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Charles D'Oyly (1781-1845) - Square at Bologna, Cathedral and Palace of the Pope's legate 12th Nov.r 1840
Did a week of research at Yale's Beautiful Law School library. It was great to visit New Haven in the summer!
I'll only get as close as this.
Passing through the streets of the campus, noticed the mix of lights, texture and shadow all along this gated corridor. Rested my camera on an opening in the locked gate and took two shots - this is the second.
Despite the lowlight, I chose a higher f-stop for more front to back sharpness. Without raising the ISO, this in turn demanded a longer shutter speed. Interesting thing happens to the sky post-sunset during long exposure: You get this rich beautiful blue. Complemented the warm and white lights in the scene.
Raised exposure and vibrancy a bit more in Lightroom, but for the most part, this is SOOC.
Nikon D90 + Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8
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Source Images:
IMG_6789.JPG (Av: F25.0; Tv: 1/5 sec.; ISO: 100; FL: 40.0 mm)
IMG_6790.JPG (Tv: 1/20 sec.)
IMG_6791.JPG (Tv: 1/1 sec.)
Processing:
Fusion F.3 (HDR; Mode 1)
College Fjord, Alaska, USA. The second largest glacier in the fjord, the Yale Glacier, is 1.5 miles wide and 20 miles long, reaching far up in the high mountains surrounding the fjord. Like the other numerous glaciers that ring College Fjord, it was named after an eastern US college by the Harriman Alaska Expedition in 1899.
The Old Campus of Yale University.
Left, McClellan Hall (1925, Walter B. Chambers).
Right, Connecticut Hall (1752, Yale's oldest building).
Panorama taken with three exposures, handheld. New Haven, Connecticut.
Yale University President Peter Salovey greets U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and his 1966 classmate, State Department Senior Advisor David Thorne, as they arrive on campus in New Haven, Connecticut for Class Day ceremonies on May 18, 2014. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]
The Yale Bowl holds about 70,000. It looks empty because there were "only" about 44,000 spectators there that day.
(Compare to eighteen years before)