View allAll Photos Tagged SubaruOutback
Fascinated with my Subaru Outback. I couldn't keep him off of it--looking at himself over and over again. Vain fellow.
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Always find spiders on my car--the first place to look!
(Better in Lightbox . . .)
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The first place I look for spiders is on my Outback. They know a good car! (Better in Lightbox)
HA 14!
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Orb Weaver on my Subaru Outback, Same one I posted earlier that was just sitting on one of the letters. I love how the paint looks like glitter because of the bokeh. (Better in Lightbox)
HA 19!
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True to my penchant for having to "fiddle" with photography, I bought a used D90 and had it converted to take infrared pictures (www.kolarivision.com).
There's a big learning curve to do this, and it requires some considerable post processing, but it promises to be kind of fun. I took this photo in Arches National park. That's my green subaru, which stayed kind of green, and the white lines in the road stayed white, but the rest is messed up, lol. Going forward I will be posting more of this photo fun. I hope you like it, and I welcome your comments or questions if you're curious. There are HUGE variations in what can be done with these photos once they are taken.
For those of you already doing infrared, this was a full spectrum camera with a 590nm filter and no channel swap.
- Blaise Pascal.
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One complaint my wife often voices about my photography is my hatred towards adding any man-made elements in my photographs. I know that I sometimes photograph city skylines and bridges, but I often go to painstaking lengths to avoid humans and man-made elements in my landscape shots. My wife’s argument is that it provides a new dimension to my landscape photography. I think I am slowly warming up to the idea.
Fort Rock in central Oregon is the location of this photo. We spend a marvelous evening at this lonely state park. We were the only visitors on that day and had a great time running around exploring the stunning rock formations in the middle of a flat desert. As I was walking back to the car, I noticed the beautiful light on the horizon and the light bouncing off our car. I decided to take some shots of our unsung chariot. I took quite a few images, and this one was one of my favorites.
- www.kevin-palmer.com - Since the skies have been pretty smoky for the last month, I try to take advantage of the few clear nights we get. This time of year the milky way is hanging low in the southwest after sunset. Soon it will be gone for the winter, not returning until the spring.
No, not the Australian Outback, my Subaru Outback. :-) On a very gray, rainy morning beneath our Sunset Red Maple tree.
This fallen maple leaf on the raindrop covered rear taillight area of my Subaru Outback really caught my eye. It seemed to land in the perfect position for a photo. Tons of rain lately so many more rain photos to come after these, sorry. :-)
Well, I traded in the 2019 Outback Premium and now have a 2021 Outback Limited - still in the Magnetite Grey Metallic color, and with my Method Racing 501 Rally wheels.
- www.kevin-palmer.com - Montana's fishing access sites can be great places to camp and they're often free. I'm sure I'll return to camp at this spot eventually.
- www.kevin-palmer.com - As soon as it was dark, the aurora appeared over my campsite. I had to let my campfire die so I could climb the hill and get a better view.
This was my first time driving a Subie Outback rental in Utah. The ride for both on and off road was pretty good. With its 4-cylinder engine, it 's a bit sluggish when entering into the freeway. But overall, it 's a practical and comfy car. I actually liked it after a few days of driving it back and forth between Salt Lake and Vernal.
The view from the back of my friend's Subaru Outback :D We were driving through the Eastern Sierras in Mammoth to the hot springs. Absolutely gorgeous! I'm going to miss my Mammoth life so much.
Spent all day at one of the largest beer festivals in the US. Napped for 4 hours. Drove into the middle-of-nowhere Wisconsin and got lost under the Milky Way.
Only my second attempt at astro photography, and the first was the Perseids 12 years ago. Unfortunately it is a minimum of 4-5 hours from where I live to get anywhere with this little light polution.
Also, I really should have tried to learn all these new Z8 astro functions like starlight view and interval shooting before I got there. lol. I couldn't get more than 3-4 intervals to work before my camera starting making beeping noises like it was backing up. Something I'd never heard before from any camera ever. So I just manually pressed the shutter every 25 seconds for like 3 hours.