I see the light! Sorry. Just a little light humor there.
Good picture. You have room on either side for lettering. A good use of space in my opinion.
BEAUTIFUL!! Ansel Adams is one of my favorite photographers. Your black and white is just great and reminds me of his work Thanks for sharing.
Dale
Good light meter to avarage out the light and dark and not get one so dark you cannot see details and the other so blown out it is way too bright. Keep up the good work.
Thanks cnn. Both pictures have an impact to the viewer. I am glad you had this one too. Very good work.
The off center horse works also. It is called the rule of thirds. You try not to put your main subject in the very center of the picture. Usually it is more pleasing. However sometimes rules can be broken.
I wonder if she knows my mother in law. lol Keep up the good work.
Nice shots. I like 3 but just as a thought It might be interesting to reverse it and have the horse sharp and the U.S. flag out of focus.
I like to look at shots and get ideas on diffrent things to try if I come across similar scene.
Same problem a photographer has. Not enough light. Good eye.
Fish in the creek but fish under the hood.....
Wonderful pictures!
If your wife usually closes her eyes take a second picture right after the first. I have had that work with and without a flash. I have even counted. I would tell usually group shots "On 3" Then I would count: "One, Two take the shot, Three" They don't anticape the picture at two.
If I see lens flair I put up my hand out of view of the finder to block the sun from the flair in the lense.
I have Topaz but under windows with Photoshop CS5. good bundle. hope you get the suite download worked out.
Thanks Photocat. I gave someone the same advise about shooting in color a few weeks ago on this forum and convert to B&W due to having more options and I had one guy chew me out about it telling me it wasn't true black and white. It looked black and white to me.
I own Canon (Rebel, 40D and 5D Mark ii) and my brother owns Nikon. Which is better....It's kind of like beauty. It is in the eye of the beholder. The trick is to know your equipment in what it can and can not do. If you are buying a new camera and are not sure what to get...do your reasearch and go to a photo store (a real one not Best Buy) and try the diffrent cameras. The feel and weight as well as what the camera will do will help you decide.