I was experimenting yesterday evening, taking hand-held shots from my mountain bike from the trail, as we were going, using the FE 35 f2.8 on the A7R2. I tried to pan with slow-ish shutter speeds, and sometimes a lot too slow, like here:
however, the shot has a mood that I cannot ignore. At least it didn't go straight to the bin
This one is technically more like I was aiming for, but the mood is a bit lacking, perhaps:
Photo taken July 2, 2015 at about 10:22 AM at Schoodic Point near Winter Harbor, Maine, Acadia National Park. Blue Flag Irises can be seen in the foreground and roses and Blue Flag Irises can be further into the photo. Image taken with my tripod mounted A7r and my Leica M 90mm f2.5 Summarit lens, ISO 200, lens set to f11 for 1/500 second. Exposure corrected by + 0.6 Stops and processed in LR6.
Joshua, awesome shot !!!
Helena beautiful captures...
Jack, love your style of shots! Great series from China.
Derrick, beautiful rendering to your shots
Shot this evening, experimenting with lighting and Marisa
charles.K wrote:
Joshua, awesome shot !!!
Shot this evening, experimenting with lighting and Marisa
A7rII and GM 85
Thank you, Charles! Very lovely shot of Marisa . It looks like both of us really enjoy that lens, huh? Here is mine of my granddaughter, Megan during Mother's day brunch last Sunday.
Moab was my first really heavily photographed destination. So many great shots of the area for many years made me question my own goals. For seven days I could not really tell if I was "getting it" because I was rushing about and not editing much. Of course, I don't compare my shots to the iconic Mesa Arch dawns, but I have come to like them anyway.
My weather was varied, and the first day was sadly short on clouds, but crystal otherwise. Such form and color at times makes you feel as though you walk across the skin of the earth goddess herself
Most of the serious shooters were hoping to make shots devoid of the people, but to me, that was part of the story at Arches :I did not really foresee that aspect, and I'll be ready for some real "trail" photography next time
uhoh7 wrote:
Moab was my first really heavily photographed destination. So many great shots of the area for many years made me question my own goals. For seven days I could not really tell if I was "getting it" because I was rushing about and not editing much. Of course, I don't compare my shots to the iconic Mesa Arch dawns, but I have come to like them anyway.
Most of the serious shooters were hoping to make shots devoid of the people, but to me, that was part of the story at Arches :I did not really foresee that aspect, and I'll be ready for some real "trail" photography next time ...Show more →
These are more interesting than reshooting the same Mesa Arch scene for the billionth time. We already know exactly what those shots look like