It can't be the fault of the operator and his use of the lens-cap-as-shutter! :cool:
Definitely not your fault, but to be truly scientific, you need to test several El Capitans.
12-Apr-2016, 12:20
StoneNYC
Re: f64
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vaughn
Photographing El Capitan from the meadow with the 11x14. Two exposures, same lens, nothing else moved. One dang negative is sharper than the other. Something must have happened to the lens! You turn your back on an Artar and they'll change on you! It's a Red Dot - must be a commie. It can't be the fault of the operator and his use of the lens-cap-as-shutter! :cool:
Haha!
Vaughn, it wasn't the lens, it was when you turned your back on the mountain, the mountain moved mid-shot!
:)
12-Apr-2016, 12:34
Jody_S
Re: f64
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken Lee
Definitely not your fault, but to be truly scientific, you need to test several El Capitans.
Sign me up. I'll start a Kickstarter immediately.
12-Apr-2016, 13:03
Drew Wiley
Re: f64
Or due to failure to use a tad of front tilt. Most of the cliff is not truly vertical. A couple of cliff-jumper chutists have proven that!