View allAll Photos Tagged AuroraHDR

My trusty steed a Schwinn MOAB 29er

Canvey Marina, tide out and lots of mud!

 

3 exposures combined in AuroraHDR with the Magical Sunset preset

Sunset @ Devonport - watching Spirit II heading home...

Cortez is one of the last fishing villages on the east coast of the United States. That would mean these pelicans picked the perfect place to live.

 

We came for the annual fish festival and left stuffed to the gills. They had every kind of fish dish you can imagine, and then some.

 

Fishing vessels were docked alongside the processing plant, and I captured these fellas preening themselves, oblivious to all the commotion around them. Sea birds in Florida coexist with fishing and are not afraid of humans at all.

 

Anyway, this reminded me that I need to come back to Cortez on a regular workday to see everything in action. It's one of the first places I came with the new Sony camera about five years ago, and I always find something interesting to shoot here. And, as one of the last villages of it's kind, it is a little bit of history.

7 exposures combined in AuroraHDR - No preset

The problem with a place in Florida called Venice is that if you Google "Venice," you'll end up in Italy. Even if I search my website, I get Italy. Using the hashtag "#venicefl" helps sort that out.

 

That's the thing about living in the new world, a lot of places get named after the old world. If you're someone like me that was born here, its confusing as heck. (I never said I was bright.) It's like when someone in Ontario Canada mentions London; or the poor souls in Paris Texas.

 

Hashtags aside, I took this with the original Sony A7R. By this time I owned it for over a year and was thoroughly happy with it. Now I'm on the third generation A7, but am going back with newer software. The updated software breaths new light into these old shots. This is processed with Aurora HDR 2019, and after looking at what it can do with these old photos, I'm going to be going back to have a second look at a few more.

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I came here because the bridge is new and I’ve waited a long time to take this picture.

 

more here: goo.gl/8596iz

Visit to Concrete City with fellow photographers: Curtis Solanick, Brian Bukeavich, Lewis De Joseph, Marty Straub and Dave Cohen.

 

Since purchasing MacPhun's new HDR software, AuroraHDR Pro over the holidays, I made sure to capture plenty of bracketed exposures to jump head-first into the program (I've used HDRsoft's Photomatix Pro dating back to late 2006)

 

Concrete City

Nanticoke, Pennsylvania

Thursday, January 7th, 2016

 

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Santiago Calatrava's amazing Oculus, just a part of the new World Trade Center Transportation Hub.

503CW + CFV-39 + Zeiss 80mm + 16mm Ext

Phocus + Aurora 2019+Luminar 2018

Looking west with the Supermoon still visible

Slovakia, Vysoké Tatry: Lovely #PHOTOFRANO

 

Photography & FineArt by photofrano

“Exposure is just the beginning” #HDR #BW

 

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The castle ruins sit on a high bluff overlooking a portion of the beautiful Lake of the Ozarks. At the beginning of the 1900s, Snyder, who was a prominent Kansas City businessman, began construction of a magnificent European-style mansion or "castle." He was killed in an automobile accident before it was completed but his family continued the work and lived in it for a time. More than 15 miles of trails wind through the Ha Ha Tonka State Park, which has sinkholes, natural bridges, caves and an arm of the lake. The beautiful Lake of the Ozarks has over 1,000 miles of shoreline and attracts visitors from around the world.

 

IMG_9447_HDR

#AuroraHDR

 

© Stephen L. Frazier - All of my images are protected by copyright and may not be copied, printed, distributed or used on any site, blog, or forum without expressed permission.

 

Looking for Steve Frazier's main photography website? Visit stevefrazierphotography.com

 

Contact him at stevefrazierphotography@gmail.com

Don’t know why I took this shot ? Maybe it was the contrast between the man made storm water drain and Mother Nature......or maybe Im just full of it 😂

Dji Phantom 3 Pro

We walked down the road looking for a place to chill and found a quiet little beach bar with tropical beverages. It was our third stop, and it was a charm.

 

It's called the Blue Angel, and it's about a mile south of central Cozumel. If you're in the area, you can't go wrong. It's a resort and dive shop, and from what I could see, very laid back. There were half dozen cruise ships in port, so this is a spot to get away from crowds.

 

We've had a problem with red tide in Florida, so it was refreshing to see so many fish in the clear turquoise water. There were divers and snorkeling which we lazily watched all afternoon. It's the kind of place I could waste away in Margaritaville. I can envision myself napping in one of these hammocks half the day and the other half looking for my lost jigger of salt.

Here I am close to home on an early Sunday morning. I was standing at the end of Emerson Point which faces west into the gulf. I, of course, was facing east. This local park is one of my favorite go-to places for sunrise and sunsets.

 

It rained the night before, so I thought we'd have a beautiful display in the sky with high scattered clouds, but, we didn't. So instead, I composed this shot to focus on the foreground elements with the sunrise as background. If I get disappointed because the scene doesn't turn out how I envisioned, I remind myself to let go and work with what I've got. Even if things go sideways, keep looking for an angle that's pleasing or tells a story.

 

One other thing: I figured I'd be alone here. But there was another photographer down by the water, and when I turned around after taking this shot, there was another photographer with a couple doing a maternity shoot. So apparently, there was indeed an abundance of compositions to go around.

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