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Raw file taken in B/W. Almost no post processing. 2+ inches of rain in the area the night before and into the morning made this falls a nice destination today.
Not Yosemite I'm afraid !! Just the lower part of the man-made Meyberg Falls at the Los Angeles County Arboretum. Didn't have a wide angle lens to capture the full Falls, so had to be satisfied with a view of the lower section !! This image was generated using a hand-held camera.
As you may have read in previous posts, back in March I took the plunge and made my first visit to Lower Antelope Canyon. It was beautiful. But it was major sensory overload for someone like me who shoots mainly landscapes
This picture was taken off Jackson Square Park, on West 13th Street and Greenwich Avenue in Lower Manhattan.
As seen in "Gothamist," 7/22/22: gothamist.com/news/early-addition-cities-keep-building-sh...
The beautiful Cotswold village of lower slaughter.
Usually I don't like heavy photo editing, but the residents of this village clearly also don't like their houses being photographed either, so have put big fluorescent yellow signs and "no photography" signs all over the windows etc. So once I started cloning stuff out, I didn't stop, so the signs, pictures, warning notices, telegraph poles, people all fell foul of my clonestamp tool.
Szeged egyik nagy értékű, országos jelentőségű műemléke a gótikus egyhajós Alsóvárosi templom, melynek tervezője és építésvezetője az a ferencesrendi János-testvér volt aki a kolozsvári és nyírbátori templomot is építette. Alapozása egy régebbi Árpád-kori templom helyén a XV. század legvégére tehető, tornyának barokk stílusú emeletei 1771-ből származnak.
Belépve, gazdag barokk díszítményekkel ékesített templombelsőben gyönyörködhetünk.
Another part of the Lower Falls of the Tahquamenon River.
Nikon F Photomic T
Nikkor-O 35mm f/2
Ilford FP4+
The lower falls of the Yellowstone is still the largest volume major waterfall in the Rocky Mountains of the United States. The volume of water flowing over the falls can vary from 63,500 USgal/s (240 m³/s) at peak runoff to 5,000 USgal/s (19 m³/s) in the fall.
I know it's not on most people's "must do" lists when travelling the western US, but it should be. Antelope Canyon is an incredible place. You typically see photos of the famous light shafts in the upper canyon, but oyu can point your camera pretty much anywhere and you'll see something amazing. Unfortunately, no light shafts for us (these only occur for about an hour a day in the upper canyon, we went to the lower canyon, which I think was a better choice given it was overcast anyway). It was also really busy when we went as it was the fourth of July, so no tripods were allowed. It's decepitvely dark down there so getting a sharp image was tricky. Guides were great though. By all accounts the lower canyon is a little more work to climb through but worth it.
Shot this handheld with my LG G4. This'll do until I process the others. This was about a 1.8km hike from the Moraine Lake parking lot. Just enough distance to shoot all by myself, yet close enough to shoot a Moraine Lake sunrise and still have time to get there with some good light remaining.