Shane's cabin with view of Grand Teton
BigWahoo wrote:
The best that you can produce.
To be serious; any quality printer will use the highest quality files that you send them.
I don't use Lightroom but use Adobe PSE.
The higher the quality files the better.
sorry if I didn't ask that the correct way. Most places require jpeg. What's the best highest quality format to get the best print
What's the highest quality image, that can be sent to a printer? From Lightroom
I'm sure this can be turned around. Caused by global warming lol
Going next week. Hoping for a few clear days
cday wrote:
Don't you just love Fort Fisher! Beaufort and Southport are some of my favorite places to visit, along with the OBX!! Love your photo.
i've been to Southport but never Fort Fisher
I've taken many photos of the local mill. This is the first ones with snow(i mean ice). What do you think
snapitup wrote:
Fine images of quiet nature at work. I had a discussion with a painter who said she thought sun-up and sun-down images produce similar results with no recognizable differences. I disagreed with her from my experience. What do you think?
I think the biggest difference is the warmth of the colors. I seem to get more flares with sunsets. They are both difficult to take. They never seem to come out the way I think.
The 30 mins before and after always seem the best.
Thanks all for the kind words
LeoB wrote:
Beautiful, can you tell us a bit about how you captured it?
Canon 6D 24-105 f/4L
24mm
F/9
ISO 100
Tripod
2 Sec delay
30 minutes of playing around in Lightroom
Here is a couple more from this past weekend
Great shot. Would love to go one day. I see a lot of wonderful pictures from there. Hope you post more
Taken this weekend at Fort Fisher. Very cold getting out that early, but it was worth it
These were taken with canon 6d no flash, 1600 iso.
On April 17, 1865 General Joseph Eggleston Johnston and Major General William Tecumseh Sherman met at the farm of James and Nancy Bennett to begin negotiations the terms of the surrender for all troops still fighting in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina. Their negotiations would continue from April 18th until April 26, 1865. As a result of the peace treaty, 89,270 Confederate soldiers laid down their arms and returned home. This was the largest surrender of the Civil War