View allAll Photos Tagged highangle
Ginza during the first night of the large Japanese blizzard during winter of 2014.
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7XP HDR shot of Hong Kong, Kowloon and Victoria Harbor from Victoria Peak.
Decided to test out the D800 by creating an HDR from 7XP during blue hour atop Victoria Peak in Hong Kong. Definitely will need more testing since I'm so familiar with the D700! :P
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Equipment: 5D Mark II +Samyang 14mm f2.8
Filter: Nil
Post process: LR5.6 + PS CC
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POND 5 - Ahmad Hafidz Abdul Kadir
My pictures available at Getty Images
Hafidz Abdul Kadir / © All rights reserved
Thursday, March 10, 2022
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Crews from Grimsby Fire, Niagara EMS, and Niagara Regional Police responded to Beamer Falls Conservation Area on the Bruce Trail for a report of a patient who had fallen a significant height over the edge of the escarpment. The patient was located by emergency workers, who repelled over the side of the escarpment, where they were unfortunately pronounced deceased. Police continue to investigate.
HIGH ANGLE is the topic of the "our daily challenge group"...first i tried to shoot our dog flora, but then i decided to do this on.
infront of our apartments door i came across this red shoes and nearly fell down, which my son left there...in the middle of the floor carpet....a broad hint...(i would say...) ;o)))
great day for all of you! have fun! enjoy! stay relaxed.... ;o)))
This photo was taken for an assignment for my FIT precollege photo class. I had to take a series of self portraits in my bedroom describing different aspects about myself, which in this case was my love of photography.
Single RAW HDR shot of uptown Manhattan and Central Park in New York, NY.
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I was looking for a location where I could look down into a sparsely treed area so I could photograph tree trunks against a nice snowy background. I saw this group of trees at the base of a bare hill next to the river while out for a walk in a snow storm and took a reference shot with my iPhone 9 (the sun had already set for the day).
The next morning, with fresh snow and a magical coating of hoar frost on the landscape, I headed back to this spot with my camera bag and tripod. It was could out, about -19°C, so I bundled up well.
I wanted quite dark tree trunks against a high-key background. Unfortunately, the sun was casting fairly strong shadows that were mitigated slightly by fill light from the snow. The river was reflecting the blue sky, though it was covered in a light mist.
In post processing I was able to significantly reduce contrast in the background and eliminate most shadows by abusing Lightroom’s new Dehaze filter. This is a technique I have been experimenting with for this sort of image.
Normally, moving the Dehaze slider to the right increases the contrast of the image outward from a point about 3/4 along the histogram (that is, around a Highlight area). Lights get a bit lighter, and darks get a significantly darker. But by moving the Dehaze slider to the left I can reverse this effect. I only slightly darken the lights (which I compensate for by increasing the Highlights slider a bit afterward) but the shadows (and blacks) are practically eliminated. To make the tree trunks dark again (but without touching the now lightened shadows) I move the Blacks slider to the left until the black point just touches the left of the histogram again.
I think this could all be done with tone curves as well, but using the Dehaze slider to actually add haze seems easier.
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© 2013 Yuri Figuenick All Rights Reserved.