View allAll Photos Tagged infinity
Launched in 2001, Infinity is a member of Celebrity’s Millenium class of cruise ships. The 965-foot, 91,000-ton behemoth, which cruises in Alaska, South America, and the Panama Canal, is capable of hosting 2,118 passengers in its 1,059 staterooms. Like its sister ships Millenium, Constellation, and Summit, Infinity is equipped with six restaurants, eight bars, three swimming pools, and a wide selection of live entertainment. Despite its mega-ship size, Infinity’s shipboard atmosphere is elegant and upscale; in fact, this is one of the world’s largest luxury cruise vessels
Amara Resort and Spa's infinity pool provided perfect reflection for the Red Rocks in Sedona, Arizona.
I was in Washington DC last March (a bit too early for the cherry blossom) so I focused myself in other subjects. I took this picture from inside the reflecting pool taking advantage that it was not completely full of water due to maintenance. It was a windy day and as a consequence the water had a lot of ripples (small waves). In the long exposure this is not visible since the water looks flat, however the water ripples elongated the reflection of the Lincoln memorial.
I used a tripod and an exposure of 1 minute (f/22 & ISO=100). In order to achieve that time with daylight, I used the “big stopper” from Lee filters. It is equivalent to reducing the light 10 stops (every stop is equivalent to reduce the amount of light by a factor of 2). The same picture without the filter needs an exposure of 1/15 sec (f/22 & ISO=100). However at that speed the reflection in the water was discontinued by the water waves.
The long exposure achieved 3 objectives: Remove the walking people by the side of the water and also much of the people in the memorial stairs; create the sensation of moving clouds in the sky and finally reflect the Lincoln Memorial in the moving water.
Picture taken the 13 March 2018 in the national mall, Washington DC
Equipment:
Camera: Nikon D750 - Lens: Nikkor AF-S 24-70mm f/2.8G ED - Tripod
Camera settings:
Exposure: f/22 at 59 sec - ISO 100 - F = 66mm
Post-processing:
Crop; temperature, exposure and tone correction; sharpening and saturation rectification.
A view of the Infinity Room, the glass room that projects far out over the valley floor, from inside, near the beginning of the tour.
For more details about Infinity Nado Brooming visit:- www.thetoystore.com/product/infinity-nado-brooming
Loved how this image of Infinity Lights at our local outlet mall turned out. They will make you any color or kind of lantern you want and they are fairly inexpensive. See my blog for info on this image at www.digitalladysyd.com/?p=2781.
Sometimes dependant on the lense the infinity can be just a little bit off, look for the infinity symbol on your camera and practice where the actual point of infinity may be
This is a shot of the Infinity Room at "House on the Rock" in Wisconsin.
I wanted to take a picture of this room to emphasize the effect of infinity...
So I slowly turned the zoom on my lens during the 2.5 secs exposure.