Just returned from a few days of cool-weather camping; I couldn't help it, I was downloading and sorting images before the car was unpacked...
The first two were from the kayak, on a pre-dawn paddle; sunrise with a 24-105L, and the departing ducks with the 400 DO. It was the first time I've had two cameras at once on the water - unwieldy, but manageable on a perfectly calm lake, and certainly easier than changing lenses...
I used a 100L macro, tripod mounted, for the mushroom.
Tenn.Jer wrote:
The first two were from the kayak, on a pre-dawn paddle; sunrise with a 24-105L, and the departing ducks with the 400 DO. It was the first time I've had two cameras at once on the water - unwieldy, but manageable on a perfectly calm lake, and certainly easier than changing lenses...
Tenn.Jer wrote:
Just returned from a few days of cool-weather camping; I couldn't help it, I was downloading and sorting images before the car was unpacked...
The first two were from the kayak, on a pre-dawn paddle; sunrise with a 24-105L, and the departing ducks with the 400 DO. It was the first time I've had two cameras at once on the water - unwieldy, but manageable on a perfectly calm lake, and certainly easier than changing lenses...
I used a 100L macro, tripod mounted, for the mushroom.
Following my shots of the local sluices on P15, a two row Pano from the top of the dam. I'm not a big pano shooter, so this suffered probably all the problems of a totally amateur handheld pano. In particular perspective problems at the edges (which i had to crop out due to "ghostly" railing problems) and not quite enough "headroom" on one shot to give it enough sky. I'm not sure i got the perspective sorted properly either, but it looks ok at web scale. 5D with 17-40mm f/4L. Something like 20 shots, though i'm not sure exactly how many actually made it into the final pano.