Great cloud drama.
And both shots are tack sharp.
Type: Posts; User: barnninny; Keyword(s):
Great cloud drama.
And both shots are tack sharp.
I'm soooooo glad I finally decided to see what in the world this thread was about.
This series could do more to renew interest in LF photography than the TravelWide will.
Sounds like an interesting idea, but I'd be no help with the techy geek stuff.
Harley has a point.
I guess photons grew up faster, then. They had to. There were chickens to milk and cows to be picked.
Good book. I liked PrairyErth even better.
You have a very readily identifiable style, cj.
Yup, I dig it.
I grew up in rural America. I don't think it's any more "the real America" than urban America is. But it is the most invisible America.
Love this.
Sure, but photons are so much better today than they were a hundred years ago.
I always like looking at old school pictures like that and puzzling over the ways that time of their lives was like and dislike the same stage of life today.
Wicked atmospherics, saturnus.
Really nice work, Don. I especially like the first image in the first set. It's easy to imagine someone hunched over that desk in that claustrophobic room, trying to keep the flu drawing. ...
That one's fascinating, Scott.
Great sense of vastness, and I like how the moisture(?) on the road echoes the cloud shapes.
Love it. It looks like something out of a '50s advertisement.
I think I'll leave mine accoutreless, at least for a while, and do pinhole shots with it.
Blues and browns (and reds)! I love it.
Yeah, fascinating place, and a lot of great images, Bryan. Looks like you guys could easily shoot in there for a year without exhausting it.
Likewise.
I think you've got an interesting subject you can really work, there, Bryan. The whole mill, I mean.
Pretty sure that's the first image I've seen here taken from the door of a tractor. Looks like somebody taught Hayden the rule of 3rds.
Sony's RX100 seems to get most of the press in that class...
He didn't take your previous post to be rude. Whether you meant it to be or not, your previous post was rude. There are non-rude ways to express the concerns you had.
And it's maddeningly rude...
Looks like a great place to work, Bob.
I like both of those a lot, Bryan. The first one is very stark. The second one . . . well, I love texture and I love geometry. An image that's almost entirely one tone has no business being that...
Aspens make such lovely pictures.
If you find yourself crossing that big river again down Memphis way, I'd be interested.
Fixed that for you.
Indeed. I love working with just blues and browns.
Not to go all categorical imperative or anything, but: since the same is true for all of us, that's a very selfish way to live.
Nice vertical composition, Scott.
Very cool. I keep waiting for a little girl to walk out of one of them and spin her head around.
Now there's a name that would suggest a completely different line of business today.
Love the photos.
Well said.
Thanks for sharing your experience, Maris. I don't know how many of us get to watch large numbers of people look at photographs, but I know I don't, so I found it very valuable.
Excellent job getting the eyes good and sharp. The word "piercing" comes to mind.
Have to say I don't get why this pushes so many buttons. Do I get what he's doing? No. I don't get performance art in general, if that's even what this is.
But nothing about it makes me wanna...
That one has a feel to it I really like.
That made me giggle.