kdrk888 wrote:
Thank you, Jim. Here is another shot from yesterday with the Sony 24-105. This is the much photographed Glade Creek Grist Mill in Babcock State Park in West Virginia. They say the colors can be much more vibrant than this in a good year.
kdrk888 wrote:
Thank you, Jim. Here is another shot from yesterday with the Sony 24-105. This is the much photographed Glade Creek Grist Mill in Babcock State Park in West Virginia. They say the colors can be much more vibrant than this in a good year.
Douglas, that's an awesome image , no matter how often that has been photographed! To me that's vibrant...
Thank you Jim! Sorry to hear it. The time between colors and snow can be quite boring, but at least we have had some frost lately. I'll post those shots another day.
Btw. I took these photos before the leaves fell off, just so that no one thinks that I complain about nothing.
A7rii, which I used here, just not as nice with backgrounds as my Kolari or Leica. I need to mod it. I love the hybrid low light and IBIS. All my 300 shots are handheld. This is one of my very favorite lenses, and the only 300 I've tried I really liked. Storied lens, which saved Nikon in 1980s photojournalism. Not as well known as it should be, because it was never marketed to the public, but to news organizations who could afford one. No Leica lens more creamy
kdrk888 wrote:
Thank you, Jim. Here is another shot from yesterday with the Sony 24-105. This is the much photographed Glade Creek Grist Mill in Babcock State Park in West Virginia. They say the colors can be much more vibrant than this in a good year.
Robert, Jim, Joshua, thank you for the comments! Here is a shot of the New River Gorge Bridge at sunset with the CV 40 f1.2. One of the main reasons I have the Loxia and Voigtlander lenses is for their sunstar and flare resistance.
kdrk888 wrote:
Here is a shot of the New River Gorge Bridge at sunset with the CV 40 f1.2. One of the main reasons I have the Loxia and Voigtlander lenses is for their sunstar and flare resistance.