Sculpture of Ice
Lightbox: http://www.flickr.com/photos/martinj...ream/lightbox/
Toyo 45AII, Schneider Super-Symmar 110 XL
Sculpture of Ice
Lightbox: http://www.flickr.com/photos/martinj...ream/lightbox/
Toyo 45AII, Schneider Super-Symmar 110 XL
I like it more than the previous landscape you posted. I think it's because I don't like heights. The short DOF makes you think about what's at hand, rather than what's yonder. When I'm on the edge of a rock or climbing a tower, I am comforted by dealing primarily with my immediate surroundings more than the view which might make me think, "Hey that's a long way to fall or tumble." Yet you've left enough background detail to show, "What a view, this hike was worth it." It's more story telling and communicating than a normal static f64 landscape.
Banks Lake, WA
Toyo 45A, Rodenstock 210mm (or 90mm? Can't remember!), T-Max 100
Jonathan
Well that is what it looks like in a more fromal landscape
cheers,
Luc
Field # ShenHao XPO45 - Monorail # Sinar P, F2[CENTER]6x6 # Minolta 1965 Autocord, 6x9 # Kodak 1946 Medalist II
Not sure if it counts as a landscape or not.
Sandstone & Ivy. Taken on Fomapan100 developed in Caffenol.
[IMG] Sandstone & Ivy by Marvin d martian100, on Flickr[/IMG]
Mart
Shepherd's Horse, Eastern Utah
Attachment 73082
Bookmarks