So I came home from work, walked into the house, and was greeted with the smell of freshly roasted bread! Of course, they are gluten-free. Don't ask me how she does that. Taken with the 105mm f/2.5.
Flowers in December, tube amplifiers, grumpy seabirds on pilings. All great! We are stuck with snow banks. So as an escape as I sit here in front of my work computer trying to be productive, I grab the camera on the shelf to my left and snap away at what I see before me, my sweetie's cooking library.
Most of the library (with an 11 year old National Audubon Society calendar)
GeorgeBo wrote:
Just a test shot for my contribution to the thread.
I just received my GFX 50S back from a full spectrum conversion at Kolari. Went out for walk with the IR720 clip in filter and wanted to see if the old Nikkor 75mm f/2.8 for Bronica lens had any hotspot issues shooting IR. Happy to see there are none! This was shot with the sun just to the upper right of frame so was really pushing the limits for performance.
This just converted to B&W and ran into Lightroom for the border script.
So I came home from work, walked into the house, and was greeted with the smell of freshly roasted bread! Of course, they are gluten-free. Don't ask me how she does that. Taken with the 105mm f/2.5.
@BLLX Reminds me of Copenhagen School of Business, but was quite trippy at first trying to figure out what I was looking at on a small screen. Well seen!
jimmuller wrote:
Quite a sight. It reminds me of the one time I visited the Guggenheim, only more expansive. Is that in Denmark?
Thanks - yes it Aros museum in Aarhus, Denmark
---------------------------------------------
mivadep wrote:
This is ARoS, right? I was lucky enough to live in Aarhus for about 3 years in the last decade. Beautiful city and wonderful people.
Yes it is. I live about 1 hour car ride from Aarhus. Wonderful city with lots of culture
---------------------------------------------
AdaptedLenses wrote:
@BLLX@ Reminds me of Copenhagen School of Business, but was quite trippy at first trying to figure out what I was looking at on a small screen. Well seen!
Morten, The installations are a poignant message of current events playing off each other. These are difficult times, but I have hope like abolitionist minster Theodore Parker wrote in 1853, "I do not pretend to understand the moral universe; the arc is a long one, my eye reaches but a little way... But from what I see I am sure it bends towards justice" and often paraphrased by MLK. The thirst for justice will be realized.