This 'town' has no ZIP code
If it's May then it's Tulip Time in Pella. Here's a few pics.
Triplets wrote:
It appears to have been cropped out of the one marked "Affinity".
Yes but it was cropped by Affinity. It was a very sunny day and many of the buildings were on the shady side. What sort of filter might reduce the glare? Or am I setting the camera wrong? I have been using it on full auto cause it is supposed to have such a fast focus.
I was out taking pictures of courthouses using my new Sony RX19 miv. But when I open them on my pc they have big pink spots - apparently where the sun was reflecting. Ii used both corel psp and affinity but it only seems to occur when I open the raw photo with corel?
Here are 2 horses in the Teddy Roosevelt National Park, ND, the original and one using Corel PSP, one done with Affinity with its HDR, and one with Affinity and googles NKI, and Affinity HDR using one of James Ristons customization. I don't know where the glowing orb came from in Corel, but it is very obvious in all the options that they show, no extra edits, just saved as jpegs. I just picked one out of the different processes. Affinity did have some that were less "gaudy" but since I wasn't really doing a technical compare I just picked one from each type..
For the swing bridge - Rock Island Arsenal, Rock Island, IL
Hi, I just traded in 2 Nikons (3100,5300) and got a RX10 IV. Were these all taken using the auto settings, or did you use the camera manually? Great shots, hope I can get a few like them.
That is because that is my photo, trying to approximate the ones that this person took.
Style - a word with many ways to define it. I assume that when using it in the context of art, it refers to producing whatever you make in a way that is somewhat unique an identifiable as the work of a particular artist - you. I think that style in those terms develops as the artists work does. We all start with a camera - playing around, but as we learn to manipulate light and color your style begins to show. If it is unique enough, and people connect with it, your style is reinforced. Picasso, was inventive and daring enough to have several styles, or periods. I don't feel that I have a particular style and may never, am I too old, in too bad health - who knows? I think that style finds you, as much as you find a style. Learning and making use of various techniques - and knowing which are going to contribute to your style are important, but more than technical skill is making the work yours. More than 'nuff said...
Style - a word with many ways to define it. I assume that when using it in the context of art, it refers to producing whatever you make in a way that is somewhat unique an identifiable as the work of a particular artist, you. I think that style in those terms develops as the artists work does. We all start with a camera - playing around, but as we learn to manipulate light and color your style begins to show. If it is unique enough, and people connect with it, your style is reinforced. Picasso, was inventive and daring enough to have several styles, or periods. I don't feel that I have a particular style and may never, am I too old, in too bad health - who knows? Your style finds you as much as you find your style. Learning and making use of various techniques - and knowing which are going to contribute to your style are important, but more than technical skill is making the work yours. More than 'nuff said...
alolewis wrote:
Was it Vivian Maieir, a street photographer who was a nanny. She was not discovered until after her death when a person bought her prints and negatives and unexposed film at an action.
I don't think that any of the female photoraphers that i have found, (vivian mairie, mary ellen mark, diane arbus and dorethea lange) are this woman., of course I could be wrong, but the pictures that I saw looked almost like daguerreotype. just faces lined up on square ragged frames.
My try at copying:
this may be an odd request, but some day during the last few weeks , I think it may have been jerrryc42, posted a link to a woman photographer( not a current photographer - antiques) who took very "grungy" looking pix - mainly headshots. I don't remember the artists name. does anyone know who I'm talking about?
Every now and then things at the edges of my photos are slanted. See attachment, telephone pole and sign.. What causes this?