I spend two weeks of my summer holidays with some friends in Wales and would like to show you some results.
My kit consisted of a Nex-5n, a Nex-7 (got it shortly before we left), CV15, G28, G45, Canon nFD 50/1.4, Samyang 85/1.4, Minolta 135/2.8 and some other lenses which i rarely used.
I had some still unresolved hard drive problems which mainly affected my Nex-7 shots so the majority of the shown pictures are taken with the 5n.
Okay, lets start with a walk around Dinas Head, a nice round-walk near Fishguard
the ever-changing weather:
while we were driving home from the trip we could see some fantastic cloud formations
Great stuff Phillip. Some excellent exposures in here too, the last one is particularly striking - could you share your technique? The difference in exposure between the sky and foreground must have been quite great, so are you bracketing the exposure here (two separate), or are you taking advantage of the 'live histogram' just retaining enough in the highlights, then lifting the shadows? The warm light just touching some of the leaves is beautiful.
Really nice: my favorites are the first two and the last one. Did you crop at all with the first two? The corners look great for both the G28 and CV15. Corners look softer in the third shot, but there might have been other factors?
Mescalamba wrote:
Wow.. pretty impressive pics. Nicely done processing, wouldnt say its different lens (expect Zeiss being.. well Zeissy).
Interesting theres tiny bit color shift even at 5N with CV15. Hard lens for any mirrorless I guess (except Ricoh).
thanks ;-).
Yes, it shifts a bit, but those are the only exposures ever where i noticed it in the field.
ricardovaste wrote:
Great stuff Phillip. Some excellent exposures in here too, the last one is particularly striking - could you share your technique? The difference in exposure between the sky and foreground must have been quite great, so are you bracketing the exposure here (two separate), or are you taking advantage of the 'live histogram' just retaining enough in the highlights, then lifting the shadows? The warm light just touching some of the leaves is beautiful.
I underexposed a bit, lifted the shadows by 92 and pulled the highlights by 72, no other except step-resizing.
alwang wrote:
Really nice: my favorites are the first two and the last one. Did you crop at all with the first two? The corners look great for both the G28 and CV15. Corners look softer in the third shot, but there might have been other factors?
Corners stepped down with the G28 are quite okay and a bit better with the CV15. I think that corner i unsharp because of DOF.
Incredible shots. exposure and detail are impressive. Looks forward more
Have a feeling that you seems more comfortable with 5n's files? Is the way you proceed step sharpness? Or could be just different lighting and timing, I sightly prefer 5n's color and sharpness more.
zhangyue wrote:
Incredible shots. exposure and detail are impressive. Looks forward more
Have a feeling that you seems more comfortable with 5n's files? Is the way you proceed step sharpness? Or could be just different lighting and timing, I sightly prefer 5n's color and sharpness more.
thanks :-)
Well i know what to expect from the 5n and i don't have much experience with the 7, but while processing my shots from that holiday i didn't notice much difference. I increased saturation a little bit with most of the 5n shots,but not so with the 7 shots.
FlyPenFly wrote:
I'll admit i came in here expecting to see pictures of magnificent sea creatures... but I'm not disappointed.
Have you thought about using a graduated ND filter either a Lee system or just a screw on grad?
hehe, thanks.
With the vast dynamic range of the 5n or 7 i haven't thought about it, as i think i could simply simulate it with LR.
Are you thinking of any specific shot which might benefit from a grad ND?
FlyPenFly wrote:
Anything with 30-40% or more sky, just play with it, it looks a lot more dramatic than just using software.
i will give it a try nex(t) time :-).
Some random shots:
Really great shots,but quite a number of them have that crunchy oversharpened look with halos along the hill tops, and the color shift does bother me a bit.
I've been to Wales 12 years ago and loved it. Your shots definitely do justice to the place (although a they're centred on the coast while there is nice inland scenery too with rivers/streams, lots of Rhododendrons etc.).