View allAll Photos Tagged Rokinon14mm
Abandoned farewell building in Detroit Michigan. The multiple layers of each floor made this building quit unique - for more images like this feel free to visit me at www.instagram.com/panog
As you can see, the side space of the barn is just one long open space, not divided into stalls. I'm really puzzled as to how this old barn was used. And what's with the single groove in the concrete foundation?!
All gussied up for SlidersSunday... ;)
the sky was turning blue in June the astro twilight starts before 3 am its 2:53 am here! the Campfire across the lake went all night too!
© 2016 All Rights Reserved
14 mm Rokinon lens. 2 exposures - 1 for foreground; other for sky taken one after the other.
Here's a story I wrote about my recent night under the stars at Palouse Falls, published in today's Spokesman Review newspaper, www.spokesman.com/stories/2015/may/14/seeing-the-lights/
Some people have asked about dealing with the noise in the landscape part of these really long exposures. I tend to post my rough-drafts here on Flickr before I remove the noise. This photo is the finished product with all the noise removed.
There is an in-camera noise reduction feature but for every 8-10 minute exposure it takes an additional 8 to 10 minutes of sitting waiting for the camera to do a dark-frame subtraction. This kind of delay just isn't feasible with my work flow when I'm out shooting, so in post-processing I use the healing brush in Photoshop to remove all the red, green, and purple spots. In some cases it only takes 30 minutes. In others, like this one, it took me about 8 hours. For me that's the price I pay for not missing the shot.
If I weren't crunched for time I might use in-camera NR. I should also probably learn how to do it manually with my own dark-frame but I'm not convinced that will lead to a good result given the sheer volume of the noise that results. I suspect it would look really blotchy given how the noise changes from frame to frame.
© 2016 All Rights Reserved
What a wonderful treat Friday evening as the moon turned golden when it neared the horizon. The green color evidences the airglow in the sky this evening. I did have to apologize to a couple of ducks I accidentally woke up.
A surreal landscape, including artifacts from Carlo Scarpa's Architecture, and other iconic Architecture.
Have a look at: Carlo Scarpa's Architecture