth taking a look at.
Yes it does matter. I would definitely go for the one with the image stabilization. The 10-24 is a wide angle lens. Still yet you would want IS. The more elements the better the lens. If you can afford to go the extra $50 I would go for it. Check to make sure that, that lens will work for the crop sensor. If it is not a crop sensor lens, then you may get some vinyetting. Tameron makes good lenses, I have had 2 of them for my Canon camera's.
Very nice B & W. But now for some technical stuff. What camera, lens and setting did you use. Must have been a high f-stop as it is in focus all the way.
What is all the fuss over pixel's - get a good camera with a good sensor and let it do the job. Shoot in RAW and post process to your hearts content. Photography is about having fun, not getting all rapped around the axle about technical stuff you have no control over. Let the camera manufactures sweat over all the technobabble. Have fun - take lots of pictures.