Lovely image with excellent feeling of depth & perspective.
Texture of the water is wonderful.
Would make a beautiful large print.
Lovely image with excellent feeling of depth & perspective.
Texture of the water is wonderful.
Would make a beautiful large print.
I know just enough to be dangerous !
Nicely seen, Mjork...
Neil
Mjork,
Inspired view, like it!
Cheers,
Renato
My latest obsession has the edges of two--count-'em, two--waters: Nine Mile Creek below, and a stretch of the Erie Canal carried on a stone aqueduct above, near Camillus, NY. The aqueduct was built in the early 1840s when the Erie Canal was first enlarged, and was restored and re-filled in 2008-2009. It is close to where I live, and I've been stopping by every so often over the past month or two. It should be particularly interesting when the inevitable snow arrives.
8x10 Korona, Schneider g-claron 240mm, Ilford HP5.
Equally good, both of them,
Paperbark Forms, Lake Weyba
Gelatin-silver photograph on Freestyle Private Reserve VC FB photographic paper, image size 24.6cm X 19.6cm, from a 8x10 Kodak TriX Pan Professional negative exposed in a Tachihara 810HD triple extension field view camera
fitted with a Schneider Super Angulon 121mm f8 lens.
Photography:first utterance. Sir John Herschel, 14 March 1839 at the Royal Society. "...Photography or the application of the Chemical rays of light to the purpose of pictorial representation,..".
Amicalola Falls is the largest waterfall in GA, and conveniently located just a few miles from my new residence. Due to the long drought, the water flow the last few months has been very small. Over the weekend we had a lot of rain (luckily helping stoke the fires up north in the Smokies) and yesterday I found the waterfall to be flowing very well. It was a wet, cold, and foggy day, which was pretty neat. You can see the main falls up in the fog and the observation deck.
Chamonix 45n1, Nikkor 90mm f/8, FP4+, Acufine:
And here is a close-up of the falls from the deck, using a 47mm XL and slightly cropped due to a tiny bit of vignetting:
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