Thanks! The lighting in the caverns is all artificial, with warm, diffused fixtures placed throughout the chambers. It’s surprisingly even, which makes shooting a bit easier compared to natural cave light. I believe they’ve recently upgraded the lighting system, and maybe that might have contributed to the more uniform illumination.
old-gregg wrote:
Nicely done! What kind of light did you have here? Looks unusually uniform.
That's my grandfather's house. My mom grew up there.
Dad took this shot in 1955 with his Leica IIIf, 50/3.5 Elmar and K64.
The brown house on the left was my aunt's. It was a wing of a mansion that washed up on the 4th hole of the golf course a mile away in a hurricane during the Depression. My uncle and grandpa trucked it there and set it up as my aunt and uncle's for the next 50 years. Your subject house was built in 1750 and was bought by an investor 25 years ago, stripped out the colonial mantle and interior woodwork and left to rot.
Grandpa farmed less and less of the acreage as he aged. He was an immigrant laborer in many jobs and sold fruit (amazing raspberries) and veggies in a stand out front. He sent my mom to college, which was pretty rare in 1947.
Dad took this shot in 1955 with his Leica IIIf, 50/3.5 Elmar and K64.
The brown house on the left was my aunt's. It was a wing of a mansion that washed up on the 4th hole of the golf course a mile away in a hurricane during the Depression. My uncle and grandpa trucked it there and set it up as my aunt and uncle's for the next 50 years. Your subject house was built in 1750 and was bought by an investor 25 years ago, stripped out the colonial mantle and interior woodwork and left to rot.
Grandpa farmed less and less of the acreage as he aged. He was an immigrant laborer in many jobs and sold fruit (amazing raspberries) and veggies in a stand out front. He sent my mom to college, which was pretty rare in 1947. ...Show more →