Thank you.
Silos, Eastern Washington by Austin Granger, on Flickr
Haystack with Spool, Eastern Washington by Austin Granger, on Flickr
Thank you.
Silos, Eastern Washington by Austin Granger, on Flickr
Haystack with Spool, Eastern Washington by Austin Granger, on Flickr
Good discussion above. I can always learn from these exchanges. But I think I'll avoid 'gators.
And since Austin just brought up Eastern Washington, here's Palouse Falls during a blizzard 2 weeks ago. One thing that surprised me was how bright the meter reading was - it seemed really gloomy to me. Anyway, on TriX and #8 filter there's a bit of detail in the falling water. For those who've never been there the pool at the bottom is 400 feet below the camera position.
[IMG]R4N1c LFF by John Olsen, on Flickr[/IMG]
Wow John, if you didn't say otherwise I would have thought that was a small, maybe 2-foot drop into a snowy pool. The ice in the foreground looks just like the frothiness I see in such small pools. An interesting difference in perspective! The waterfalls here are generally cascading falls and not sheer drops like that.
That's quite a photo, John. I was there in summer, and so it was a very different experience.
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
Thanks Corran and Peter. As for the summer view, I'd like to try the hike into the canyon below, but that might have to be just a 35mm shot given my knees.
I also tried with the 150mm lens:
[IMG]R4N7a LFF by John Olsen, on Flickr[/IMG]
I think someone else might print these in a really high key style. I just can't make myself do that.
Steve Midgley
Dan O'Neill would approve.
Enough drooling over that wonderful Norton. Here's something more in line with reality, at least in Idaho.
[IMG]R3N12a dodged LFF by John Olsen, on Flickr[/IMG]
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