Cindy Flood
Super Moderator
Re: More and more fun with M8 images
My 75 lux shot.
My 75 lux shot.
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!
i love elliot erwitt. i've seen and admired so many of his pictures since i was a kid, but i never knew who was the photographer until a few years ago. sometimes i wonder if his work drove me to majoring in anthropology.I had fun with this one. An Elliot Erwitt moment?
M8, 35 Summicron
--Peter
Thanks, Jack. The 75 lux is a really special lens (especially now that DAG has perfected my copy.)Cindy: IMO framing like your flower shot, regardless of subject, is what the 75 Lux excels at -- very nice capture!
that'd be interesting. i wondered about this also. i've also thought of staging this. i'll have my friend in the background peeking over the dumpster, and wait for someone to walk by and do the same thing as this gentleman did (trying not to get into the the camera's view). i hope the dumpster will still be there.Dan: I wonder how the image would change if the man were in focus and the background out? I assume he's a waiter and the "dump" in the background is ironic
Especially when you've got an M8 and a CV 35/2.5!Maggie, I second the motion on the last B&W of the kid with the cowboy hat and the reflection in the puddle. That is a "damn, I wish I'd taken that" shot.
Ain't playing in the dark fun?
--Peter
Bummer, the dumpster was gone when I went backDan: I wonder how the image would change if the man were in focus and the background out? I assume he's a waiter and the "dump" in the background is ironic