First One: 30 second exposure, F14, 55mm, ISO400
Second One: 1/125 exposure, F6.3, 18mm, ISO100 (in retrospect should have brought my tripod, bumped it to ISO400, and upped the Fstop as much as I could get away with....)
Cheers! (if an admin needs me to resize them, just let me know, I felt that "medium" was a bit too small... (flickr))
Originally Posted by alexniedra
Nice one, Alex, the depth of field is incredible.
I have to look in my photo-library to see whether I have something that fits in this assignment, pretty hard one.
BTW(Off-topic, I'm sorry), which photo-library program do you use? I use Picassa, and it works great
I thought I would keep it simple for my first assignment.
[img]/cfs-file.ashx/__key/CommunityServer.Components.UserFiles/00.00.00.28.72/pegs_2D00_med.jpg[/img]
Canon 450D & EF 70-200 L
Whatsreal:
Thanks for posting. This was taken in my "backyard" of Washington DC at the George Bush WWII Memorial leading the eye to the Lincoln Memorial.
Canon Rebel XSi + 24-105 f4L | Manual | f16 | ISO 100 | 8 second exposure
Both RAW conversion & final processing done using CS4
Wow, steady as a marksman! Nice one Jorundr.
Originally Posted by Damian S.
Thanks, but I confess, I cheated, it was cafaine-free coffee in the morning.. ; )
Originally Posted by Pieter
Thanks Pieter. []
I like to use a 12mm lens at f/9-f/11 for the majority of my landscape images for full depth-of-field.
Originally Posted by Pieter
No problem - I don't mind, and I hope everyone is okay with this semi-irrelevant discussion.
I use Adobe Lightroom 2.0 for organizing my images. It allows me to import, edit and export all of my images in a streamlined worflow. I'm sort of an Adobe nerd, sorry. []
I have used Picasa as well and I think it's great. I just prefer Lightroom for it's editing/fixing options and it's intelligent export options (Zenfolio, Facebook and Flickr direct export). Very rarely do I do any more editing to my images than what I can do in Lightroom, but all that may change when Adobe Photoshop CS5 comes out in April. [] I have to admit, HDR seems really cool to try sometime. I currently use Photoshop Elements 4.0 (Ancient! I know!) for Panoramas and I have been pleased with the results so far.