Lieutenant Z wrote:
great eye Ronny..... is that Nitro?
Thanks Z
Yes it is Miss him he passed away 2 years ago
he was 13 years and now I have been without a dog for 2 years and I have had German Shepherds for 27 years before
Ronny Olsson wrote:
Thanks Z
Yes it is Miss him , he passed away 2 years ago
he was 13 years and now I have been without a dog for 2 years and I have German Shepherds for 27 years before
yes I was aware of Nitro's death but I saw in your flickr that the shot was taken in 2013.
why don't you get an other German Shepherd ?
Ronny Olsson wrote:
Thanks Z
Yes it is Miss him he passed away 2 years ago
he was 13 years and now I have been without a dog for 2 years and I have had German Shepherds for 27 years before
That's a great shot Ronny. Your reflection in his eye is so poignant in light of your comment about missing him. I remember so many pics of him, especially pics of him jumping over fallen trees and things.
Jay, enjoyed the cost series, but especially so the second instagram-ready shot.
Serge, the 35O should be used not stored! Unless of course you have a different favorite 35mm MF Nikkor.
Ben, you capture a lot of forlorn looks, and they are an outstanding match for your style. Are there different frames of the same subjects where the mood is different but just does not fit the classic dark Ben look?
Samy, have not mentioned this before but have enjoyed the Veterans' Day series you've posted. This latest one is a great moment and showcases the 180mm.
Riccardo, great eye on the light on Santa Maria. The sharp and soft shadow line in the same picture is intriguing.
Ronny, excellent capture of your own reflection in Nitro's eye.
Leighton, the birds at the top of the shot really adds to an already impressive "Rays" shot!
Thanks folks for the likes and comments on the Veterans Day pictures. Serge, Dean's postings with Portra film inspired me to retry C-41. Hope he reappears here with his work soon.
I had two German Shepards when I was growing up. King and Kong. They are a special breed. I have been without my best friend since 2018. Just hard to get another. A special bond for sure.
This is the only fall color in my house. An Arizona walnut. A misplaced tree in Southern California where it shed its leaves in fall for no good reason.
It never gives me a good color, the leaves drop real quick upon changing. However this year the 90f November weather confused it and it is keeping the leaves on.
Nikkor 3.5cm 3.5 S rangefinder mount. Great color, excellent sharpness.
The Fotasy adapter is junk, it now lives in a Kipon one.
My last post was with the 105 f2.5 AIS. Carrying on in that vein, I was playing with trying to get some sunstars with it. It often ghosted and flared and showed some rather uninteresting 6-pointed stars. However, occasionally, I did get some rather interesting ones as well
I am not sure why it was at ISO 320 - perhaps I forgot to reset it after shooting inside this mission.
This is the Cataldo Mission in N Idaho along I-90. It has some rather interesting history and is linked to the mission here on the Flathead Reservation in Montana. I have a sequence on this that I will post in couple of weeks when I am back from the UP Michigan. I hope the weather gods are nice to me on this trip!!
Looking at Chuong's post on this page, I think he's one of the likely suspects. I have an alibi, when I clicked on the link the thing had already sold.
saph wrote:
Looking at Chuong's post on this page, I think he's one of the likely suspects. I have an alibi, when I clicked on the link the thing had already sold.
Sorry Samy, that's hearsay, it wouldn't hold up in a court of law.
Ouch that's 5X heavier than the 1000mm f11 I carted over to Conowingo dam last week. Probably enough light to see galaxies and nebulae.
anitrone wrote:
Hopefully this link will work, its a test of the 1959 1000mm 6.3 Nikkor at KEH, I just thought it would be interesting to see this beast in action.