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I thought this was my first shipwreck photo, but then I remembered shooting the boat out near Point Reyes, so this is actually my second shipwreck!
This one is down in Florida. It will be the first of a series of 3 images of this beached sailboat from last week. I used the Smooth Reflections app to blend 8 15 second exposures. I was happy to have that app handy since one of my two remote cables that connect the receiver to the camera has died and the other was connected to the second camera doing a timelapse. The Sahara Sand dust cloud in the air made for some really odd light, I think it would have been a great sunset without that dust in the air.
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Explore #476 in Oct, 2, 2008
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Binalong Bay being what it is on a day with some oppressive feeling pre-frontal cloud streaming from the west.
iPhone 11 Pro Max, 4.25mm Back Camera lens, 1/2500th sec at f/1.8, ISO 32, Moment Camera App RAW file.
A dried up Echinacea Cone was all that was left to this flower.
Taken with an iPhone4, Olloclip Macro lens, edited on iPad. Apps used, Snapseed, Pixlr Express+ and Mextures.
One of the highlights of this trip for me was to meet the famous cormorant fishermen of Guilin. Even if the water is too polluted now for fishing to be sustainable, these fishermen remain icons of some sort in this area, prized by many photographers, yet they remain as graceful as ever, even with old age. Their art will eventually be lost, as new generations take over, turning traditions into a simple tourist attractions. I’m so glad and honoured to have been able to meet the authentic, original cormorant fishermen of Guilin.
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2017
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NOTE: All works featured here are completely original creations. None are made with the assistance of any form of AI technology in any fashion whatsoever.
Contemplating Spring;
apps used; proCamera, iColorama, superimpose, Pixelmator, flow paper,
homage to Frederich Sandys;http://www.victorianweb.org/painting/sandys/drawings/14.html. parts of hair & hand are from one of his drawinings. All other photos mine.
I saw the aurora forecast early yesterday evening and later noticed incredible pictures starting to appear on Facebook and Twitter from nearby and further south. It was a last minute decision to head out of the city and try my luck somewhere along the Drymen road.
The Whangie carpark was busy and, although I was delighted to see the aurora visible to the naked eye (the first time I've seen it), I wanted a better view from higher up and further away from car headlights. So instead of lingering I grabbed my camera gear and ran up the hill in the dark.
For about an hour the aurora remained a steady but faint greenish glow in the distance. Then without warning the glow appeared to grow far stronger, jump closer and become more structured, waving and rippling slowly, a vast curtain across the northern horizon blowing in the solar wind.
The display went on like that for 15 or so minutes before fading back to its previous state. I waited for a repeat but eventually gave up when my "torch" (an app on my phone) ran out of battery and I remembered I had work in the morning. So it was back down the hill to the car - not running this time - with only the glow from my camera's LCD screen to guide the way.
Note to self: bring a proper torch next time.
However many times I see the northern lights in the years to come, and I hope to see plenty of them, I won't forget last night in a hurry.