S
Shelby Lewis
Guest
Thanks Darr!preeeeety!!
:thumbup:
Shelby
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Thanks Darr!preeeeety!!
:thumbup:
I like the tones in this.Jack and Guy... truly fantastic work. Loving the light quality in the workshop images. I've got my first visit to the GC this coming July... VERY excited.
One from the other night:
Cheers!
Shelby
GuyI like the tones in this.
Well . . . . here we go with my new Alpa Max. + Hasselblad H4d 60 back + Alpa APO Switar 35mm lens. Two frames stitched by shifting the back. Not much of an image but it's taken a few hours to sort out flat frames and the like, working out presets for shifts. Color casts and vignetting were fully sorted out in Phocus with the presets. Pixel dimensions of the finished tiff are roughly 13,000 x 9,000.
Yeah, I really am a gear whore.
Looking very nice Woody. It's all thereWell . . . . here we go with my new Alpa Max. + Hasselblad H4d 60 back + Alpa APO Switar 35mm lens. Two frames stitched by shifting the back. Not much of an image but it's taken a few hours to sort out flat frames and the like, working out presets for shifts. Color casts and vignetting were fully controlled in Phocus with the presets. Pixel dimensions of the finished tiff are roughly 13,000 x 9,000.
Yeah, I really am a gear whore.
Thanks Woody it was the vertical i put on my new website. I liked it better tooGuy
I much prefer the vertical version of your shot. It is a strong composition with the tree providing strength.
The Helicon focus looks like it is doing a good job here for you
Woody
Did this in a rush - spotting to come.The Beta arrived!
Wonderful capture...I have not seen the Switar look better.
(Irrespective of the dust.):thumbup:
Bob
Captures look great .... a couple of small spots not a big deal. Indeed nothing like my H343 Scans...too 4-5 HOURS per capture just to spot and I had very good dust free conditions. Wish I could say the same for my lab.Did this in a rush - spotting to come.
30 seconds is a long exposure...even at ISO 50.Woody the detail and DR are there but am I seeing some type of noise pattern. Maybe Phocus better here?
This is super... tones, dynamic range, color, sharpness (not to mention the great composition). It's all there. :thumbup:
I have been very pleased with the negative Clarity slider in C1 for this purpose, specially with dusty or misty scenes.Ditto 100%! I think that is what gives Jack's (and Guy's) images such presence.
Looking good Woody!Well . . . . here we go with my new Alpa Max. + Hasselblad H4d 60 back + Alpa APO Switar 35mm lens. Two frames stitched by shifting the back. Not much of an image but it's taken a few hours to sort out flat frames and the like, working out presets for shifts. Color casts and vignetting were fully controlled in Phocus with the presets. Pixel dimensions of the finished tiff are roughly 13,000 x 9,000.
Yeah, I really am a gear whore.
Incredible view :thumbs: and the middle of the shot is really good!Thank you Viablex!
Just for fun, I grabbed this one just after the one above, a repost from the trips thread: The first afternoon we had a lone snow storm cloud come right up the center of the canyon and start dumping its load while we were waiting for sunset. It was large so it did not appear as one cloud, but rather a small storm unless you viewed the entire length of it. The Sun was low enough to hit underneath it and gave us the changing side-light view, so I decided it might be a fun pano to try and grabbed it quickly. It is 7 frames at 55mm covering almost 180 degrees of view from the West end of the South Rim. This is 2000 pixels wide here, but the original would print 3 feet tall by 15 feet wide at 240 PPI with intricate detail. Not the greatest image, and I'd certainly need to work it more before printing it, but an interesting view we can't usually encompass with our normal vision: