Serge,
That is the best angle I have ever seen of the Bixby Bridge - what a beautiful bridge!
Jim
serge07 wrote:
Hi, everyone:
James, congratulations on the new wheels! Sixty miles in a month, that is some serous mobility.
Glen great captures and processing with your converted X-T2.
Scott, excellent fall colors. Perhaps you can send some my way.
Rafael. I have had stuff stuck in customs before but in the end, all has worked out well. The waiting part does s*ck. BTW, great captures of awesome looking gear.
Ray, great colors. The 25-50 s certainly no slouch and would be seriously tempted if it were a tad smaller.
A couple from the left coast, Highway 1 taken with the Fish:
Leighton,
Range spec is 18 miles, but it lasts two outings or at least that is the longest I have gone between charges. I knew exactly what I wanted and the sales rep was extremely helpful, and really understood exactly what I needed. So many features builtin, and well thought out engineering have me very impressed.
Jim
leighton w wrote:
Glad you are able to get around more easily. Will the battery last all day?
A slight detour from the vacation pics. Saw this on a co-workers tailgate in the parking lot yesterday. 105mm f2.8 AIS. The second shot is a three frame focus stack.
I like the silver/chrome finish of the M to Z adapter to match the Amedeo
I am still waiting for that full frame Zf with BSI sensor to come out from Nikon and really put the Nikon S mount and LTM lenses to work without cropping. Hey I can wish, right?
pbraymond wrote:
A slight detour from the vacation pics. Saw this on a co-workers tailgate in the parking lot yesterday. 105mm f2.8 AIS. The second shot is a three frame focus stack.
Cousin of one I saw today on my walk. The couple photos I took were on a Provia 100 roll so have to wait to finish the roll and get it developed before I can see if I got anything worth posting.
I visited the North Georgia mountains again today and ran into this gentleman at Neel Gap on the Appalachian Trail. I asked if I could take his photo and then we chatted for a few minutes. He said that everyone calls him Whittle and that he pretty much lives on the AT. I asked why he wears a kilt and he said that it's more comfortable and less confining that pants. He said he would hike naked if he could get away with it!
spoupard wrote:
I visited the North Georgia mountains again today and ran into this gentleman at Neel Gap on the Appalachian Trail. I asked if I could take his photo and then we chatted for a few minutes. He said that everyone calls him Whittle and that he pretty much lives on the AT. I asked why he wears a kilt and he said that it's more comfortable and less confining that pants. He said he would hike naked if he could get away with it!
Nice shot. Doesn't he realize that his shirt/jacket clashes with his kilt?
I've seen several men through the years of being a market vendor wear kilts at the market. To each their own. It's part of what makes the world interesting.