I'd probably use closer to f/16-f/22... I like the photo though
Maine isa very nice place from what I have seen/heard!
ps, also noticed a little sensor dust near the top right of the boats mast(?) on the left
I'd probably use closer to f/16-f/22... I like the photo though
Maine isa very nice place from what I have seen/heard!
ps, also noticed a little sensor dust near the top right of the boats mast(?) on the left
Originally Posted by nickds7
Why f/16-22?
I see what you mean about the possible sensor dust. I've looked for the spot in later photos of the sky but can't see it. Maybe it got vibrated away when I turned the camera off.
Maine is very nice. We stayed near Acadia National Park.Wetook part in the Canon Photography in the Park Workshop our first day
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I like the scene, too.
Being a darkened background, if you were hoping to get it in sharp clarity, it wouldn't show up much, anyway. Diffraction would have wiped out any benefit, regardless.
I would have stuck to f/8, since the scene doesn't need much clarity beyond the boats.
Or, do a focus stack with the foreground and background, then you'd have the far boats and the foreground showing sharper focus.
Originally Posted by Alan
This is the first I've heard of "focus stacking." I did a Google search and found that one can use the Enfuse Lightroom plugin todo this. I'm looking forward to trying it.