View allAll Photos Tagged fisheyes
Macro Mondays 23/07/18 theme Photography Gear
Lensbaby 12mm fisheye optic taken with the lensbaby composer with a +10 diopter.
The Parish Church of the Assumption (Maltese: Knisja Arċipretali ta' Santa Marija), commonly known as the Rotunda of Mosta (Maltese: Ir-Rotunda tal-Mosta) or the Mosta Dome, is a Roman Catholic parish church in Mosta, Malta, dedicated to the Assumption of Mary. It was built between 1833 and the 1860s to neoclassical designs of Giorgio Grognet de Vassé, on the site of an earlier Renaissance church which had been built in around 1614 to designs of Tommaso Dingli.
The design of the present church is based on the Pantheon in Rome, and it is said to have the third largest unsupported dome in the world. The church narrowly avoided destruction during World War II, since on 9 April 1942 a German aerial bomb pierced the dome and fell into the church during mass but failed to explode. This event was interpreted by the Maltese as a miracle.
Camera: Canon Eos 6D
EF8-15mmF/4L-Fisheye-USM
Aperture: f/4.0
Focal Length: 14 mm
Shutter Speed: 1/40
ISO: 320
Sunrise over the cliffs of Portknockie in Morayshire, Scotland.
I'm experimenting with stitching of very wide angle images to create a fisheye effect. Not sure what I think of it yet though.
I recently bought an Asahi Takumar 17mm f4 fisheye lens and Today I got out to see what it can do. Fairly typical of fisheye lenses.
Taken at the junction of Cortlandt Street and Church Street.
Buildings include 3 World Trade Center (L); 4 World Trade Center (top L); and 1 Liberty Plaza (R and reflected in 4 WTC).
From a visit to Kew Gardens about 10 years ago when I only took shots with the Samyang 8mm fisheye but newly processed.
Previously posted in colour, this version slightly cropped to remove my foot...
The chef and the kitchen crew at the Benson Hotel in Portland, Oregon, put a lot of effort into this 2011 gingerbread creation. This fisheye look just gives a closeup of part of the village.
Actually it looks like a broccoli/cauliflower hybrid, writ large.
I asked around for answers as to what this is called.
Mary says “Crepe myrtle.”
Tom says: Melaleuca linariifolia. Also known as Paperbark or "snow in summer" tree. www.marinatreeandgarden.org/treelist/melaleuca_l.html