Morning
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Do not post personal information or images relating to your home, family, workplace or possessions as this is public forum. Feel free to post about your home town, countryside, hobbies, sports, subjects of special interest or study, culture, tourist attractions. No more than three images or three external links allowed in any post or reply. Please trim quotations and do not include images in quotes unless essential.
Morning
I usually get up before sunrise. Sometimes I get it right so that when I go out to get the papers from the side walk, pick them up and turn around, I see this:
A700: 3s f/8.0 at 11.0mm iso200
What do you see in the morning?
A700: 3s f/8.0 at 11.0mm iso200
What do you see in the morning?
Winston Mitchell
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
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Re: Morning
This is from a few years ago, and heaven forbid, taken on my old Nikon. Unfortunately i had to get to work so i only had time for a few quick shots.
jpeg straight from camera.
Tony
jpeg straight from camera.
Tony
Re: Morning
Winston, what a wonderful evenly distrubuted exposure! Light seems to be coming from all directions and there are no dark shadows... Impressive.
Thanks for waking up and deciding to pick the newspaper.
Tony, those are indeed blazing skies. What a way to start the day!
Thanks,
Yildiz
Thanks for waking up and deciding to pick the newspaper.
Tony, those are indeed blazing skies. What a way to start the day!
Thanks,
Yildiz
Re: Morning
Nice pic, Winston. I wonder did you use DRO or HRD? And 3s exposure means you take your tripod when going to pick up the newspaper?
Re: Morning
Winston;
I forgot to mention that you live in a beautiful place and among some wonderful trees and nature in general in my first message. The log house is also lovely and cozy and looks neat in this technic you shot the photo.
There, now I feel better for saying all that as well!
Yildiz
I forgot to mention that you live in a beautiful place and among some wonderful trees and nature in general in my first message. The log house is also lovely and cozy and looks neat in this technic you shot the photo.
There, now I feel better for saying all that as well!
Yildiz
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Re: Morning
I think Winston put the camera on an existing thing, such as fence, or pole or mailbox...bossel wrote:Nice pic, Winston. I wonder did you use DRO or HRD? And 3s exposure means you take your tripod when going to pick up the newspaper?
Excellent shot.
- bonneville
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Re: Morning
What a great idea, and you do have a great morning view Winston.
I live in one of the few rural parts of the UK and when I look out in the morning I see my trees. But it depends on the time of year that presents me with its mood.
This is early morning winter:
and this is rainy summer:
(BTW, I've check on the path outside my cottage but there is never a newspaper there )
Brian
I live in one of the few rural parts of the UK and when I look out in the morning I see my trees. But it depends on the time of year that presents me with its mood.
This is early morning winter:
and this is rainy summer:
(BTW, I've check on the path outside my cottage but there is never a newspaper there )
Brian
Re: Morning
Nice images, Brian. Ooooh so many variables without touching the camera; time of day, time of year, type of weather...
Winston Mitchell
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
Re: Morning
First things first: Thanks to all for your generous comments.
Doc: My existing thing is a tripod.
Bossel: I usually don't take my camera either.
Yildiz: Assuming you mean illumination, the evenly distributed exposure was achieved with five applications of Lightroom’s adjustment brush.
All: The image presented is probably not what I saw. It is an attempt to create an image representing some mixture of what I wanted to see and what I remembered seeing out of what the camera saw.
I frequently see something like this in the morning and always say to myself: "I ought to record that." This particular morning, I decided to do just that.
So I went back in the house, went out to the garage, got the tripod out of the truck, took it out of it’s sleeve, removed the ball-head cover, found the pano-head and mounted it on the ball head, changed lenses on the camera body . . . well, you get the idea . . . it took a considerable amount of time. Then I took the rig outside, setup the tripod after spending some more time considering the shot height and placement (I picked a low one), leveled the pano head and composed the image in the viewfinder (yes, live view would have been helpful).
By then, enough time had elapsed that the scene was totally different from what I had first seen. But, since it looked like all of the visual elements, though altered, were still there, I proceeded.
I turned on the two-second MLU and made an exposure. I checked the image for proper exposure and went back inside. Here is the raw-file’s embedded jpeg. It looks nothing like the final image.
If I had been shooting jpegs, game over. The final image is not possible with a jpeg. My objective in making the exposure was not to get a good-looking camera image but to stuff as much information as possible into a raw file so that I could extract what I needed in PP.
All post processing was done with Lightroom 2.4. After a lot of adjustment sliding and application of a soft-light tone curve and the adjustment brush, the final image emerged.
This is why I always use raw (cRaw).
If you stuck with me, thanks for wading through this.
Doc: My existing thing is a tripod.
Bossel: I usually don't take my camera either.
Yildiz: Assuming you mean illumination, the evenly distributed exposure was achieved with five applications of Lightroom’s adjustment brush.
All: The image presented is probably not what I saw. It is an attempt to create an image representing some mixture of what I wanted to see and what I remembered seeing out of what the camera saw.
I frequently see something like this in the morning and always say to myself: "I ought to record that." This particular morning, I decided to do just that.
So I went back in the house, went out to the garage, got the tripod out of the truck, took it out of it’s sleeve, removed the ball-head cover, found the pano-head and mounted it on the ball head, changed lenses on the camera body . . . well, you get the idea . . . it took a considerable amount of time. Then I took the rig outside, setup the tripod after spending some more time considering the shot height and placement (I picked a low one), leveled the pano head and composed the image in the viewfinder (yes, live view would have been helpful).
By then, enough time had elapsed that the scene was totally different from what I had first seen. But, since it looked like all of the visual elements, though altered, were still there, I proceeded.
I turned on the two-second MLU and made an exposure. I checked the image for proper exposure and went back inside. Here is the raw-file’s embedded jpeg. It looks nothing like the final image.
If I had been shooting jpegs, game over. The final image is not possible with a jpeg. My objective in making the exposure was not to get a good-looking camera image but to stuff as much information as possible into a raw file so that I could extract what I needed in PP.
All post processing was done with Lightroom 2.4. After a lot of adjustment sliding and application of a soft-light tone curve and the adjustment brush, the final image emerged.
This is why I always use raw (cRaw).
If you stuck with me, thanks for wading through this.
Winston Mitchell
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
Re: Morning
This is a very 'illuminating', tutorial-like explanation Winston. The final image is indeed something other-worldly...a world with 5 suns rising almost at the same time...
I enjoyed it.
Thank you.
Yildiz
I enjoyed it.
Thank you.
Yildiz
Re: Morning
Wow that's some cool post-processing - well done! (btw, how long did it take you?)
Re: Morning
Yildiz, think of them as flashlights...much more manageableaster wrote:This is a very 'illuminating', tutorial-like explanation Winston. The final image is indeed something other-worldly...a world with 5 suns rising almost at the same time...
I enjoyed it.
Thank you.
Yildiz
Most images not long at all. Challenging ones like this take me a lot more clock time than actual time.bossel wrote:Wow that's some cool post-processing - well done! (btw, how long did it take you?)
This is because I do it in spurts. It's easy for me to get lost in my own edits. So I do a rough try at an idea and snap-shot it and similarly try a few more and then give it a rest. When I come back, I can usually see what I like or don't like about each version and get it done. It iterated this process a couple of times for this one.
Clock time . . . hours. Computer time . . . minutes.
Winston Mitchell
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
KM7D, A700, A77, A77M2, A7M3
- KevinBarrett
- Emperor of a Minor Galaxy
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Re: Morning
Beautiful shot, Winston! Way to set the bar high on this thread.
It just happens that my wife picked me up from work this morning and as we drove home I was able to snap a few pictures in the morning light...maybe this thread will still be active by the time I get to them.
It just happens that my wife picked me up from work this morning and as we drove home I was able to snap a few pictures in the morning light...maybe this thread will still be active by the time I get to them.
Kevin Barrett
-- Photos --
-- Photos --
Re: Morning
I like the illusion of thinking your world has 5 wonderful suns bending to your will!
That's part of photography; either one creates / builds one's own illusion of what it should be like in the same realm as of a painter or live with the reality of a snapshot.
If anything, those flashlights should be enourmous in size to light this land piece anyway...if this photo was an exact copy of a reality..
Yildiz
That's part of photography; either one creates / builds one's own illusion of what it should be like in the same realm as of a painter or live with the reality of a snapshot.
If anything, those flashlights should be enourmous in size to light this land piece anyway...if this photo was an exact copy of a reality..
Yildiz
Re: Morning
Woke up to see this at 5 am this morning.
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