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Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 10:57 am
by [SiC]
Hej!
Sebastian Thorstensson from Hammarö (Karlstad) Sweden
Shooting with a KM D7D since end of 2004.
I'm here to learn and discuss in general.
Please feel free to browse my photostream on
Flickr!
BR,
Zeb!
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 11:31 am
by David Kilpatrick
Hi! That is an amazing set of pix. I love the way you use darkness and contrast, and deep colours. The shot of the jump with a wavy horizon is the first time I have ever seen something which can happen with AS and a moving camera plus stabilization - the subject recorded in different positions as the sensor moves across the direction of the shutter slot. In theory it should happen, but I have never seen it before.
David
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 11:53 am
by [SiC]
David Kilpatrick wrote:Hi! That is an amazing set of pix. I love the way you use darkness and contrast, and deep colours. The shot of the jump with a wavy horizon is the first time I have ever seen something which can happen with AS and a moving camera plus stabilization - the subject recorded in different positions as the sensor moves across the direction of the shutter slot. In theory it should happen, but I have never seen it before.
David
Hi David!
Glad to hear you enjoyed the photos
The photo with the weird horizon is actually shot with my SonyEricsson K800i
BR,
/Zeb!
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 12:46 pm
by Dr. Harout
Hi Sebastian and welcome.
About the old truck, I too have no idea about the mark, but I love old car photos too.
Nice set of pictures.
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 1:14 pm
by [SiC]
Dr. Harout wrote:Hi Sebastian and welcome.
About the old truck, I too have no idea about the mark, but I love old car photos too.
Nice set of pictures.
Thanks for the warm welcome
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 1:40 pm
by David Kilpatrick
[SiC] wrote:David Kilpatrick wrote:Hi! That is an amazing set of pix. I love the way you use darkness and contrast, and deep colours. The shot of the jump with a wavy horizon is the first time I have ever seen something which can happen with AS and a moving camera plus stabilization - the subject recorded in different positions as the sensor moves across the direction of the shutter slot. In theory it should happen, but I have never seen it before.
David
Hi David!
Glad to hear you enjoyed the photos
The photo with the weird horizon is actually shot with my SonyEricsson K800i
BR,
/Zeb!
That explains why I have never seen the effect from AS!
But I have also never seen that kind of effect from anything except a focal plane shutter. I have no idea how a camera phone could produce it.
David
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 2:07 pm
by [SiC]
David Kilpatrick wrote:That explains why I have never seen the effect from AS!
But I have also never seen that kind of effect from anything except a focal plane shutter. I have no idea how a camera phone could produce it.
David
I have no idea either... Maybe it's a well hidden "feature"
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2008 2:58 pm
by bonneville
Hi and welcome from bonneville
Good set thanks for the link. I like P7032276_sun_rays. Not sure why, it just appeals
Brian
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Mon Sep 08, 2008 12:44 pm
by [SiC]
bonneville wrote:Hi and welcome from bonneville
Good set thanks for the link. I like P7032276_sun_rays. Not sure why, it just appeals
Brian
Thank you Brian!
BR,
/Zeb!
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Mon Sep 08, 2008 2:27 pm
by Javelin
Sebastian I went through your whole flikr site. I must say you have a very good eye.
Someone posted on DPR that if the camera senses panning motions the AS is turned off. maybe thats why ?
David Kilpatrick wrote:
That explains why I have never seen the effect from AS!
But I have also never seen that kind of effect from anything except a focal plane shutter. I have no idea how a camera phone could produce it.
David
Re: Hej from Sweden!
Posted: Mon Sep 08, 2008 3:16 pm
by 01af
But I have also never seen
that kind of effect from anything except a focal plane shutter. I have no idea how a camera phone could produce it.
If the distortion was from a focal-plane shutter it would have been an extremely slow-traveling one ... like those built, say, 80 years ago. To me it looks as if the phone's camera internally works like a scanning back, recording the pixel rows (or columns in portrait orientation) one after another. However I'm only speculating here; I have no idea how miniature cell-phone cameras actually work.
-- Olaf