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Nikon F100 | Ilford FP4 Plus 125
Digitized with Nikon D600, Micro-Nikkor 55mm 2.8 | Viltrox L116 LED panel | Negative Supply MK1
Home developed in Kodak Hc-110 1:31 | Tank
Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: Linear | WB: Auto-Neutral
Spent 2 hours in the walk-in clinic today. After an exam and 5 X-rays, it turns out I (surprisingly) don't have any broken bones, but I do have a sprained ankle. Ice 3-4 times a day, wear the air cast for a week. And I got a prescription for Vicodin. Woo!
Photo: ©10/11/2024-Phil Wahlbrink
Ercé-en-Lamée, Brittany, France
Camera: FUJIFILM X-T5
Lens: 80.4mm — ISO: 640 — 1/250” f2.8
Note: A full day of work and a photo shoot with my sister didn't leave a lot of time for my project. I grabbed 2 quick frames during a wardrobe change and lucked out with this one.
Gear: Nikon D700. Nikon 50mm f/1.4 @f/5.0. I used Lightroom for cropping and then into passed into photoshop for desaturation, border and removing the fangs from my face.
Strobist: AB800 into an Octobox @ 1/4 power on cam left. You can see the hot spot on the wall behind my head. I using the soft, feathered light on my face.
The moon is very bright tonight, so I decided to try to shoot it through the telescope with a 3mm eyepiece. That gives an incredible level of detail, but it is difficult to get a sharp photo. This is a pretty decent effort, though. I love it when you can see the shadows in the craters.
One of the hardest flowers to get a good shot of, is the Aconitum, Stormhatt in Swedish.
In english it have many names, like:
aconite, monkshood, wolf's bane, leopard's bane, women's bane, Devil's helmet or blue rocket.
It's abstract in it's growt pattern and doesn't look good on pictures... so I tried a different approach... :~)
It's also one of the most poisionous herbs of the garden....
It contains large quantities of the alkaloid pseudaconitine, which is a deadly poison
Several species of Aconitum have been used as arrow poisons.
Included in my "2012 - 366 Days" project
Big Betony (Stachys macrantha), Praktbetonika. Another one of the wild friends in my garden.
Included in my "2012 - 366 Days" project.
I rode by these ladies this evening while on a bike ride. The brown one on the left was closest to me, but as soon as I pulled my camera out, they started coming out of the woodwork! Curious creatures, cows.
See that person in the corner there?
That's my little sister - younger than me by a mere 3 years but is like half a daughter to me. No matter where she is, she is always in the line of my sight. Always.
On the 20th April (her 18th birthday) I will share an up to date photo of her and tell you a little story.
But for now, I leave you with this thought: if you know my name, you will undoubtedly know hers too. And if you don't already (have you been living under a rock?!), you will..
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I made her sit on the cold window sill for at least 20 minutes before letting her sleep haha.
Etowah Mounds is the most intact Mississippian Culture site in the Southeast. - www.gastateparks.org/EtowahMounds
I wish I could have gotten closer, but the site is only open four days a week now due to state budget cuts.
4/26/12.
These days are always the hardest to get an image since I'm working pretty much the entire day.
This coal blast furnace dates back to the 1830s. It was captured by Sherman's troops during the Atlanta campaign of 1864. It is the only remaining structure of what was the town of Etowah, most of which was flooded by the Army Corps of Engineers when Lake Allatoona was created.
This is another thing I'm working on. The next step is to get an equatorial mount, which will allow me to take photos of the stars without the blur from the earth's movement. This was taken on a regular tripod, so you will see some blur if you look at the larger versions.
Sunset peeking through.
This image is a composite from two different exposures. No HDR merge, this is manually aligned and masked. PS was doing a horrible job at auto-align for some reason.