View allAll Photos Tagged iphone15Promax
Our Daily Challenge: Some Assembly Required
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My images are posted here for your enjoyment only. All rights are reserved. Please contact me through flickr if you are interested in using one of my images for any reason.
While on a hike this scene captured my eye. So with cell phone in hand I took this image. I then on my desktop edited in Topaz with a slight painterly effect.
This image of the Moon, is cropped from one taken with the 5x 12mm lens with the iPhone 15 Pro Max.
The built in iPhone camera app overexposes the full moon even with the exposure compensation all the way down. However if you increase the lens plus digital zoom all the way to 25x, the moon takes up enough of the frame so that the auto expose, with some exposure reduction, gives a decently exposed image of the moon.
The image above was taken with this technique. The 25x digital zoom images was then receded by 1/5 to restore the image to the size taken of the 5x, 120mm shot.
I've also taken similar images with the Moment Pro Camera app ISO 125, fl 120 mm, f/2.8, 1/318 sec.
Day 2/365 in 2025
Our Daily Challenge: New Year
If you are looking for a fun group of fellow photographers to share in the love of photography, join us at “52 Weeks of 2025” on Flickr. Each week we have a theme which each interprets in their own and creative way. It is a simple way to hone your skills, participate in a 52-week photography project and be inspired by others also participating. Please join in on the fun. and follow this link:
www.flickr.com/groups/52_weeks_of_2025/
Thank you so much for your views, comments and favs. I really do appreciate every one!
My images are posted here for your enjoyment only. All rights are reserved. Please contact me through flickr if you are interested in using one of my images for any reason.
Golden Retriever checks out the sunrise on Lake Lowell in Idaho, USA. Luminar Neo for editing a very underexposed photo
The ancient Greek philosopher Plato explored the idea that we love in order to become complete. In his Symposium, he wrote about a dinner party at which Aristophanes, a comic playwright, regales the guests with the following story. Humans were once creatures with four arms, four legs, and two faces. One day they angered the gods, and Zeus sliced them all in two. Since then, every person has been missing half of him or herself. Love is the longing to find a soul mate who will make us feel whole again… or at least that’s what Plato believed a drunken comedian would say at a party. Skye Cleary, TED
El Confital, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria