It's called a swarm. It's the way bees create new colonies. The queen leaves with about half of the workers. They pick a spot to hang out until they find a suitable new home. The ones left behind create a new queen. Now you have two colonies. They usually go to trees, but sometimes pick the oddest places to go while they wait for the scouts to find a new home.
A couple of the old barns in Allen County, Kentucky
Yellowstone River Lower Falls.
Check the file name of the missing file to see if you accidentally "lost" the jpg extension. If so, put it back via rename.
I use LR 6.14. I use the color (HSL) sliders, the WB and Hue controls mostly. I find that I am able to make some very decent B&W conversions plus all kinds of "artistic" effects including faux IR.
There is photography as documentation which is what ad photography should be and there is photography as art. I have made photos for use in a court of law. They must be an accurate representation of what they purport to be. I do most of my photography as art which is a visual interpretation of what I see in hope of evoking a pleasing response in the viewer.
There is photography as documentation which is what ad photography should be and there is photography as art. I have made photos for use in a court of law. They must be an accurate representation of what they purport to be. I do most of my photography as art which is a visual interpretation of what I see in hope of evoking a pleasing response in the viewer.
If you have a Nikon, you have the ability to convert individual RAW files to jpeg in camera. Check out the camera menu. Not sure about other brands.
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