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Technical Camera Images

Pemihan

Well-known member


Storms over the seemingly endless Wyoming Prairie once ruled by the Lakota and Cheyenne..
Cambo WRS 1250, IQ160, SK60XL - two shot stitch.
 

rga

Member
For some reason I'm finding it extremely difficult to post images to my albums here and not have them all resized and re-proportioned in gruesome ways. So I'll just post a link to them on my site and hope some of you will take a look.
Going back through some old images and reprocessing with Capture One Pro 8 as well as new CC techniques, I found this one from my second MFDB, a P45+ mounted on a Hasselblad Flexbody. I really like it:
Robert Adler Photography | Why I Have 8TB of Image Files

Thanks for looking!
Bob
 

Ed Hurst

Well-known member
What is the deal with the letter on top of some of the piles? Are they the remnant of an art installation project?
I was there a couple of months back and worked out that they spell the message "marry me XXX" (the XXX being a woman's name). Don't know if that was an artistic project or someone who went to a lot of trouble to be romantic! (You can't see all of the letters in this image)
 

danlindberg

Well-known member
Yes, I 've posted this image a while back (view from my terrace) but today we are 15 people climbing it :D 1 200 metres high and only a couple of km from the sea.
It's an eight hour trekking and I'm going totally minimalistic, bringing the Alpa TC and a single lens....the XL 28 and nothing else. Well, my smallest and lightest tripod the Gitzo 2 series is coming with me as well.

6 litres of water per person and big sandwiches. :)

 

danlindberg

Well-known member
Wow, some trekking we managed yesterday! It was definitely tougher than I anticipated. It was really difficult to think photography because I was so much concentrating on the tiny narrow pathways and not looking down a few hundred metres just beside me.....and when we had a break I was catching my breath, the heart pumping away and legs shaking like crazy. Yeah, I know, I should be in better shape :p
Halfway up I hadn't even opened my backpack, but here I sat behind my daughter and I shot this as a familysnap, handheld at 1/125 and straight into the sun. This was after 3 hours trekking uphill all the time and around 5 minute breaks an hour.
 

Shashin

Well-known member
Well Dan, I can tell you it never gets easier. It may get faster, maybe longer between breaks, but it is always hard, it always hurts. But that is why you carry a camera--no one can tell if you are working or resting. ;)
 
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