George and Ken, enjoying Outer Banks and canyon country vicariously through your lenses! Ken, that view of Bryce Canyon is fantastic.
Curtis, good to see regular rambles and their results!! Stay cool.
Glen, wow, what horns on that ancient skull. And those mushroom like formations are wild!
Peter (Knysna), what a relief to keep on hearing from you and hearing that you are inching towards some semblance of normal. Horrified to hear how much loss there was in your community.
Chris, love the Amsterdam bike scenes.
Laura, your pic reminds me, haven't heard from Scott in a couple weeks or so. And Priya I believe moved to India, we haven't heard from her for quite a while.
Samy, she did, and we heard from her once or twice, and then she vanished. Scott is otherwise engaged at the moment, I did send him a PM asking if he would be available to meet.
saph wrote:
Laura, your pic reminds me, haven't heard from Scott in a couple weeks or so. And Priya I believe moved to India, we haven't heard from her for quite a while.
This German architecture building's been the subject here at least one previous time, but I find it so interesting every time I go by it that I had to show up armed with the F2SB, 28 3.5 PC-Nikkor and loaded Tri-X to give it another try, sometime last week.
6.35pm here in Scotland. Man, I'd really love a cold one right now but always use my trips here to detox and stay away from alcohol. My Scottish family don't drink alcohol.
Colin
Are you SURE they're Scottish?
The Laphroaig mounted atop those two lenses is doubtless waiting to be uncorked... Although Lagavulin is my favorite, I'm a big fan of Laphroaig as well. Enjoy your visit... sober or not.
The post momentum and quality are chugging along very nicely these days, causing me to do much clicking on the Like button. Here are today's badlands photos, which show the broader perspective on a part of this unique area.
saph wrote:
This German architecture building's been the subject here at least one previous time, but I find it so interesting every time I go by it that I had to show up armed with the F2SB, 28 3.5 PC-Nikkor and loaded Tri-X to give it another try, sometime last week.
You folks are bringing back some delightful scenes from your trips. George, sensational sun/pelican shot! Glen, great images again of the unique landscape! Laura, very nice lighthouse in the night!
One with the LTM version of Nikon's first wide angle lens, the 3.5cm f3.5 W-Nikkor. This one from the serial numbers is about the same age as the S-mount version, so produced around 1949-50. Mounted on the Bessa R rangefinder and taken on Ilford FP4 Plus ISO125 film.
Glen the last series put the badlands into a perspective for me. Really a grand area nicely captured by you!
Samy "Fed Ex" is everywhere a truly global company in a traditional German building. Nicely done.
Colin you captured the sentiment for me with the lenses and bottle.
George I echo Leighton comments.
Laura what a brilliant shot of the lighthouse, well presented!
Back to Bryce Canyon where I took a lot of shots that really none of them captured the place in my minds eye. I'm thinking I'd need a drone for a flyover. Instead I opted for a four shot pan in Elements that "sort of" gives the idea of the size of this awesome place. The second and third crop shot show people I "didn't" see in the view finder. Enjoy.
Tomorrow we move to Capitol Reef another of Jay's suggestions and I believe his favorite spot in Utah.
Colin, Thanks! I'm just not comfortable with it, and Nik Plugins can't be brushed like they can be in PS, it's all or nothing with them in LR. Then I have to go through and find all the edit-edit-edit TIF files and delete those later....
DeltaSigma wrote:
Laura,
That is a great picture - what's the concern with LR?
Colin
Ken Hill wrote:
Glen the last series put the badlands into a perspective for me. Really a grand area nicely captured by you!
Samy "Fed Ex" is everywhere a truly global company in a traditional German building. Nicely done.
Colin you captured the sentiment for me with the lenses and bottle.
George I echo Leighton comments.
Laura what a brilliant shot of the lighthouse, well presented!
Back to Bryce Canyon where I took a lot of shots that really none of them captured the place in my minds eye. I'm thinking I'd need a drone for a flyover. Instead I opted for a four shot pan in Elements that "sort of" gives the idea of the size of this awesome place. The second and third crop shot show people I "didn't" see in the view finder. Enjoy.
Tomorrow we move to Capitol Reef another of Jay's suggestions and I believe his favorite spot in Utah.
Ken I sure agree with Jay on Capitol Reef. You don't read or hear as much about it and Marci and I "stumbled" on it following our Bryce/Zion/Grand Canyon trip in 2005. It is stunning, as each of these natural wonders are in their own way!
Jack