Guy Mancuso
Administrator, Instructor
Re: Fun with the Sony A7 Series Cameras( all of them)
Totally studly. Lol
Totally studly. Lol
Great to see you here. Join our insightful photographic forum today and start tapping into a huge wealth of photographic knowledge. Completing our simple registration process will allow you to gain access to exclusive content, add your own topics and posts, share your work and connect with other members through your own private inbox! And don’t forget to say hi!
It's because they both own shares in Mitakon.cool...same smiles
Firstly, AWESOME "heavy" processing :thumbs: !!!The shot of the workshop !!!!!
p.s. This was HEAVILY processed in both C1 and Photoshop.....
Thanks! The total area occupied by these terraces is over 60,000 acres in Yuanyang county. The largest is about 2,600 acres. The amount of work that went into building these terraces defy logic. They are over a thousand year old, but rice is still being cultivated in the traditional manner. These terraces can be up to 1000 meters up on the mountain and the slope ranged from 15 to 75 degrees!these are fabulous pictures, nsng! the people walking, especially in the first image, provides a sense of scale that shows just how impressive in size these rice terraces are. well done!
Ng, As per Doug’s comment +1 ...Excellent yet again.A few more Yuanyang rice terrace images. A7R w/70-400G. This is the second time I have used the 70-400G in a trip. I am glad I did as I had to use up to 400mm in several of my shots.
David...Always room for another photographer here in Cornwall with the amount of building work going on!<sigh> I have GOT to move to Cornwall.
It reminds me of my very first "5 star" image, taken when I was 12 years old on a family trip to Devon & Cornwall. I had my first SLR - a Pentax H3V. It was at Lands End, a classic sunset shot. Cornwall is near the top of the places I want to go back to ASAP.
You beat me to it. What is up with that??I want everybody to pay special attention to what Guy is holding!
Ng, As per Doug’s comment +1 ...Excellent yet again.
Those Paddy field contours must be a... “Cartographer’s nightmare to map but a photographer’s dream too snap” :ROTFL:
__________________________________________
Thanks Barry. Very appropriate, "Cartog's nightmare, photog's dream"
When I looked at these terraces, I have to give the utmost credit and respect to the Hani people. With just hand tools they have carved vast terraces on mountains to grow rice for over a thousand years. But the younger generation are slowly abandoning this lifestyle to seek jobs in towns and cities.
First time I held a D810. Too bigYou beat me to it. What is up with that??
.According to Cornish folklore, the Doom Bar was created by the Mermaid of Padstow as a dying curse.
In 1906, Enys Tregarthen, wrote that a Padstow local, Tristram Bird, bought a new gun and wanted to shoot something worthy of it. He went hunting seals at Hawker's Cove but found a young woman sitting on a rock brushing her hair. Entranced by her beauty, he offered to marry her and when she refused he shot her in retaliation, only realising afterwards that she was a mermaid. As she died she cursed the harbour with a "bar of doom", from Hawker's Cove to Trebetherick Bay. A terrible gale blew up that night and when it finally subsided there was the sandbar, "covered with wrecks of ships and bodies of drowned men"