I love this! What a wonderfully composed and balanced triptych.
You have such an amazing way of framing. Did you have this triptych in mind when you were out wandering the streets or did the individual frames lend themselves to being aligned this way (downhill slope, horizontal, uphill)*(red car, orange, red)*(low building, high, low)?
I love this! What a wonderfully composed and balanced triptych.
You have such an amazing way of framing. Did you have this triptych in mind when you were out wandering the streets or did the individual frames lend themselves to being aligned this way (downhill slope, horizontal, uphill)*(red car, orange, red)*(low building, high, low)?
Colin
Thank you Colin! Some come together all at once and so are shot in sequence. Others I’ll take the first pic because something about it caught my eye, then I’ll stumble across another scene that I realize would work really well if only I could find another…
What is interesting is because I am looking for them, I have been composing in the portrait/vertical much moe than the horizontal.
Here is another I took last week on the same outing, and I hope it is ok to post here because while two of the images were taken w the F2, the third was taken w a Leica M6. Often if I am half way through a roll of film I’ll take a completely different body to switch out when that roll is done. Just to keep things interesting!
AdaptedLenses wrote:
Thanks, that makes sense, it was interesting & different in the transition areas, definitely caught my eye.
I used Lightroom for years and when I got my first Fuji, switched to Capture One. Then I bought a different Fuji and C1 didn't support it. I REALLY didn't want to pay for the new version of C1 (over $200) and I didn't want to go back to the subscription model of LR. So, I decided to try some others out until I landed on Luminar Neo. I love it and they have made huge improvements with the software since I've been using it.
pbraymond wrote:
Leighton, too bad about the daylily vendor. There should be some kind of movement to popularize deer meat, we got to get that population under control.
I know, it's really getting bad. When we first moved here 25 years ago, we hardly saw any dear. We never had to worry with our 2 acres of vegetables being eaten by them. Now, I had to put up electric fence around our garden or they'd eat the whole thing, even with the dog around. I would never kill one because of them being a nuisance, so maybe it's time we learn to like venison. I know the one that's been in our orchid every day should be tasty after eating all those apples.
There was a program around here called "Hunters for the Hungry" where you could take one to a butcher and they would give the meat to anyone who needed food.
Desmolicious wrote:
Thank you Colin! Some come together all at once and so are shot in sequence. Others I’ll take the first pic because something about it caught my eye, then I’ll stumble across another scene that I realize would work really well if only I could find another…
What is interesting is because I am looking for them, I have been composing in the portrait/vertical much moe than the horizontal.
Here is another I took last week on the same outing, and I hope it is ok to post here because while two of the images were taken w the F2, the third was taken w a Leica M6. Often if I am half way through a roll of film I’ll take a completely different body to switch out when that roll is done. Just to keep things interesting!
It is crazy prices! I only rode in one (dual windshield version) once as a kid but still remember it. My uncle had a VW Bug and I got to drive it to and back from Myrtle Beach SC one year with him when I still just had a learner permit. That was a blast!
I always kept interest when VW would tease a re-release of the microbus and then it would never come to pass. Always told my wife I would buy one if they ever did come back. And I am not talking about the ID. Buzz
Desmolicious wrote:
Have you seen how much those buses are going for now? Crazy.