View allAll Photos Tagged Rokinon14mm
The recent forecast of the Perseid meteor showers excited the astro nerd in me to drive around the county at midnight seeking the best areas to capture this phenomena.
Sorry no EXIF info as the Rokinon 14mm is totally manual.
(Note to self; I have to learn how to download this lens' profile and upload it into Photoshop and Lightroom)
Near Fort Nelson, BC
August 2017
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From our last night in Manarola, IT. Stormy night, but the crashing waves and ominous sky only made the place even more striking...
the aurora suddenly brightened on the western and eastern horizon I started shooting east and then I could see the pink at the base of the bright curtain to the west seen here., The reflection shows the colour but the curtain was over exposed, If you take the time to view this photo there is Venus and Zodiacal light at the horizon and pink curtains in the distance.
One of several ponds in the Dawes Rd. area along the Taylor-Massey creek.
Toronto, Ontario.
Rokinon 14mm F2.8 IF ED UM
Kodak DCS Pro 14nx
Dawn twilight on a blustery morning. Strong tradewinds bring fast moving low-level clouds and a dusting of salty ocean spray. Salt spray detests being airborne and rapidly accumulates on its preferred habitat, the front element of a camera lens.
This image of Geongbokgung Palace in Seol, South Korea was captured by photographer Nathanael Draper with a Canon EF mount Rokinon 14mm lens, mounted on his GH5 with our Fotodiox Canon to Micro 4/3 adapter. Click here to learn more about our lens adapters: bit.ly/2i456xJ
And check out more of Nathanael's work here: www.instagram.com/drapernate/
This is an outbuilding from the same abandoned farm as the previous image. It used to have a companion right next it, to my right. But that structure is now in ruins on the ground, either torn down deliberately for the wood or by nature. Or both. Either way, it amply shows why I really love finding old places like this and photographing them. This one is actually quite well known because it is right off Highway 97, so it is often photographed. That is how the advancing deterioration, likely human-caused, caught my attention and made me swing out here one recent night when I was in the area. These places are not like the stars. They are all too finite.
Sterling Colorado is home to one of the BNSF railways. A break in the downpour allowed me to get this shot from a newly formed puddle. The clouds out east were just crazy and I had lightning hitting all around me....
125' tower on Bowmans Hill. It was built of local field stone in 1929-31 to commemorate what may have been a lookout point for Washington’s troops to watch for enemy activity on the Delaware River.
Looking north toward New Hope and Lambertville.