I would like to ask, out of ignorance, how you metered this scene.
Thank you,
Printable View
I read this morning about a couple who had to be rescued from a corn maze by the police: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/nati...-call-911.html
Here's to them:
Inside a Maze on a Stormy Day, Sauvie Island
http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6041/...2789bfd5_b.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/austingranger/
I think pretty much all the images on the last three or four pages are fabulous. Good job, folks!
A-mazing...:D
(great image, too!)
Thanks from me h20man!
BTW when I posted the Lands End Sunset this morning I forgot to mention that the birds standing on the far rock next to the sun are all Brown Pelicans and they are all looking at the sunset! It's a good place to watch the sun disappear beneath the horizion and the Pelican seems to enjoy it as much as humans do.
Thomas
http://gelatina.altervista.org/pics/...gonevesred.jpg
This one is difficult to scan, and to print either, Red filter 25A, SA90/8, Arca Swiss F.
IN the print the pinewood forest is visible on the mountains with detail that is lost here.
Many thanks,
Vaughn, Frank, chassis, Ibenac, Giovanni, John,
Bruce; the film was taken at 6.40 a.m. of July, I expose for the shadow on the small stone on the snow, used the orange filter, developing the film on ID-11, N-1.
These film was one of my firs 4x4 film on b/w, for me was overxposed of 1 f/stop; on the darkroom burning the snow below; Tetenal baryt vario paper, Dokumol developer. At the next.
Velvia 100F.
I would like to point out that it is extremely dangerous to photograph the sun. When the sun is very close to the horizion, as it is in this image , it is safe to glance at it for a second at max, but never - ever look at it directly with optics without a suitable filter. In this case I used a wide angle lens which did not magnify the scene and a B+W polarizer for eye insurance and limited my visual inspection to a fraction of a second. The energy of the sun, especially that which transmitted through an optical lens, is capble of cooking the human eye like a hard-boiled egg in a fraction of a second.
I metered off the corona.
Thomas