View allAll Photos Tagged Shifting
As I watched and photographed the sunset, I looked away and noticed the sand. I love the dimension and texture it adds.
"There is another way to begin this", he said towards the end, "and that is were we shall continue next."
SY Locomotive, 1397, prepares for the night shift at the steam depot in Fuxin. Sadly, steam was phased out at Fuxin in 2016 so such shots are no longer possible. North western Liaoning province, People's Republic of China.
Dunes have always fascinated me because of their textures and geometries, colours and contrasts. They are mobile, forming and reforming and it's just never the same when you get there. They are like waves in water, just much much slower. An then there is life, little grasses and little flowers or bones. Well, step back from the image and discover the track of a tinny creepy crawler. I find it amazing how it stands out.
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Truck after truck leaves one of the many loadouts in the cane fields as the day winds down for these workers who have been going since before sunrise. The 409 is creeping west following another cane train that had just made a pick up from the cane loadout in the background.
Busy times at morning shift change in the colliery yard at Dongchang on the Chengzihe system of the Jixi Coal Railway.
Canon TS-E 24mm II, shifted downwards, compare shot with other lenses: GF 23mm at flic.kr/p/2nKDAhR or Laowa 15mm shift at flic.kr/p/2mgp4P3
This American Tree Sparrow was a first-of-season sighting for me. In our area, typically they arrive in the autumn soon after their similar-looking cousins, the Chipping Sparrows, disappear on their southerly migration.
It's a phase I'm going through.
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A ball in motion. Single shot, stroboscopic flash from below camera at 10Hz, 1/64 power, 2s shutter. And I stuck a pin in the ball and drew it away by hand, with a black sleeve on my arm. There are limits to my patience...
From the Richard Harvey Studio One
First proper opportunity to get out and test drive my new tilt shift lens today, and am already a big fan. The shift funtion is unbelivably useful, and slowly getting used to the extra dimension the tilt can add. I probably went a bit overboard on tilt today, but I really like the way you can focus the eye on a virtual path through the image with it.
I promise I will not use M645 80/1.9 Sekor for another tilt/shift experiment. this was the best coverage I could get at F/4 and still was insufficient. Thus, I've lost control over light leaking...
Mamiya 645 1000s, Sekor 80/1.9 C, Kodak Ektar 100.
by the way, if anyone can identify this ancient Voigtländer fold-out camera, please let me know which one is it.
Tilt shift shot of The Gateshead Millenium Bridge. This was my first ever try at using the new tilt shift filter in Photoshop CS6.
South Wales based 2884 GWR Standard heavy freight loco No. 3822 simmers whilst the foreman Mr Ian, discusses the night shirft duties with fireman Derrick.
A posed scene in the shed at Didcot - TLE photo event.
just a street photography.
Leica IIIf + Industar10 50mmF3.5
/ Ilford PAN100
- selfdeveloping Rodinal 1:100
catch you up later today.
Watching the clouds and tides as the sun goes down from Bushwick Inlet Park, Williamsburg.
My Instagram
Yeah, I know it's fall right now (at least here in Portland). But cherry trees always seem in season.
Image made with my Hasselblad 500 C/M.
ICM (Intentional Camera Motion) technique, 1st try. 3 exposures with Multiply blend and some more Ps stuff.