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The Future Is Now....
I love this movie. It is in my top 10 favorite movies of all time list. Everything was firing on all cylinders for this film and I can find no fault with the acting, writing, directing, lighting, sets, props, music, etc.
Having worked in the film industry for 10 years, I usually have some sort of critique about something.
Sure, sure; The Hudsucker Proxy isn't a movie for everyone, but if you haven't seen it you should set aside some time to check it out.
About the build:
I wanted to use all "cheese slopes" but didn't have enough and needed to improvise. The Hudsucker "H" is 100% cheese slopes. Over all the mosaic is 70% cheese slopes.
Size is 12 x 11 studs
To save my sanity during the photographing of this build upright I did tape the back so the mosaic wouldn't accidentally fall apart.
Pentax K-3 II, objectif Pentax SMC 1:2.5 135mm + soligor MP Auto Tele Converter utilisé en bague allonge.
17 prises Raw DNG en Pixel shift résolution à F11, 1/15, 100iso avec variation de mise au point, essai du logiciel Hélicon Focus 6. Post-traitement.
J'ai utilisé un ancien objectif manuel avec un ancien teleconvertisseur utilisé ici en bague allonge( sans la lentille), on est alors dans le rapport de reproduction 1:3 à la distance minimale de prise de vue, selon mes calculs donc une photo proxy. La photo a été recadrée en 4/3.
La bague de diaphragme est réglè sur F11 pour la netteté sans les défauts d'une ouverture plus fermée, la fonction pixel shift résolution de Pentax est activée et j'ai pris 17 prises pour augmenter la profondeur de champ dans une certaine limite, le but étant aussi de tester le logiciel Hélicon Focus 6.
Those who know and understand how proxy service works already know about amazing benefits of using it goo.gl/LDulmz
I took a day trip to the Willamette National Forest East of Eugene Oregon on the Old Mckenzie Highway. I drove 1/2 hour into the park and passed no one. This fall is about a 1/2 mile easy hike from the road that will take you over an interesting lava flow. It was pouring rain and I needed to plant my tripod in the middle of the river to get this shot. Then I realized if I slipped it was going to be a VERY long wait for help.
Unfortunately, I arrived late enough in the morning that the sun was shining directly into the camera - I had to hide in the shade of a tree and take some "peek-a-boo" shots of just part of the falls...
I haven't been here since last year but I thought I'd post an old one anyways. I was working in Corvallis all last week and was tempted to drive a little further south to revisit this one. Last time I was here I took a vertical shot right next to the falls that I really loved but overexposed it slightly. Since then I've been wanting to get back here and redo that one shot. This place is always amazing to visit too, and like a lot of the waterfalls here in Oregon you'll probably have it all to yourself.
Fuji 6x17 camera.
When I visited Upper Proxy Falls, the waterfall itself was nothing special, but the slowly swirling water in the basin at the bottom made for an interesting long-exposure shot. The water was shallow here so you can see sticks and things on the bottom, while leaves and other debris on the surface swirled, creating a whirlpool effect.
Proxy Falls, also known as Lower Proxy Falls, is a cascade and plunge waterfall from a collection of springs on the shoulder of North Sister, that plunges into a gaping canyon near McKenzie Pass in the Willamette National Forest, near Belknap Springs, Oregon.
I seem to be getting less and less creative with my titles.
This is another aspect of Proxy Falls, one of the most magical waterfalls I've been to. This is from last Spring, when we hiked through 2.5 miles of snow on the road to even reach the trailhead, and then hiked another mile to the falls itself. I recently revisited Proxy (I won't have those images for another week or more, though, as they are slides and I'm not about to fire off my last few shots of Velvia without careful consideration) and guess what I found?
Snow. Sigh. Luckily, though, the road was passable this time, and the snow at Proxy was only a light layer. I actually journeyed up to the Dee Wright Observatory and when I came back down and hit the Proxy Trail, I was completely alone in the parking lot... just the way I like it. It was a damp but lovely hike and the waterfall itself didn't disappoint this time, either.
Taken with my Nikon FM, and likely Kodak 160VC film.
I took a longer exposure on this shot than others in my Proxy Falls series to emphasize a mist effect.
Proxy Falls, Oregon
Exposure Northwest Workshop
Canon 50d
18-200mm Lens, 28mm
f/16, 2s, ISO 100
Circular Polarizer
Copyright Laura A Knauth, All rights reserved.
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My Blog: www.dreambiglivereal.com/
Provia 400x, 1/4 sec. Singh ray warming polarizer. It was great using faster film this time to battle the spray. I bracketed 4 shots, 1 stop apart (1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1 sec) on this roll with a polarizer and center filter at f/22 and didn't even use the bulb setting. That means not having a lens dripping with water after a 20 second shot.