View allAll Photos Tagged WideAngleLens
shot with an olympus om-d e-m10 mark ii—720nm infrared converted—and an olympus 12mm f/2.0 wide angle lens
So this is what squirrels must see! ;)
Looks better large, I currently have it set as my desktop image. =)
Finally had a chance to go out and play around with the new wide angle lens a bit. I'm still extremely busy but that should change next week! I'm hanging in there waiting for when I'll actually have time to take some photos and catch up.
Thanks for understanding! Life is just getting in the way right now and with my current work schedule I get a maximum of 2-3 hours of time for myself, which is spent caring for the pets/walking dogs. Crazyness!
While on my way home today I noticed the sun was beginning to set so I pulled in to a local park and decided to try out the HDR setting on my Canon EOS-70D. I did not have my tripod with me....next time maybe...
This photo was taken at Angkor, Cambodia. It's incredible to see these historic buildings themselves. To date, more than 1000 temples and sanctuaries were discovered already different sizes.
An evening at the Delicate Arch.
Me being fluffy had a serious butt kicking while 'climbing' the hike for this natural marvel. It was well above my health grade but nonetheless I climbed it just to take a picture. Love of photography does a lot of crazy but wonderful things to your lifestyle. I can say I would have never even thought of going for this if not for capturing this monument in my camera. My wonderful wife was next to me and looked unbothered with all the elevation, hardly giving out a drop of sweat. It sucked!
But once I was on the top I loved every moment ogling at this wonderful Arch and all the Delicateness associated. It was majestic and appears to be built by aliens!
I took a spot after walking carefully on the slanting edges and waited out for the sunset. Eventually, I had almost a dozen photographs next to me (I choose a good spot!). As the sun went down I clicked almost 500 shots and still had to browse through them. I loved the two cotton candy flakes of clouds emanating from the horizon giving a third dimension to the majesty of the Arch.
In retrospect I think photography is the best thing that has happened to me, won't regret any moment spent behind the camera!
The Count's House is named after 'Count' Joseph Boruwlaski, who lived from 1739 to 1837. Originally from Poland, he lived and died in Durham. His house was Bank's Cottage - formerly known as Callamanco Hall, which was next door to what is now the Durham Little Count's House. Durham Count's House is actually a folly - a building erected for the sole purpose of looking nice in a rural setting and usually made to look like a forgotten piece of history.
The monoliths in Bandon, Oregon are a great place to explore. Many of the sea stacks have names. The one on the left of this image is commonly called the Witches (or Wizards) Hat. See it?
I believe I used a soft-edged two stop grad filter on this to bring down the sky in an effort to balance it with the reflection below.
This photo was taken at Angkor, Cambodia. It's incredible to see these historic buildings themselves. To date, more than 1000 temples and sanctuaries were discovered already different sizes.
Sony A7RII Fine Art Autumn Landscapes Fall Colors Autumn Foilage! Dr. Elliot McGucken Fine Art Photography!
Been busy traveling and shooting landscapes and working on my books The Golden Hero's Odyssey about the golden rectangle and divine proportion I use in a lot of my compositions! Also working on my physics book on Dynamic Dimensions Theory! The equation dx4/dt=ic is on a lot of the 45surf swimsuit and shirts and all! :)
Follow me & 45surf!!
www.facebook.com/45surfAchillesOdysseyMythology/
www.facebook.com/elliot.mcgucken
My fine art landscape lenses for the A7RII are the Sony 16-35mm Vario-Tessar T FE F4 ZA OSS E-Mount Lens and the Sony FE 24-240mm f/3.5-6.3 OSS Lens ! Love the Carl Zeiss and super sharp Sony Glass!