A couple years ago I took a bunch of hummingbird photos in Arizona. Never made any prints, but recently I bought a painting of a hummingbird from a new friend and artist and showed her the images. She loved them and wanted to see some prints. Her painting was made on a ceramic tile and presented on a piece of thick corrugated cardboard painted to look like roofing. I loved the look and took some inspiration from that.
I bought some wainscoting from Home Depot and a thicker piece of wood for more rigidity and glued them together. Then, I used a really nice hammertone metallic spray-paint to make it look a bit like metallic barn siding. Finally, the hummingbird photos were printed on Kodak Endura metallic paper and mounted on gatorboard, which will be glued onto the wainscoting. Oh, and I plan on mounting plexiglass on top to the same size using nuts and bolts like I did with a tintype recently.
These three images also looked nice as a vertical triptych. If I have an interested buyer, I could make another one, but the plan is to cut the wainscoting down into three pieces here (8x10 each). The hummingbird prints aren't glued on yet:
Yes the colorful delicate birds contrasted by harsh cage tower which shares soft and sharp like Reinholdg’s road and sea fog also just posted.
Tin Can
Man (used in the general sense, which also includes women) does not live by photographing palm trees and houses alone, so I tried something a bit different today during my outing / dog walk and photographed the Palo Verde tree in my neighbor's backyard:
DIY modified full-spectrum Samsung NX500 / Contax 28/f2.8 lens / Hoya R72 filter
And you didn't cut yourself ? That's biting sharp. Really like those IR images.
Les
So I tried yet another experiment yesterday, this time creating a five-panel stitched photo with each of the five panels itself the result of stacking and then median-blending seven identical exposures to reduce noise / increase the SNR, as well as increase the overall file size to 62MP and its resolution accordingly. By my math, the final, effective field of view laterally is equivalent to that of a 17.2 mm lens on a 24x36 sensor, only its resolution is more than six times greater than it would have been if I had cropped a 4:1 panoramic photo from a single one of my A7R's 36 MP files.
Creating this photo required me to take a total of 35 photos (although I actually took 63 in total, because the FPS rate of my camera is fast enough that I can't count-off exactly seven exposures, so just let it run until I was sure I had taken at least seven ... lol) and required a lot of post-processing, because I first had to create each of the five panels by stacking and blending seven exposures, and then editing a 4:1 pano required me to alter my on-screen tools / menu setup to accommodate it, so nothing fell readily to hand while I was working on it.
Still, I think it was worth all the effort, because I rather like the final photo -- IMO, photographing with IR light was the perfect choice for this scene, on this day and at this point in time! -- and that I was able to successfully do this handheld was a bit of a revelation to me, as I have always used a tripod on those rare occasions when I've created stitched panos in the past. Here's a link to a larger version -- https://i.imgur.com/aoX2mRV.jpg -- but below is a smaller version that can be seen here:
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