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An EMD 16 710G3C prime mover is carefully lowered onto the frame of Union Pacific SD70ACe No. 8382 on May 18, 2015, at UP’s Downing B. Jenks Shop in North Little Rock, Arkansas.
Prime Movers on their way in to Yass during the bi-annual "Haulin' the Hume" run for historic, veteran and vintage trucks and a get together of drivers; on the old Hume Highway.
(1/3) 1985 KENWORTH W900, as the plates say!
(2/3) 1982 KENWORTH K124.
(3/3) Just beautiful, the INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER from Lowe's of Greensborough.
Yass, New South Wales, Australia.
Dimension 35 mm 1:2.8 Prime - 2 (of 7) - Canon EOS M (2012) and Fotodiox EOS-EOS M adapter with Dimension 35 mm 1:2.8 Prime (M42 mount) with Fotodiox M42-EOS Adapter - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives on Vancouver Island, where he works as a writer.
A sweet little trio of sparrows from earlier in the Summer. Happy Fence Friday, my friends, I'm dashing out the door but will catch up with you later this afternoon. :)
A walk along the Vöckla river in Spring 2020 - fresh logs from Jan 2020
Back to the roots - one camera with a prime lens only. It is worth trying!
Canon primes with fieldmade.co stickers on the lenscaps.
Strobist info:
- Elinchrom ELB400 with 135cm Rotalux octa subject left
- bounce subject right
- Elinchrom Skyport HS Plus trigger
Lens stickers by Field Made
Lego Nemesis Prime - Masterpiece Brickformer (MB-01b).
Fully transformable without removing any pieces.
Look out for Lego Optimus Prime - Masterpiece Brickformer (MB-01) in the near future.
You can't build a Prime figure without a nod to Chris Roach . I have been meaning to build this for many years and there is no doubt that his Primes have influenced this build. Thanks for the inspiration Chris.
The vegetarian curry wurst at Bestie is so damn tasty... and I'm guessing this sugary orange beverage would also be super tasty, but I was strong and resisted my sugary urges. I found out that there's only 14 grams of sugar in a bottle, so that was probably a mistake I shouldn't repeat when I return for lunch again! Photographed while exploring with Daniel, NJ, and Tatsuya. (Thanks to my brother for the playtime with his new a7... and thanks to Daniel for letting me shoot the Zeiss 55mm f/1.8 for pretty much our entire outing!) East Pender Street, Chinatown, Vancouver. February 15, 2015.
Optimus Prime from Transformers, built as part of my “Saturday Morning BrickHeadz” display at Bricks By The Bay this weekend.
I just returned from a family trip to San Antonio over Christmas. Probably the most memorable thing we did was attend the Alamo Bowl and watch BYU play Colorado in football. A couple of days before the game, the bowl organized a pep rally on the Riverwalk in which the coaches and players were introduced to fans. We happened to grab a spot on a bridge crossing the river that was very close to the stage. This picture shows Coach Prime (Deion Sanders) on the stage with Travis Hunter (Heisman winner) and Shadeur Sanders. Lots of hype and excitement around the Colorado team, but during the game they played poorly and BYU dominated.
Green is the prime color of the world, and that from which its loveliness arises.
Pedro Calderon de la Barca
Jan cleverly devised a way to make to put lights into Prime's eyes. There are 2 separate push buttons at his back that activates the lights.
There is no doubt that advances in optics have made the DSLR zoom lens the tool of choice for most photographers, combining convenience, performance and cost in a single package.
Sometimes however, you need something faster than f/2.8 or f/4 to allow low light shooting or to give you a very shallow depth of field and great bokeh.
I present to you my collection of affordable prime lenses.
I don't use them all the time but find them quite useful on occasion.
From left to right:
AF-S DX NIKKOR 35mm f/1.8G. This compact optic is dirt cheap and sharper than you would expect. It mates perfectly with my D3300 and delivers a very compact package that can't be beat. The problem for me is that I was never a big fan of the 50mm focal length when I shot film, preferring instead a 35mm f/2 lens on my film Nikons. I feel that the 50mm is too long for most interior shots where you will most likely need it. I wish that Nikon or a 3rd party would release a 20-24mm f/1.8 DX lens (35mm equivalent) at a reasonable size and price. I would buy it in an instant!
AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G. The "Nifty Fifty". I like this full frame (FX) lens a lot. The 75mm equivalent focal length on my DX cameras gives me a great indoor volleyball lens, a perfect product photography lens and a very useful portrait lens. Shot wide open, the bokeh is excellent and the shallow depth of field is easily manipulated by changing f/stops and observing the results you get with each iteration. It is also quite compact as you can see in the lineup.
AF-S NIKKOR 85mm f/1.8G. Another classic optic and perfect for head and shoulders portraits with both DX and FX cameras. The f/1.8 aperture also makes it a great indoor sports camera. Combined with a DX camera like the D500 you can get fantastic action shots in low light. The bokeh also makes it a fabulous portrait lens.
Do you have a favorite prime lens you can't do without?
SROBIST INFO: Shot with a single Larson 27" Soffbox fitted to a Novatron bare tube flash head and powered by a Novatron 440+ W/S powerpack. I used four white foam core cards to create a quasi light tent and used Yongnuo wireless flash triggers to fire the strobe