Did you ever photograph your eye?
Tennessee In My Eye
[quote=bsmiley]Well when I go out (and yes I am a female) I sometimes go out alone and I do have a concealed carry lic. I always carry my 280 pistol.
What is a "280 pistol"? Do you mean ".380"? I'm not pickin' at you; I would really like to know.
Burton
dreist wrote:
This is not a bad critique!!!....I'm just trying to make a funny.......... The left wing looks like a a wire hanger for a stuffed bird.
Pls don't take the comment wrong, I love the photo! :thumbup:
Dreist, I hadn't noticed that, but you're right. If it comes back next year, I'll try again! :>) Thanks for the comment. No offense taken.
-------- Burton--------
Here we go, Fifty-Fifty! This should do wonders for your truck. (I really AM joking!)
Burton
We could ALL use a little correction at one time or another.
Badger, did you REALLY spend a "one-half" day with these people, or did you spend half a day with them?
Snowbear, you're up next! Things like that really "dive" me crazy, too.
All in good fun, folks. All in good fun.
Burton
This little hummer was stopped with a Canon A-80 set on manual and at maximum zoom (23.4mm). The in-camera flash was on and the shutter speed was set at 1/500 of a second (the maximum for flash sync). The aperture was set at f/8. All of this blacked out the background.
Yes, I know; the cropping didn't leave the little fellow a place to fly. Sad, isn't it?
By all means, let this beautiful lady keep her freckles.
She looks nice, but a few good ol' hamburgers wouldn't hurt.
It needs a background. I've looked at both photos for ten minutes and I haven't seen a background yet!
REALLY good shots!
Comments, please, about my editing of this photo. Did Photoshop save it? The photo was shot with a shutter speed that was much too slow. I was not prepared.
I used Photoshop to crop, then I sharpened the image way beyond the point where grain began to appear, then I saturated the colors.
Be harsh if you would like, but be honest. I can take it.
Original Photo
Edited Photo
Check your lens to make sure it isn't dirty.
I wonder if yaterman96 would now pull my other leg.
Photographing the moon is basically the same as photographing any object illuminated by the sun. For photographing a full moon on a clear night, a good place to start is with the old "Sunny 16" rule: Set your lens at f/16 and set your shutter speed to match your film's ASA/ISO rating (1/100 second for ASA 100 film, 1/250 second for ASA 200 film, 1/500 second for 400 ASA film, etc.). On the first night out, bracket your exposures widely and make good notes.