View allAll Photos Tagged Aperture
“Crazy Tuesday” ,
“Aperture” ,
River Stones,
Macro,
Open Aperture,
Blue,
Nature,
United States,
Pennsylvania,
Winter.
Camera: Canon EOS 50D
Exposure: 0.01 sec (1/100)
Aperture: f/7.1
Focal Length: 70 mm
ISO Speed: 3200
Exposure Bias: -4/3 EV
Flash: Off
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Dąbrówka
It's evening, the sun has already hidden behind the horizon. My wife and I drive slowly along our country roads, and at the end of our first journey during the ending epidemic and the necessary isolation we want to look at the Drzewicki reservoir from the Dąbrówka side. Suddenly we noticed a stork walking majestically through the field. I am slowly driving along a dirt road without stopping the engine - he does not run away, looks and continues to search for his delicacies. I have to hurry, but in order not to scare him away, he is close and there is a great atmosphere, you need to capture her. It is already quite dark and in these conditions I try to get the most out of the equipment. I take the first photos with high ISO sensitivity, burned, I automatically change to the native ISO sensitivity - photo - and I see that a dark photo, I do not have time to think about it, I raise it to ISO 800, then 1250, 1600. I don't know if I have anything, but this moment was extraordinary. Finally, the stork estimates that there is too much traffic around and breaks away, it flies further to the center of the field and we can not see it anymore. I had to wait until the next day to assess what pictures we have - unfortunately, practically all the pictures were out of focus (too long exposure time in difficult conditions despite raising the ISO, with the aperture open to the maximum), I almost gave up, but I remembered that I still have dark photo - this is the photo.
Now I am thinking about how to optimize the technique of taking pictures with this relatively dark lens in order to maximize the quality of the received pictures. I chose it because of the focal lengths, and because it is over 6 times (x 6.44) cheaper than the bright M.Zuiko 300mm f / 4.0, in the hope that in good light I will take great photos with it, and in low light - well well what can be squeezed. But by accident it may turn out that relatively low ISO - maybe not native but something between ISO 400 - 800, combined with the short times required to freeze fast moving objects - will give dark photos that can be easily processed in post-production. I can't wait for the next locations
Maybe this picture is not yet perfectly sharp and technically exemplary, but the pictures are not taken literally, the most important are emotions, mood and narration.
Five blocks from our house, this Cathedral is the oldest and largest church in our city. It always offers so many photographic possibilities.
From deep in my archives and re-edited, this is from 2012, just one year after I took up this fulfilling hobby :)
I like the cocking of the head here on this colorful swallow. Captured at the Horicon Marsh a couple weeks back.
With an average body height of four feet and wing length of nine feet, the American White Pelican gives off a dino vibe.
While gangly on land, their soaring abilities are amazing and they know how to use the air currents both in their migrations as well as in daily flight.
This one passed directly over me as I fired off several shots.
Here's a link to 10 Fun Facts About Pelicans :)
www.mentalfloss.com/article/515654/10-fun-facts-about-pel...
a male klipspringer ( O.oreotragus ) under an humid drizzle.
these little antelopes live just in rocky areas and they are incredibly agile and always alert.
their enemies are mainly leopards and big eagles,the only predators able to ambush or attack klipspringers in their three-dimensional environment.Unlike most other antelopes, the klipspringer has a thick and coarse coat with hollow, brittle hairs.the coat is a significant adaptation that saves the animal during steep falls.
kruger national park ,South Africa
F5,6 (max aperture) to blur the background ,1/640 trying to catch the rain drops
original 3K file here:
This is the cave looking in. It barely goes back 15 feet and had been sealed off for years until wave erosion and weathering wore the rock and block away. flic.kr/p/2na4kpm
Processing done with APERTURE 3
Taken with EOS 550D & TAMRON 28-75 F2.8
Press L to see it on black (light & colors are better)
Toutes vos critiques, commentaires et fav sont les bienvenus !
All criticisms, comments, and fav are welcome !
© All Rights Reserved
An aperture/porthole view of False Creek, Vancouver in beautiful British Columbia, Canada
Please view my Night and Twilight album:
Decked out in its brilliant crimson plumage, this cardinal was belting out its song and trying to woo a mate.
Loud and proud :)
The 2nd part of the lens test. Even with the aperture wide open I could get very sharp pictures. It seems that this combination (Sigma 150-500 mm f/5,0-6,3 APO HSM + Sigma APO Tele Converter EX DG) works very well.
Atardecer en los arrozales . Alfafar-Valencia
Cámara Canon EOS 40D
Exposición 0,02 sec (1/50)
Aperture f/5.0
Lente 17 mm
Velocidad ISO 160
LEE filters
Wild chervil (Anthriscus sylvestris) - also known as cow parsley and Queen Anne's lace.
Olympus EM1 + Pentacon 50mm f1.8, wide open aperture.
A stand of trees by the lakeshore and captured with my telephoto lens...
Artistic rendering.
Enjoy :)
A week or so ago I traveled to find a small waterfall I had heard of. I had a better angle of the falls, unfortunately the wind ripping through this little valley created so much movement of the trees, and small brush in the scene the images became unusable. While I will be back here to get the composition I wanted, this one is interesting enough on its own. The water cutting the rock into boulders, into stones, leaving this strange boulder field in an unmarked valley in the mountains. This is Little Bird Falls, a lovely, if not often visited fall, it to me is more significantly interesting than the larger fall up above that attracts the most attention, though I fear the scene is a bit chaotic.
ISO: 800
Aperture: f8
SS: 3seconds
Focal: 33mm
While this angle didn't require me to get wet, the previous composition I can't show you yet had me knee deep in the creek.
My favorite shots can be purchased here:
In the coming week I will be away visiting, among other things, two Japanese gardens. To help set the mood, today's theme is photos framed by apertures in a Chinese garden.