Mine for today. My wife and I went to the Museum of Modern Art to see an exhibit on studio photography. To be honest, I was not impressed, but I thought this exposed stairwell was cool. I waited for a long time to get people walking in both directions, but eventually gave in to my wife's desire to go see the Frank Lloyd Wright exhibit. D800 | 24-70 | 66mm | f/3.2 | 1/30s | ISO 640 Processed using Silver Efex
@Msmoto Very cool image! I tried something similar when I was first learning photography ( film, late '70s ) and could never get the glass to look so wonderfully transparent. Or did you pull some PS slight of hand?
For all our friends still dealing with snow up north.........a Pink Hibiscus in Tampa.
Nikon D7100; AF-S DX 35mm f1.8; AF-S DX Macro 40mm f2.8; AF-S DX 18-200mm VRII; SB-700 Speed Light and a bunch of other not very noteworthy stuff......
We've had some great discussions over the past few months about macro photography and focus stacking. After several months of reading and researching various techniques (not to mention a LOT of trial and error), I'm happy to unveil my first decent effort. D800 | 105mm | f/8 | 1/60s | ISO 100 33 images, all using an R1 speedlight system (no SU-800 controller) Stacked using Zerene stacker in P-Max mode Still a lot to learn, particularly about the software, and my set up was a total hack, so there's work to be done there as well. I'm also going to post this on the critique thread, as I'd like to hear what you all think about this and what could be improved upon. I also want to add the full size version here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/gdanford/13233385865/sizes/o/ The detail is incredible.
I think I may revisit this vantage point again, and spend more time working the light. There was an awesome sky about 6 weeks ago that would have looked really cool with this setting. At least that is what I'm going to keep telling myself. And, no, of course I didn't have my camera with me to catch the awesome sky. Even my cheap screw in grad ND filter might have helped here, but of course, I left it in the car.
Post edited by dissent on
- Ian . . . [D7000, D7100; Nikon glass: 35 f1.8, 85 f1.8, 70-300 VR, 105 f2.8 VR, 12-24 f4; 16-85 VR, 300 f4D, 14E-II TC, SB-400, SB-700 . . . and still plenty of ignorance]
I think I may revisit this vantage point again, and spend more time working the light. There was an awesome sky about 6 weeks ago that would have looked really cool with this setting. At least that is what I'm going to keep telling myself. And, no, of course I didn't have my camera with me to catch the awesome sky. Even my cheap screw in grad ND filter might have helped here, but of course, I left it in the car.
I'm sure you could have done many things with the available light, used a filter, etc., I get the feeling you're not happy with this shot but I would be thrilled to have captured such a beautiful picture.
Nikon D7100; AF-S DX 35mm f1.8; AF-S DX Macro 40mm f2.8; AF-S DX 18-200mm VRII; SB-700 Speed Light and a bunch of other not very noteworthy stuff......
Comments
D800 | 24-70 | 66mm | f/3.2 | 1/30s | ISO 640 Processed using Silver Efex
I did have to remove a reflection from the bottom surface of the Lexan along the left lower edge of the card. To see some variations:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fantinesfotos/
John Stamos playing drums with the Beach Boys
D3s f4 200mm 1/100 ISO800 (70-200 2.8)
D800+ AF-S 16-35mm F4G VR. 5 shot HDR, compiled in HDR Efx Pro 2.0 | Large Version
D3100 | 50mm | F4 | 1/200 | ISO 100 | Blue Gel With External Flash
Nikon D40, 28-300mm lens.
(Old N Gauge)
D800 | 105mm | f/8 | 1/60s | ISO 100
33 images, all using an R1 speedlight system (no SU-800 controller)
Stacked using Zerene stacker in P-Max mode
Still a lot to learn, particularly about the software, and my set up was a total hack, so there's work to be done there as well. I'm also going to post this on the critique thread, as I'd like to hear what you all think about this and what could be improved upon.
I also want to add the full size version here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gdanford/13233385865/sizes/o/
The detail is incredible.
D3200; Sigma 35 1.4
Even my cheap screw in grad ND filter might have helped here, but of course, I left it in the car.