Landscapelover
Senior Subscriber Member
Re: Fun with D800 Photos
Cherry Creek State Park, CO
Nikon D800E; Nikon 16-35mm
Cherry Creek State Park, CO
Nikon D800E; Nikon 16-35mm
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It seems that this lens, as one of the few, makes the D800E shine in the way it should! But the scenery might also contribute a lot!Telluride Golf Course at sunset Zeiss 35/2 D800E
Steven
Hi Landscapelover - very nice shot but my EXIF-viewer says "Hasselblad, 70 mm" ??.
Cherry Creek State Park, CO
Nikon D800E; Nikon 16-35mm
Oop!!!! Sorry, it was H3DII-30 with HCD 35-90mm.I mixed up!Hi Landscapelover - very nice shot but my EXIF-viewer says "Hasselblad, 70 mm" ??.
I'll take a guess and say that you assigned sRGB to the image the first time vs converting to sRGB ...Now I used "save for web" which I never did and had to do before but IMHO it looks better:
Apologies for the OT :salute:
Oop!!!! Sorry, it was H3DII-30 with HCD 35-90mm.I mixed up!
Thanks Magic.
Ustein your colors look great. I found lately, aside from my profile and Camera Standard in ACR, that tweaking the primaries makes my colors more natural. Mostly lowering the green and red primaries.Posted this i nApril but improved in processing:
Yes those aerials.>I like the yellow dunes look fantastic.
Do you mean the aerial photos? These are rock formations nearby in the middle of nowhere.
Welcome to Copenhagen Jack, hope you enjoy your stay ...Totally different for me. Walking at night and on the docks looking across at the Copenhagen Opera House, and see a sailing ship coming into view. No tripod, so I hand-hold my 24-120 zoom at f 4, ISO 3200 for a 1/5 second exposure. Here's the result, clearly not perfect, but I like it anyway :
Thanks BSEH! Yes Christiana was really interesting, but I knew well enough to keep my camera in my pants so to speak. OTOH I'm quite a bit larger than the typical Dane -- 200CM tall and 113 Kilos -- so most folks tended to give me a relatively wide berth :ROTFL: (Though I did look eye to eye at a couple Swede's while there!)Welcome to Copenhagen Jack, hope you enjoy your stay ...
And photoshooting at Christiania can be a little dangerous, at Pusher Street... hope all went well
A case can be made for all three crops....quite subjective but I think the original image you 1st posted is the most effective. It provides the viewer with a somewhat mysterious uneasy feeling of the interior's darkened enviorment which goes hand and hand with not knowing what to expect as ones eyes follow the circular path as it spirals ever higher. The one below the original is good too with slightly more interesting interior lines. Both are terrific images with great tonality.This is a long, spiraling ramp up, probably four or five complete turns to the top, so I shot similar compositions a few different locations. Then to top it off, this one is an unconstrained crop which is unusual for me to do. Finally, keep in mind, these are quickly processed versions on my MacBookAir in my hotel room after a day of shooting.
All that said, I cropped this one the way I did to get the floor/wall seam in the lower RH corner and to eliminate a small hot spot from the window left. Here is the full frame version (in color), ultimately I might just process out the hot spot and leave it full frame or crop to 3:4:
Here are two other candidates for comparison, and I like them all for different reasons:
PS: You can't help but LOVE the DR on this cam!
PPS: I get more surprised (impressed) by the performance of the 24-120 every time I use it.