This was North, the Highlands of Scotland, I'd say that ambient was about 2 stops darker than that. The following picture was taken in Iceland at about 1:30am and I've darkened it for mood, it was actually much brighter in reality! Iceland in midsummer is crazy! Pic was just a boring 1Ds with L zoom lens so I'm posting it small I'll find some on my MF Mamiya Velvia stuff and post up when I get a chance.
I love shooting at night but have done nowhere near any, maybe 5-nights to date so with the Aussie summer nearly here I'll have to lift my game.
(D700) zf21
(D700) zf100
(D700) zf21
The Three Macbeth Witches represent darkness, chaos, and conflict.
(D700) zf100
Witch no#1(chaos)
Witch no#2(darkness)
Witch no#3(conflict)
Witch no#3(conflict): She is reading off the screen of her phone and I rattled off this pic from a distance of inches. “Did you just take my picture?” and over the top of her words I could smell the cheap booze. We exchanged a few words, mine like carstenw's must have had some magic in them as she suddenly disappeared.
I'd like to breathe a little life back into the Twilight/Night thread now that winter is approaching in the Northern Hemisphere and we've shifted our clocks back.
fracas -- Sorry you feel that way. I'm not devoutly religious or ultra-orthodox. I consider any equipment or technique that is out of the ordinary to be in the Alt Realm. Especially when we are talking subject matter threads (Pano, Night, Fisheye, Bokeh/Soft-focus, etc.) -- they are orphan topics unless they are pertinent to sub-fora such as Landscape, etc.
Sony DSLR/Nex is Alt?
M4/3 is Alt?
Medium Format/Large Format is Alt?
Film is Alt?
Camera phone is Alt?
P&S is Alt?
Oh! Zeiss and Leica (or any bizarrely expensive gear) are ALT!
Now I get it!
It is okay to include all those named above as representing Alt (even though some are the most ubiquitously un-Alt in our culture), but draw the line at Canon/Canon doing something odd and cool as crossing the line.
Carsten -- Thanks again, for your very NIMBY approach. :- P
Here's the final image (digitally retouched) used for the 2012 Southern California IBEW/NECA calendar. This ended up being a combination of three images to get the best tonal range, taken from several time periods during the shoot (the camera wasn't disturbed, so matching was pretty easy). Final off-set litho printed image comes out around 15.5x22.5 inches, so, pretty good size! Today, I got to pick up some samples along with the disk with this image.
Shot with Canon 1Ds3 and Zeiss ZE 35/2, @ f/8, ISO 100.
And as a follow up to the early submission I made regarding the 2011 calendar image -- got to pick up the image file from the retouching at the printers.