View allAll Photos Tagged livecomposite
Walked out of work today to see a lighting storm off in the distance. Used Olympus' Live Composite feature again to track it across the sky over the course of a half hour or so.
I used my Voigtlander Heliar 15mm last night, but I needed something wider. It was too much trouble to switch out the lens once the fireworks started, but I'll know for next time.
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I took a series of star trail shots with the Transamerica Building, starting from far to near. The stars got brighter the closer I got to the base of the building as I pointed the camera higher into the sky and away from light pollution. This is a blend of 2 five minute Live Composite exposures.
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White amaryllis flower illuminated from around with LED panel. Shot with OM-1's Live Composite Mode.
One corner of the sky (12mm) out at the campsite during the Perseids meteor shower last night. I'm thrilled to have finally enjoyed one, previous years have all been cloudy. This year it was calm, cloudless and moonless during the show so we made it a boy's camping expedition!
This angle did not catch the majority of the show, but the camera was set up and running well with a pleasant composition and sky gradient in the base exposure, so I let it go. Once we had moved off a ways and flopped down on air mattresses, I noticed that a lot of meteors were likely higher than this shot could catch. Maybe I should have gone for a portrait orientation.
Another reason this shot has so few meteors is probably that the base exposure was started early, capturing quite a bit of light in the sky. It makes for a beautiful shot, but might have obscured a lot of meteors when it got darker. The human eye is also more sensitive than a camera sensor. We saw on average a meteor every minute or two, with some real fireballs. But this exposure only reveals 7 for the whole duration. The base exposure was 20s as shown by the Exif. But the stacked images in the "live composition" total 1.5 hrs.
this was a 6 second, live composite exposure taken near dusk and let run for about 30 minutes. There were thousands of these fireflies in our backyard.
Used my new camera for a live composite star trail photo. I don't like the reflections in it but it's ok.
I shot 48 Wall Street from the other direction a few weeks ago. This view is better as we can see the front of the copper eagle atop the building. Based on the pattern of the stars, this seems to be facing close to true north. The stars were moving slower looking in this direction than others for some reason.
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The new Four Seasons building intruded on the shot, so I cloned it out. That's the spire of One WTC in the background.
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Lightning storm captured on Olympus em5 mkii using live composite mode caught both the lightning show in the storm clouds and a short burst of star trails! 20211014-EM5-PA141061-
Una linterna, un flash sencillo y el modo "LiveComposite" con mi Olympus Micro4/3 para crear esta Fotografía.
Taken about a month ago, never got round to uploading. Taken using Live Composite and built of a little over 1000 photo's over 37mins
It didn't take as long as I expected to get from the street up to the 102nd floor. It was crowded, but I was able to get to most of the prime spots for the better views. I used a lenskirt and shot hand held most of the time, but as more people left, I used an Ultapod, remote release and a black windbreaker to block the reflections. This is a Live Composite shot using the Ultrapod.
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Trazas con vistas al pueblo de Pujayo (Cantabria)
Web "Cantabria Nocturna" www.cantabrianocturna.com/
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Olympus OM-D E-M1 + Live Composite + Luz
Trazas con el sistema "Live composite"
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Played around with the live composite feature of my new Olympus OM-D EM1 MKII. This is a collection of 20sec exposures taken over a 90 minute timeframe with the live composite feature. No photoshop involved, just a bit of editing in Lightroom.
Ice fog rises off the Yukon River near downtown Whitehorse. At minus ten degrees, it was a fairly warm morning, but still cool enough to create some mist from the marginally warmer waters of the river . When the temperature dips into the double digits below freezing this fog can innundate the entire town. As I was taking this photo I could here the deep sound of ice pans rubbing together as they floated down stream. Weeks from now the river will be frozen over from edge to edge.
This view got me closer to the traffic circle. I believe the left arteries head east in Pudong and the right artery heads toward The Bund in Puxi.
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