p.20 #1 · Anyone up/in for a "Canon Spring 2013" Thread???
Yes, boingyman, I really like that field of lupine; excellent work!
I encountered more than wildflowers on my creekside ramble this morning...
Black vulture with 500 f/4 (handheld), cascade with 24-105, and iris with 100L macro...
Jerry
Black vulture
along Natchez Trace
Dwarf Iris (I tried a "focus stack", but it was too breezy)
p.20 #8 · Anyone up/in for a "Canon Spring 2013" Thread???
Prevelige wrote:
Nice perch, but still a cold spring day.
Bob
Bob, that is a very eye pleasing image. While looking at it, a thought has crossed my mind about ancient Chinese and Japanese rice paper and silk paintings and inks: I think those of us who photograph nature might learn a thing or two from those old masters.
p.20 #15 · Anyone up/in for a "Canon Spring 2013" Thread???
Congratulations, John_T! I know you've been waiting...
Too windy here for flower macros, as a storm front approaches.
Springtime makes itself known in other species, though; gobblers echo down the hollows, probably bragging of their conquests (and warning competitors)...
With 500L...
Also, I played at the waterfall some with a 70-200 f/2.8 II...
Jerry
p.20 #19 · Anyone up/in for a "Canon Spring 2013" Thread???
Gunzorro wrote:
9-shot pano
1D Mark III, 100-400L IS + 1.4X
Jim, I suppose one reason to use the 100-400 with 1.4X for a stitched pano would be to make it easy to "lock" the focal length at 140mm (the minimum for the combo), but...that lens can be pretty well locked with the zoom friction adjustment, so why not use the bare lens? Doing other shots at longer focal lengths? Gear junkies want to know! Believe me, I've used zoom/extender combinations at FLs that could be gotten with the bare lens. Sometimes there's no time to remove the X, or it's not worth the trouble. Just wondered what your reasons were.
p.20 #20 · Anyone up/in for a "Canon Spring 2013" Thread???
Jefferson wrote:
PIF... Porsche In Flight...
Jefferson, maybe you could do a Muybridge type series to demonstrate that periodically all four wheels leave the ground at the same time (when a Porsche is at full gallop)!