05-11-2016 10:38 AM - edited 05-11-2016 10:39 AM
Share your amazing travel photography! Let us know the Canon gear you used and the story behind the photo.
This beautiful scene in Italy was captured with a Canon EOS 5D Mark III and a Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM lens at f/11, 1/5 sec, ISO 100.
05-13-2016 09:29 AM - edited 05-13-2016 09:30 AM
@Holymoly wrote:I think it's a bit sad when a thread on photographs becomes a discussion about HDR and whether it's a valid form of photography.
I remember when I switched from film to digital and the purists would argue that ANY interference from Photoshop destroyed the art. It's all a matter of degree.
If a particular individual's preference for highly stylised HDR offends you then that is your opinion and perhaps you are missing the point. Infra red, black and white, soft focus, even polarised are all techniques that alter the final image away from the original scene. HDR is the new kid on the block and could be argued is introducing a new art form distinct from old school photography.
Personally I love using Lightroom and Photoshop to produce an image of which I am proud. It isn't neccessarily just an exercise in faithfully reproducing the subject to the n'th degree.
I think you're the one missing the point. The reason for submitting photos to a thread like this is to find out what other people think of them, to try to understand what works and what doesn't. Ernie's four pictures all work, to one degree or another; the original picture that kicked off the discussion is, in my opinion, much less successful, for the reasons I stated. You're obviously free to disagree on artistic grounds or to challenge my analysis of the technical issues underlying the shot. But to lament the fact that I expressed an opinion different from yours makes no sense. The bottom line is that the moderator wanted to start a discussion by posting the original picture, and she succeeded in doing exactly that.
05-13-2016 09:33 AM - edited 05-13-2016 09:35 AM
"I think it's a bit sad when a thread on photographs becomes a discussion about HDR and whether it's a valid form of photography."
Why? This is a public forum. It sole purpose is discussion and opinions. Besides info and tips on how to do photography.
Beauty is truly in the eye of the beholder.
"Personally I love using Lightroom and Photoshop ..."
I am right there with you. All of my photos go through LR and/or PS. 100%
Speaking of IR, how's this?
EOS 10D with IR conversion. ef 17- 40mm f4L. 20mm, f11, 1/100, and ISO 100. RAW conversion done in DPP and edited in PS.
05-13-2016 09:39 AM
EOS 10D with IR conversion. ef 17- 40mm f4L. 20mm, f11, 1/100, and ISO 100. RAW conversion done in DPP and edited in PS.
05-24-2016 01:26 AM
05-24-2016 04:55 AM - edited 05-24-2016 04:57 AM
My preference is for special effects that do not look like special effects. Here is an in-camera HDR, shot with a CPL filter. On the left is the regular shot, handheld. On the right is the same handheld shot, but as HDR.
New Haven, CT - EOS 6D w/EF 50mm f/1.8 STM - 1/4000 sec, f/4, ISO 100,
05-24-2016 07:51 AM
Interesting. I spent four years in New Haven when I was in college, but I don't think I even knew that lighthouse was there.
Of course that was so long ago that maybe it wasn't!
05-24-2016 08:40 AM
@RobertTheFat wrote:Interesting. I spent four years in New Haven when I was in college, but I don't think I even knew that lighthouse was there.
Of course that was so long ago that maybe it wasn't!
Do a web search for " lighthouse road new haven ". That's also the name of an exit on Interstate 95. There is a popular public park is called Lighthouse Point. Locals take it for granted, probably because it is a bit out of the way, and accessed by a single road with a 25 mph speed limit for a couple of miles.
The left hand picture even shows the second lighthouse, which is located some distance off shore. It can be seen in on the water's horizon in the right part of the shot.
05-24-2016 08:47 AM
HDR can be mild to wild. You can make a photo where it really isn't noticed or you can go abstract.
Oil rigs in eastern Kansas. EOS 1D Mk IV with ef 16-35mm f2.8L @ 16mm.
05-24-2016 10:30 AM - edited 05-24-2016 10:31 AM
Antelope Canyon
Canon 1D Mark IV, EF24-70 f/4L, ISO 400, 1/8 sec @ f/8
05-24-2016 10:40 AM
Monument Valley Sunrise
Canon 1D Mark IV, EF24-70 f/4L, ISO 1250, 1/250 sec @ f/22
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