View allAll Photos Tagged magiclantern
On the banks of Phandar Lake i found the last few standing old guys who are waiting for the day to bid farewell this beautiful land.
Visit my Facebook page.
shot using the new Lensbaby
Sweet 50 optic lensbaby.com/optics-sweet50
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
After endlessly cloudy or brightly moonlit nights, we finally saw clear skies with no Moon over Southern New England. So I set out to Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, RI.
This is one of the shots I snapped. It is Messier 11 - The Wild Duck Cluster, a rather dense open star cluster that is found in the constellation Scutum and resides at 6,200 light years distant. This is a fabulous target for binoculars and back yard telescopes along the plane of the Milky Way galaxy in the Northern Hemisphere summertime sky. -Enjoy!
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
1370mm
f/9
ISO: 5000
Exposure: 30 seconds * 77 exposures
This is 77 shots median composite to reduce noise.
-Scott MacNeill
The sun was about to make its appearance.
6.28 AM, 21.Aug.2013
7 frames Magic Lantern - Auto
Blending of Photomatix Pro HDR - Details Enhancer & Exposure Fusion
PS CS5 + Topaz Adjust & Denoise + blending
shot using Lensbaby Composer Pro with Edge 80 Optic www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using the Lensbaby Composer Pro II with Edge 50 Optic www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using Lensbaby Composer Pro with Edge 80 Optic www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
v2.3
It was my 2nd time attempt of capturing lightening at the night sky. And to be precise it's a part of experiment with long exposure. A big shoutout to the magicLantern that made it too easy to get the most out of such an old entry level canon.
Antique ' Magic Lantern ' Glass slide photographed.....over a light box.
.....Bought at antique market.
..........The National Gallery, London was founded in 1824 and houses over 2,300 paintings - one of the greatest collections in Western Europe.
..........( Please note the hansom cab in the picture ! ).....
Here is a shot I snapped of 31 Cygni on Saturday, September 12, 2015 at Frosty Drew Observatory In Charlestown, Rhode Island, USA. 31 Cygni, residing in the constellation Cygnus, is an optical trinary system. Each star, though appearing to be interacting, reside at significantly different distances from Earth. The primary star in the group sports a stunning red and resides at 881 light years distant. The second brightest star in the group is 30 Cygni, which resides at 615 light years distant. The third star and dimmest of the group resides at 1359 light years distant and shows off a striking blue.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
1369mm
f/9
ISO: 1250
Exposure: 30 seconds * 25 shots.
This is a median composite of 25 frames to reduce noise.
-Scott MacNeill
Here's a composite shot I snapped this morning showcasing the radiant point of the annual Quadrantid Meteor Shower at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, Rhode Island. The bright Moon made it difficult to capture many of the meteors, though I counted 92 from 1:00 a.m. - 4:00 a.m. Comet Catalina is visible at the bottom center right of the image. This was also the warmest Quandrantids I have experienced. Temps usually hang in the single digits in New England for this shower, though it was in the mid 20's this year.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
11mm
f/2.8
ISO: 2500
Exposure: 30 second intervals
This is a composite shot of 11 meteors.
-Scott MacNeill
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using Lensbaby www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
Bak Bak Beach is the main beach for the town of Kudat. It is located about 11 km to the north of town.
We are lucky to be here during a very low tide at sunrise. A bit confusing compose your image here since the rock formation are diagonal with the sunrise, may be sunset is better here. This image is shot using Canon 6D with Samyang 14mm, 9 exposure using Magic Lantern. Merged in Photomatix and some adjustment in Photoshop.
Definitely we will be back.
Location: Nationaal Park De Loonse en Drunense Duinen, The Netherlands
Date taken: September 7, 2017
Camera: Canon EOS 650D with Magic Lantern for focus stacking
Lens: SIGMA 105mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM Macro
Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/
Canon 5d Mark 2
Canon 24-105mm
Magic lantern dualiso 50-800 iso
shot using Lensbaby
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
A zoetrope is a device that produces an illusion of action from a rapid succession of static pictures.
..........It consists of a cylinder with images from a set of sequenced drawings.
.....As the cylinder spins the user looks and sees a rapid succession of images producing an illusion of motion.
..........The earliest projected moving images were displayed by using a 'magic lantern' zoetrope.
.....It was this principle of the ' Persistence of vision ' that was the forerunner to the earliest Television pictures.
This page of instruction for making 12 different shadow images with only your hands and a handkerchief was included in a booklet on sign language.
The booklet is filed and when I find it I will add additional information.
*Done! All the pages have been scanned and posted. There is a link at the end of the comments.
Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/
Canon 5d mark 2
Canon 24-105mm
Magic Lantern dual-iso 100-800
Panorama en 3 photos
Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA
Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation.
Camera Info:
Canon 5D Mk3 | Canon EF14 f/2.8L ii | ISO - Bracketing 100-400 | f 8.0 | focal length 14mm
| Single image | 9 exposures - Magic Lantern
| HDR / DRI
The great thing about the Rokinon 12mm T3.1 Fisheye is that it gives me the same basic field of view as my previous favorite car rig setup (7D II + Rokinon 8mm Fisheye) except that it's compatible with full frame sensors, allowing for use of my 5D Mark III.
strobist: 1 Canon 580EX, left of subject, full CTO gelled, diffused by a Lumiquest LPT softbox. Flash triggered via Cybersyncs. Camera triggered via intervalometer (Magic Lantern).
Primi esperimenti in vista della mia recensione altamente sprofessionale sul dual iso del magic lantern
First experiments while preparing my utterly unprofessional review of magic lantern dual iso
A colorful shot I snapped of Messier 20 - The Trifid Nebula yesterday morning at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, Rhode Island, USA. The Trifid Nebula is a star forming region visibly featuring an emissions nebula (red), reflection nebula (blue), and a dark nebula. The Trifid Nebula is found in the constellation Sagittarius towards the central bulge of the Milky Way's galactic core, and resides at 5,200 light years distant.
Photo Details:
Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern
663mm
f/6
ISO: 2500
Exposure: 60 seconds * 22 frames
This is a median composite of 22 individual shots to reduce noise
-Scott MacNeill
Shot in Hunza near Attabad Lake
it was a clear stary night and moon was in 2nd quarter
in opening sequence jupiter sets into west followed by Orion.
Used Canon EOS 60D loaded with Magic Lantern Unified
mounted with EF-S 10-22mm USM with lens f3.5. Applied lens twist technique to avoid any flickr etc
530 pics were taken at ISO 640 (a multiple of 160) to get optimized image quality.
Intervalometer in Magic Lantern was set at 20 sec exposure with a 2 sec gap.
You can see the complete Timelapse video on this link
Plz follow me on Facebook and leave your comments also.
Hi everyone. Posting an image after a long hiatus. We are on a Scandinavia trip and I wanted to share something and hope to share more after I am back home. We almost never saw the sun in our entire 4 days in Norway and I have a feeling a lot of the images will be black and white! This is Nigardsbrevatnet, the body of water just created from the Nigardsbreen glacier, an arm of the Jostedalsbreen glacier, the largest one in continental Europe. It's an HDR composite of 4 handheld exposures, finished in Silver Efex Pro and Lightroom. Would love to hear your comments.
I couldn’t upload a new picture of NYC without updating all the faithful followers of my work. As photographers, we all go through different seasons of our life for shooting and producing new work. As much as it kills me, the last half a year or so has not been great for producing new content. The artist inside of me is dying to create new work, but I have spent the last couple months getting my affairs in order and more importantly, relocating to New York City after graduating from Oklahoma State University. I have tons of exciting things going on, but a lot of them will not be visible to my followers for the time being. Here’s the run down:
I am interning/assisting photographer Daniel Castro twice a week and plan to stay with him for quite some time. He’s a great photographer, retoucher, and I am learning tons from him each and every day.
I am the lead retoucher for a product studio in Long Island City where I spend my days retouching products ranging from purses to sunglasses and everything in between. I also shoot products/models for them on occasion as well.
In my “spare” time, I do freelance retouch for other photographers.
There were a few people who were surprised that I would take the time to intern given that I already have a fairly extensive portfolio from my 52-week and 365 projects. I will tell you that as confident as I was in my photographic and retouching abilities before coming to NYC, I have learned as much as I did in my two yearly projects in only 10 weeks here. Nothing beats hands on experience and I’ve already had plenty since arriving. I’m excited about the future and excited to start shooting my own work in the very near future. I can’t wait to share it all with you. I feel like my career has finally begun.
A star trail is a type of photograph that utilizes long-exposure times to capture the apparent motion of stars in the night sky due to the rotation of the Earth. A star trail photograph shows individual stars as streaks across the image, with longer exposures resulting in longer streaks. Typical exposure times for a star trail range from 15 minutes to several hours, requiring a 'bulb' setting on the camera to open the shutter for a longer period than is normal.
Canon T2i
Using a 28-200 tamron @ F4
ISO 400
Exposure time of 30 seconds
681 Frames
shot using the new Lensbaby Circular Fisheye www.lensbaby.com/
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com
shot using the new Lensbaby
Sweet 50 optic www.lensbaby.com/optics-sweet50
© Nuno Caldeira
For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com