It was a little scary trying to feed a hungry swan with one hand while holding a camera in the other. Fortunately they prefer bread to fingers.
Nikon 8008s, Ektachrome 100.
Jonathan
It was a little scary trying to feed a hungry swan with one hand while holding a camera in the other. Fortunately they prefer bread to fingers.
Nikon 8008s, Ektachrome 100.
Jonathan
Roman
“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. It is a 10-inch "disappearing" gun. The fort was built at the start of 1900 as part of a three fort defense system to defend the entrance to the Puget Sound. Apparently, the fort didn't last long before it was decommissioned. Ships soon had greater range and this new fangled thing called an airplane made them obsolete.
Another attempt at this kind of shot. But this time I left my ND filters in another camera bag but did have a yellow. So I shot 400TMY at EI25 , which includes the yellow filter, looking straight into the sun to get a slow shutter. But what I didn't take into account was using a wider lens than last time. I didn't get the same motion blur for the same shutter speed (1/15th at f11) apparently.
Snow on the front porch steps a few years ago.
Tru-View 120 (Diana camera clone), Delta 400
Jonathan
It just needs a hand coming out.
http://http://db.tt/ZJDldC1x
Trying out a Mamiya 7 to replace 35 mm rangefinders.
First 6x7 roll.
Dave
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