View allAll Photos Tagged Multiples
This is what it looks like when the multiple exposure lever is left on and you forget. After counting more than 12 frames you begin to wonder what's going on???? I sadly dropped the Bronica and it is no more :(
Taken in Penang, Old City, Malaysia.
Zenza Bronica SQ-A 80mm f/2.8
Kodak Portra 400
Have a good look to distinguish what is real and what is a reflection. Photo without manipulation.
Mira bien para distinguir que es realidad y que es un reflejo. Foto sin manipulación.
Multiple exposure of The Wheatsheaf Pub in London, with the Jerusalem sign from the cafe opposite, with Hoya Pop Color Filters (Red & Green).
Nikon F4. Fujifilm Velvia 50 35mm E6 slide film.
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This week I travelled to Rice Lake in Lynn Valley. I was a bit lost trying to find the lake and the orientation maps didn't seem to help me. As the light faded, I stumbled upon an idyllic clearing, perfect for play. Nature is beautiful and peaceful on the North Shore and I look forward to returning soon.
Multiple Exposures of various things at the Loseby Park in Bowral. Used the Hoya Pop Colour Filter set.
Nikon F65. Kodak Ektar 100 35mm C41 film.
Picture taken 03/13/25
Multiple signs | 8465-8485 Market St, Mentor, OH
Please contact me via FlickrMail, or on Gmail if you'd like to use any of my photographs.
retaimings@gmail.com
Shot at an elementary school looking down the hallway. Shot with a nikon d600 and 28-300mm lens. Using the multiple exposure setting in camera. I wish the d600 had a higher amount of shots to add instead of the maximum of 3.
Multiple exposure of a pregnant model I hired in 2016, with one shot trying out a wide aperture angled shot of the grass. Taken at Lion's Park in Bowral.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 50mm F1.4D lens. Kodak Portra 400 35mm C41 film.
Multiple Exposure of a pregnant model I hired. At a park in Sydney across the road from the Art Gallery of NSW.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 24mm F2.8D lens. Kodak Portra 400 35mm C41 film.
Multiple exposure of a pregnant model I hired in 2016, with one shot of the stuff on the ground. With the type of film I was using, mundane things such as that looked really good in my opinion. Taken at Lion's Park in Bowral.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 50mm F1.4D lens. Kodak Elitechrome Extra Color 100 35mm E6 slide film.
This photo hangs in my studio....my daughter's multiples: two sets of twins; all boys; 11 years ago. #cy365 #day208 #multiples
A view across the valley on a blustery day.
Hand-held nine frame multiple exposure. Contrast increase in Lightroom.
Plenty more at Pelcomb Portraits.
I spent an enjoyable time a few days ago practicing a new technique that I learned for photographing hummingbird. Even if the pictures hadn't turned out well, it would have been fun, as these little birds are a lot of fun to watch.
I learned the lighting from a book by Linda Robbins called The Hummingbird Guide. Her method is to use a minimum 0f 5 to 6 strobes, a supplied background, and photograph the birds in the shade so that you don't have to overpower the sunlight. When you use multiple strobes on a subject in the shade you can use lower power settings for each flash which results in shorter flash durations which means it freezes the wing blur. I used 6 Yongnuo strobes because I wanted to use identical manual power output for each flash . One strobe was pointed at the background, one was underneath the feeder, and the other 4 strobes surrounded the feeder. The strobes were all at under 1/32nd power, in manual mode, and were triggered by a Yongnuo RF-603N., and you can see the EXIF info on the side. This method is the only way that I've been able to photograph one of these birds with little, or no, wing blur. Down below in the first comment, you can see a picture of the setup that I used.
I've taken quite a few pictures of hummers over the years and put them an album creatively called Hummingbirds.
Northern Class 150 Sprinter no. 150206 at Manchester Piccadilly.
Some video of trams and buses in Blackpool on this trip is here.
The full photo gallery from this trip is here: mkttransportphoto.smugmug.com/2017/May-2017/Blackpool-via...
Male Eastern Pondhawk (Erythemis simplicicollis) - Wawayanda State Park, Highland Lakes, New Jersey
I couldn't get the light behind me when photographing this guy, but the angle of the sun yielded some nice bokeh* as the sunlight was focused (refracted) through tiny beads of water on the tips of marsh grass poking through the surface of the pond.
* Those of you that think everything OOF (out of focus) is bokeh need to read this definition of Bokeh!
This image is (or was at one time) one of my most popular images
click on the following link to see a slideshow of Dah Professor's Top 100 Images
PANO-Vision shot taken while leaving metal platform overhanging dam and pipeline at Fain Lake in Prescott Valley