really caught the morning light....nice warm tones
great sunset, good pose for the youngster, must have been a nice day overall
Jblanke wrote:
Little in the photographic discipline can be described as "reasonably priced." I guess there is no reason to expect that lens caps would be either. I honestly believe the manufacturers do that stuff on purpose. OR, maybe they are so expensive because they are digital lens caps?????
Yea, their either on or off...that's binary which makes them digital...
jerryc41 wrote:
Yes! Apparently, the team of spies that Canon sent to Nikon has captured the secret plans needed to construct a lens cap with center pinch. From what I hear, it works rather well.
works well, how? Putting it on, taking it off or keeping the dust off the lens...lol
No. 1 is great, No. 2 not so bad either, and I don't think you lost anything shooting through the window.
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM
375mm iso 1000; 1/1250s; f/6.3
at the Catty Shack in Jax, fl
Great concept, I like it. would make a fantastic album cover...album??? I like the frame and your choice of earth tones over the texture. Good job.
with the bright colors against the leaves, kinda reminds me of the Mummers Parade
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM
400mm iso 1250; 1/1600s; f/14
From the fishing pier at Cape Henlopen St. Pk.
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM
The Catty Shack in Jacksonville, FL. Tough to shoot through double chain-link fences. I had to try long zoom and wide apeture to reduce DOF to minimum.
400mm, iso 1000; 1/200s; f/6.3
340mm iso 1000; 1/2500s; f/6.3
77firebird wrote:
Any and all may download and do your own magic and repost. That I would love to see how others would do this.
Sometimes you can think outside of the box... sometimes you just throw the box away.
This is extreme editing, but there is a graphic within your picture. Maybe a tee-shirt for the next anniversary of the bridge.
77firebird wrote:
Thanks JR1 for taking the time to post. I have been out working on my composition of photos. I was using the bridge in the background for point of interest. As for the tilt you are right I forgot to correct that, I was using my Canon 10-22 lens and forgot all about correcting the tilt.
If I may offer a criticism of the compositon, the strong, leading lines of the path, shadow of the curbing, and river bank are converging to the left of the bridge. The strong diaganol lines of the path are pulling the eye away from the brigde.
If the bridge is the point of interest, you could used the river banks as leading lines for example, but there are many ways to do it. Also remember the 'rule of thirds' and place the point of interest along or close to a one-third grid line. In other words, if the bridge is your point of interest and the river looks good, set the bridge across the top third line of the shot and let the water fill in the forground On the other hand if the sky is interesting, put the bridge across the bottom third line. It's not essential but if you're working on composition try it. As JR1 says, it looks like an ordinary snapshot but change the composition and you can work it into a good photograph.
Canon EOS 5D Mark II
EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM
400mm iso 1600; 1/400s; f/7.1