Pemihan
Well-known member
This looks like a painting from the 1800's!Does this one seem better?
Wonderful image, great job.
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This looks like a painting from the 1800's!Does this one seem better?
Looks a lot better but the white balance still looks a bit off in the foreground shadows IMHO - something C1 can easily fix these days.
Ha! Although I like your version much better, I know exactly what you mean about snow on the volcanic ash dunes. Wonderful image!Stokksnes dunes towards Vestrahorn, Iceland.
Alpa STC + IQ3100 + Rodie 40mm. 1/25th f11 and 1 degree forward tilt. ISO 100
A much photographed location but the conditions are always changing and I loved the snow on the volcanic ash dunes.
Thanks Dave, we must have been standing on the same dune!Ha! Although I like your version much better, I know exactly what you mean about snow on the volcanic ash dunes. Wonderful image!
I don't know about you, but I had to heal out hundreds of birds that just looked like long skinny dust spots.
Dave
Great shot!Ha! Although I like your version much better, I know exactly what you mean about snow on the volcanic ash dunes. Wonderful image!
I don't know about you, but I had to heal out hundreds of birds that just looked like long skinny dust spots.
Dave
Greg,
Thanks EJ. I screw that up every time; no excuse based on the popularity of that location. I have an image of the Sólheimajökull Glacier - that took me a while to get right.Great shot!
Just FYI - it's spelled with two k's and one s - Stokksnes
Thanks for the good words Dave. I feel fortunate to see so many lovely places. And yes, there is probably a Kodachrome, sometimes even Ektachrome, “feel” to my work in post. I loved shooting with both back in the day, though I became a real sucker for Velvia, once I started traveling to the tropics. I suspect I am often unaware I am doing it in post. It’s why I try to make sure my wife vettes each image.Greg,
That must be an amazing place. This and other images you have shared appear "Kodachrome-like". If all the world looked like this, would we be so jaded that nothing would be extraordinary?
This is indeed extraordinary, and I'm sure, good for the soul.:thumbs:
The pastels are simply stunning for me... your wife apparently does a wonderful vetting by the way. Slide film is part of my acquired DNA having used it for decades and returning to it now, via acquiring old film stocks and now using the new E100. The old 120 slide films are wonderful to use in the H camera.Thanks for the good words Dave. I feel fortunate to see so many lovely places. And yes, there is probably a Kodachrome, sometimes even Ektachrome, “feel” to my work in post. I loved shooting with both back in the day, though I became a real sucker for Velvia, once I started traveling to the tropics. I suspect I am often unaware I am doing it in post. It’s why I try to make sure my wife vettes each image.
I hope I never become jaded about natural beauty.
The sense of guilt has been building for years as I enjoy the many inspiring images shared by members of the forum but have been reluctant to post any of my work. This photograph made at Englewood Beach, Florida that was captured with a Linhof Techno. What was interesting was the lack of flare with the 23mm. View attachment 139447
Sublime! Thanks for posting.I posted a similar image last year from this session, but recently came across this shot taken about six minutes earlier and at 40x slower shutter speed. I prefer this one:
Cambo 1600 | Rodie 40 | Trichro | f/11 | 5s | ISO 35
Just such a lovely image - mystery of the cloud to the mountain offset by a foreground that works to engage.Stokksnes dunes towards Vestrahorn, Iceland.
Alpa STC + IQ3100 + Rodie 40mm. 1/25th f11 and 1 degree forward tilt. ISO 100
A much photographed location but the conditions are always changing and I loved the snow on the volcanic ash dunes.
Many thanks for your very generous comment Geoff.Just such a lovely image - mystery of the cloud to the mountain offset by a foreground that works to engage.