here aremy latest, though i ahvent had the lens long,
Well, this is the last installment from my weekend with Ed,
the skly ws starting to turn, with many varied cloud types.
it started off with some fluffy ones, then progressed to the higher sirrus clouds, then rain clouds
both of these shots where with my new 14-24mm nikon lens, a real joy to behold and use. though iam still waiting for my new focus screeen to arrive.
this sky, for mwe screamed BW, hope you aggree
this first image was shot at 14mm, i was about 3ft from the post in front of me. F11 iso100 125th sec. has had a slight crop off the bottom. http://www.sussexlandscapephotography.co.uk/mill2.jpg
this image was again at 14mm, i was about 10ft in front of the mill shooting staright up. of note, look at how straight that lower horizon line is, no lens correction needed!
i think 5.6 iso 100 80th sec. http://www.sussexlandscapephotography.co.uk/mill.jpg
thanks for looking and i hope youhave enjoyed Ed`s and my grand tour
Great lens but for night shots I have to watch for lens flare more than the 24-70, I find it more prominent with the 14-24 but it is still a great lens.
qbazdz wrote:
What software did you use to put it together?
Do you have a panoramic tripod head or was that hand held?
I use PTGui and my tripod has a panning head, but it isn't a gimble style, so it is a bit sloppy and PTGui tells me that it doesn't even have a problem despite the small amount of slop inherent in a shooting 360 degrees without a gimble.
Parsons- Great shots man! I agree that B&W was the way to go for such a unique sky. Awesome!
Steezus wrote:
I use PTGui and my tripod has a panning head, but it isn't a gimble style, so it is a bit sloppy and PTGui tells me that it doesn't even have a problem despite the small amount of slop inherent in a shooting 360 degrees without a gimble.
Parsons- Great shots man! I agree that B&W was the way to go for such a unique sky. Awesome!