Peter ! Wow !
Powerful photo. Bravo !
And thank you.
Peter ! Wow !
Powerful photo. Bravo !
And thank you.
Folker, Gary and Clement: Thank you for your kind comments. Back in the 1990s, I did quite a bit of waterfall photography. I just like hanging out by them, even if I'm not taking any pictures.
“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
Northern Sweden. By the Vapst river close to the Norwegian Border
Chamonix 45H-1 & probably Symmar 135 & Fomapan 400
Love these 3 photos - especially the last one!
Now that's some great 4x5 work there! Great falls and wonderful setting!
Did you use any tilt to bring the foreground into focus? Or did you have enough DOF with a smaller F-stop?
Here are 2 images of Takakkaw Falls in British Columbia - one taken in the AM and one in the PM.
These are 900 feet high and fed by a glacier from above.
There's a lot of flow here since it was early July and the temperature was in the 90's.
Taken with my Linhof Technika V and Schneider 150mm f5.6 APO lens on Ektachrome.
Well, If you are referring to my picture, then many thanks.
This was two weeks ago, so you could not expect me to remember, could you? But yes, I think there is some back tilt to bring the foreground in focus.
My shutter was broke so I couldn't go slower than 1/15th so I think a ended up with f/32 or thereabout (and a red filter)
Ah - I was going to ask if you used a filter, then you answered my question - thanks.
There was lots of motion - even at 1/15th sec.
Yes, I was referring to your picture by the Vapst river. Am I not replying to these posts correctly? I'm new here and still figuring out how to do things,..
Well, I don't know about what is correctly, but if you do a "reply with quotes" it's easier to see what you are replying to.
Sometimes there is more that one conversation going on and things can get a bit intertwined.
Anyway, Takakkaw Falls seems very impressive from your pictures.
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