Thanks Allen. When you have good light like that, all you have to do is not screw up.
Printable View
Thanks Allen. When you have good light like that, all you have to do is not screw up.
Springtime in the ravine, Master Technika 4x5 on Kodak E100VS (anybody hoarding any of this in 8x10 they might want to get rid of?) shot with a Fuji A 360mm f/22 at 1/2 second.
LJS
If you ever wanted to know what a 180mm protar V looks like on 11x14, here ya go! =)
http://www.alec.com/photos/Roofdeck_Sm.jpg
Great images everyone... :)
The following happens to be one of a few images I captured this past May 2009, while being AWOL from my real world oil, and gas responsibilities.
While I waited for a larger cloud formation to possibly appear from behind the mountain, I noticed that a lone cross-country skier decided to pop their frigging head over the mountain crest, and at that moment this skier decided to descend from the top of the mountain to the bottom tree line, just as I was ready to trigger the event. The bugger took forever, and left a tasteless telemark trail along the ridge that points to the viewer, which unfortunately is too small to be seen in this web image. At that moment, I could not stop thinking about how this person became alone on that slope, where I could not believe how foolish, or reckless they were at the time.
As the cross-country skier approached the first major ridge, the skier paused briefly, obviously took a breath or a picture, and then decided to take a dramatic turn to their right, straight as a crow flies, right down into the cirque's fresh snow.
I swear I heard that person scream all the way down to the trees...
jim k
Mount Shark, Kananaskis Provincial Park, Alberta, Canada, 2009
http://largeformatgroupimages.jimkit...s/09051706.jpg
Jim K, that's a really interesting one, the separate layers add great depth (and sense of scale)... Excellent...
Jiri
Jim, touch my eyes! I'm going to have to save my nickels and dimes for this one too. ;)
Jim, what filters (if any) did you use in capturing this image? Seems like I remember that you have a lot of "tricks" in processing that you employ.
Great image and thanks for posting.