Thanks! That is a genuine compliment coming from you UTMike.
If you click on my screen name and then click on the number of topics created you can find prior posts.
Thanks for the compliment!
Yesterday I posted a few B&W I shot just prior to a big storm on and around the GSL. Here are some color versions.
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A magical moment wonderfully preserved!
I was out on the south end of the GSL, near Saltair. The wind was blowing and there was enough dust that it was gritty between my teeth. Enormous clouds. I had to quit shooting when the rain started, and within 5 minutes the temp went from 90 to 68.
I ended up post-processing most as B&W.
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I have one in box, never used. I would consider selling so PM me with an offer if interested.
Hallstatt and Heiligenblut in Austria
Hwy SS44bis in Italy from the Austrian border to St Leonhard
Florence, Italy
Zion National Park, Utah
Oregon Coast
Spent a relaxing weekend in Springdale, just outside the entrance to Zion NP. On Saturday we drove over the Mt. Carmel Hwy and then decided to turn north and visit Bryce as well. On Sunday we stopped at Kolob Canyons (part of Zion NP). I shot mostly in flat mid-day light, but it was a nice day with snow in Bryce that made a nice contrast.
The first 2 are from Bryce and the other 4 are from Kolob Canyons.
I shot everything with my Nikon 810A and Nikkor 18-35.
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HDR exists because nature has an even wider dynamic range than camera sensors today.
I shoot a fair number of panos in much the same way Gene51 described. Almost all are hand held. I shoot raw, so WB is irrelevant, but one must always shoot in manual mode. I prefer using a 50mm lens (or at least a 35mm) so as to avoid distortion from a wider lens. I even shot a massive two-row and about 10 shot wide pano of the interior of a church. PS is wonderful at stitching them together. The result is a truly large file, which makes processing slow, but the number of pixels in the finished photo is incredible.
In most states, the possession of a deed is not the best evidence of ownership, but the recording of that deed on the (usually county) records is.
I love it. I wrote my daughter a check for something I owed her. I wanted to see what would happen. Sure enough, two days later she called to ask how to get that money into her account.
Technically, this is a combination. A permutation is when the order matters.
It is not factorial. Factorial is written as x! which is defined to be x * (x-1) * (x-2) . . . * 1
The woodcarver of that altar was Tilman Riemenschneider, who died in about 1531. He worked mostly in that general area and several of his altar pieces exist nearby. He is one of the most famous of his craft