Great grabs these last pages!
Manuel...love your U.S. grabs. There are more, right?
Joshua...it looks really cold there. Very nice!
Gregg
A7rll and Loxia 35
@f4...handheld @high ISO
Same as above, but I forgot the camera was set to 1/4 second shutter, so a little blurry
Greggf wrote:
Great grabs these last pages!
Manuel...love your U.S. grabs. There are more, right?
Joshua...it looks really cold there. Very nice!
Gregg
A7rll and Loxia 35
Thank you very much Gregg! Yes it is right... I've already posted several pics in the precedent pages but I have others to process and post. Probably I will bore you again for the next weeks with my "out of season" captures
Again from Navajo Loop at Bryce with Zony 55 inexplicably set to f/7.1
Remembering of a post by Joshua on a Bryce image in which he said that it had reduced saturation, I corrected my previous post and also here I have decreased saturation in order to get closer to the reality of that moment.
Manuel
Greggf wrote:
Great grabs these last pages!
Manuel...love your U.S. grabs. There are more, right?
Joshua...it looks really cold there. Very nice!
Gregg
A7rll and Loxia 35
Carl Zeiss Biogon T* 2.8/25 ZM @ f/4 w/ Carl Zeiss Proxar f=1.0m - Sony A7v2 @ ISO 100 - 1/25s, 1/60s and 1/250s
Disclaimer: The boke of the lens is not that good, even with Proxar 1m lens. I needed to smooth a little the trees on top left in PhotoShop to achieve look I was after (only top left, top right was more further away = quantity of boke fixed quality issues, as always). I have seen slides shoot with this lens, and I'm pretty sure without the thick layer of glass on top of our sensors we could get this kind of boke with A7 as well. The Proxar (/ Hoya +1) solution in front of the lens fixes lens for landscape shooting, but it's not perfect for boke shooting = more experimentation needed.
Looking across I believe Little Tupper Lake
Tripod mounted A7r and Minolta CLE MC 40mm f2 M-Rokkor lens
ISO 100, f11, 1/500 second
Exposure corrected by +0.24 Stops; processed in LR6.8
October 3, 2015
At I believe Little Tupper Lake at the William C. Whitney Wilderness Area (in or near Long Lake, NY in the Adirondack Mountains)