I had always a weakness for trains and also HDR photography. This set gives me two flies in one hit. Very well done
Explain me how in the world you was able to bracket multiple exposures from a moving object? Did you stack two exposures (one with- and one without the locomotive) to create the HDR expression?
Too over saturated for my taste. Old locomotives are nice subjects, but IMO one should try to capture the "true nature" of the subject (I do like HDR, and over the top could be very nice as well, but with a different subject). Nice reflexes and textures are available all over, possibly suitable for HDR as well, but this is too much.
Dick on Aruba wrote:
I had always a weakness for trains and also HDR photography. This set gives me two flies in one hit. Very well done
Explain me how in the world you was able to bracket multiple exposures from a moving object? Did you stack two exposures (one with- and one without the locomotive) to create the HDR expression?
Hi Dick, thanks for the look and for the nice comment.
Alan Kefauver wrote:
A little too saturated for my taste. Makes #3 look like a model railroad.
I gave my customer 3 choices of each shot one very little saturated and medium amout and a bunch and he chose a bunch. So IMHO that makes these just right since the bill payer picked them.
Stig Gjertsen wrote:
Too over saturated for my taste. Old locomotives are nice subjects, but IMO one should try to capture the "true nature" of the subject (I do like HDR, and over the top could be very nice as well, but with a different subject). Nice reflexes and textures are available all over, possibly suitable for HDR as well, but this is too much.
I agree and I have thousands of photos of the C&TSRR.