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I spent 2 days at the North Rim of Grand Canyon and it rained most of the time. I chased the lightning here for 3 hours and took over 1000 boltless photos under an umbrella during my endeavor. Trying to capture lightning without a trigger trap is a huge waste of time, but when your successful just once it makes it all the more rewarding. I tried several different setups using continuous shutter mode with long exposures and then switched to shorter exposures on slow shooting continuous mode and thought that I had failed. When I later reviewed my photos back at the campground I found that I had captured one photo with a strike included. I guess it was luck or just persistence that rewarded me. I also used a second camera to capture video of the storm and the awesome thunderstorm that accompanied the storm. I'm not sure if I will post any of the video but it was nice to have a personal record of the awesomeness of the storms the frequent the Grand Canyon.

 

If you have any questions about this photo or about photography in general, I will do my best to help, just post a comment or send me a Flickr mail and I will respond as quickly as possible.

 

Thanks for taking the time to take a look at my photos, and as always, your views, comments, faves, and support are greatly appreciated!! Have a great week ahead everybody!! :)

 

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Robin [Erithacus rubecula]

 

This is Flash, the wee female robin...just getting ready to fly off.

 

She has been appearing at my feeders at The Pixies for months, now, and I noticed she had damaged her left wing, in March. She seems to be having no adverse effects, thank goodness. When I call her name, she appears for some special wee bird nuggets. I know she has been feeding youngsters but I haven’t seen them, yet...

 

At The Pixies

South Carrick Hills

SW Scotland

Lightning on the 10th of July, in Poole Bay Dorset

 

I tried using my 70-200L as it was on the camera, but it was a bit too long (too small a fov) but I got lucky with this one I pointed it to the last flash and got this.

One From The Archives, Taken Last Summer

European Robin [Erithacus rubecula]

 

This wee Robin has white flashes on each wing. I think this is quite rare as I’ve never seen one like it (even having trawled the University of Google). She is usually first to appear when I’m filling up the winter feed - the peanut butter mixture - and sings as she’s sitting waiting for the all clear... A lovely little soul.

 

Here, she’s sitting waiting in the rain. It’s a really dull and wet day! I hope she is going to have little baby robins with this amazing white flash.

 

At The Pixies

South Carrick Hills

SW Scotland

  

(My Olympus died. Just DIED! I’m getting a replacement, hopefully, tomorrow...For now, I’m using this monstrous super-heavy Canon/Tamron combo...)

  

(cropped)

Going into hospital for a knee replacement operation tomorrow 20th May so will having a rest from Flickr for 2 - 3 weeks.

Hope to catch up with you all at the beginning of June.

Stay safe my friends xx

So, the season premiere of the Flash Season 3 sucked, but episode two gives me a bit more hope that this will be different from Arrow Season 3. But, we can only hope.

-

What did you guys think of the two recent episodes?

Flash, one of our resident male Anna's Hummingbirds, sipping nectar. His flower of choice is our Mystic Spires Salvia flowers. Photo taken in our backyard in Camas, Washington.

This is my first serious attempt at Macro. I used 68mm worth of extensions tubes on my AF-S 24-85mm VR since it stops down to f/29 instead of only f/16 like my 50mm prime. I didn't want to mess with trying to focus stack for just the hint more DOF that I wanted.

 

It's lit by 1 SB-800 which is on it's OEM stand on the table to camera left and is pointed at a wall to camera left about 2 feet away. It's set to 1/1 and 24mm zoom. The flash was triggered with a Neewer radio trigger. A homemade reflector made from aluminum foil is on the opposite side to provide a little fill.

Evening in southern Saskatchewan.

The Havannah Flashes are fishing ponds in the Sankey Valley Park, between St Helens and Newton-le-Willows in Merseyside.

SCRIPTED FLASHING STRING LIGHTS

 

WEAR THEM HOWEVER YOU LIKE

 

BASIC VERSION INCLUDED OPTION TO CHANGE THE COLOR OF YOUR BULBS AS YOU WISH BY EDITING

 

COPY| MOD | NO TRANSF UNRIGGED ACCESSORY

3 METALS : CABLES/BULBS

AT ANTHEM maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Anthem/126/127/1107

 

ALSO YOU CAN FIND UNDER THE CHRISTMAS TREE THERE FOR 50L

 

SADIE GLOVES LIMITED EDITION 3 SPECIAL PATTERNS ♥

Saw this at my Mum and Dad's house tonight.

A Crimson Rosella invites himself to the table.

Takumar 200 f/3.5

After a year of it sitting on my shelf I decided to watch a few tutorials and do some flash photography practices

Jazzit Online Session (leider ohne Publikum):

Pamminger + Brennsteiner + Maurer - 27.02.2021 - Jazzit Musik Club Salzburg

www.jazzfoto.at/konzertfotos21/jazzit-online-session-1/In...

 

Besetzung

Lukas Pamminger: bass

Klaus Brennsteiner: drums

Sebastian Maurer: guitar

 

youtu.be/AkfCkdxIwcE

Another shot from last session with Alessandra, this time featuring an outlandish look with the aid of coloured lighting.

 

Strobist info: primary blue gelled sb700 shot through rapid box octa xl as fill. Sangria coloured rim light on a stripbox, and a tiny Apollo pushed in close with a cerulean blue gelled flash for key.

Shot with a Nikon D700 and the Nikkor 24-70mm f2.8 lens.

 

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Sandhill Cranes (Antigone canadensis)

San Luis Valley / Sangre de Cristo Range

Monte Vista NWR, Monte Vista, CO

 

ORDER: Gruiformes

FAMILY: Gruidae

 

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Sandhill_Crane/overview

www.fws.gov/refuge/monte_vista/

Flash off camera fired using ebay wizzards. Flash is placed to the left, with a dish in the sink with the tap dripping.

Fog was lifting but it was getting dark. I had a panel light to the left and the flash turned down. From my early days with a flash, Gary Fong always said to have the ISO at 400 when using a diffuser. I had to change camera and lens as the focus assist light doesn't hit the macro subject with the 105mm lens (lens is too long and working distance is too short).

55mm3.5 konica hexanon avec l 'usage d'un flash annulaire .

Thank you everyone for your visit, favorites and comments

On my morning walk today I was enjoying the crisp clear air and colorful Sycamore leaves when a Flicker flew by me flashing his brilliant salmon colored wings. What a delight!

And thank you my sweet friends for all the tricks and tips that you give me !! Love you all ♥ and specially Natsu who helped me started... ♥

The river picks up the light and reflections from that lovely sky, the sun casting a flash of light through the trees as it slowly sinks behind the far hills.

My longish exposure smooths the river surface to enhance the reflections, you can make out the sun on the river and the ruffled surface in places where debris was floating by.

Lowena update, She took a turn for the worse on Saturday with another visit to the vet.and yet another visit this morning.

 

The silly dog ate something that made here so ill plus she had an ear infection, fortunately she was well enough for us to make the long drive there and back to Bristol, three hundred miles there and back was a long day for all of us but we got a lot sorted with Jane`s aunts affairs and hopefully we will not have to go again.

Now the washing machine has decided it has a blockedge which I cannot sort so an engineer has come and taken it apart to sort it, arghhhhh lol

-I just received my flash kit "Nikon R1C1 Wireless Close-Up Speedlight Kit

" and having some practices, as its written, perferct for micro and some portraits.

-Its one of the first shots.

 

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Location: Kuwait, Abdulla Al Salim Area

Camera: Nikon D80

Exposure: 0.033 sec (1/30)

Aperture: f/6.3

Focal Length: 18 mm

ISO Speed: 250

Flash: Flash fired

Model: Fahad Al-Sa`ad

Lens: Nikon 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 G ED-IF AF-S VR DX Zoom

Other Details:

Hand held + Nikon R1C1 Wireless Close-Up Speedlight Kit

 

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Copyright© Fahad Al Nusf. All rights reserved

  

Another "not a moose" photo from our latest moose safari.

 

Moose tend to do most of their feeding during early mornings and late evenings. As the later morning sun warms things up, they tend to retreat to deep shade where they nap and ruminate. That's my que to seek other wildlife photo ops. So we head to nearby Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge. By mid-August, many migrating birds have left the refuge, heading to their wintering territories. But this baker's dozen White-faced Ibis flock had yet to depart. This is actually part of a larger flock of about 40 birds.

 

These birds were pretty far away, and this is a pretty big crop, but I like the flash of iridescent color on some of their wings.

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