Werner's bridge shot is great. And now he needs to follow up with more as the building progresses! Unless I'm the only one fascinated by the way these things go up? And maybe cross post to the Bridges of the World thread. It could use a kick back to the active ages as well.
hiepphotog wrote:
Joshua: Amazing shots! You make me want to go to Iceland to explore. Which months did you go there? Your shots have certain clarity that is hard to describe.
Thank you, Hiep! I went in March, and caught the end of the winter there. We were there for the picture taking part from March 14 to 23. I would say we were a tad on the late side. Knowing what we experienced, I would say early March would have been better since I was hoping that the waterfalls would have shown more frozen components... On the other hand, the northern lights on March 17 was so spectacular. BTW, March is the best month to encounter Auroras. That means you increase your chance of being able to see Auroras by being there in March but it is pretty much a gamble. Again, in our case, we rolled the dice; we won some and we lost some.
charles.K wrote:
Joshua, wow... stunning shot
Thank you very much, Charles!
nehemiahphoto wrote:
AGeoJO--awesome photo. Where is it?
Thank you! That was taken inside some ice caves in Iceland.
Repetitive physical activity is important to psychological health in Tibetan Buddhism, so you see a lot of seemingly redundant activity undertaken to this end. It also means almost everything bears the touch of human hands. A few images of anis (or nuns), the head nun would not be photographed, but I liked the heavily wrapped green tap and water. The Sonys do very nicely with deep rich red spectrum hues. All a7r, first CY 100/3.5, 2 and 3 FE55.
Charles, thanks for the encouragement, but I haven't decided to buy it yet, it is a loaner. That said, it produces some awesome results, and, the flesh being weak, mine especially so, we know which way this is headed, don't we?
This time, wide open.