View allAll Photos Tagged megapixels
A 10 Megapixel DSLR from the year 2005.
For two weeks I have been using this camera on my daily hikes and to post images to Flickr, and is time to give my review. Realizing that this is a 10-megapixel camera from 2005 with the old CCD sensor technology. I will say that I'm very impressed by its handling, construction, and professional features like intervalometer and many others. Its image quality is excellent; the only thing that I miss was Live View, but the AF is so precise that I was able to always nail focus. I'm so glad I own this excellent camera and that is part of my Nikon collection.
(Spanish): Por dos semanas he estado usando esta cámara para postear mis fotos aquí en Flickr. Y ha sido tan grata experiencia que estoy ya preparado para dar mi opinion de ella. Primero hay que realizar que esta cámara es del año 2005 y utiliza la vieja tecnología del sensor CCD. Pero les dire que no veo diferencia en las images con respecto a las cámaras nueva. Solo dire que he quedado super impresionado de sus rasgos, manejo, características profesionales como intervalometro y mas. Y de su calidad de imagen. Lo único que extrañe fue el "Live View" pero el enfoque AF es tan preciso que todas mis fotos salían enfocadas. Muy contento de ser dueño de esta cámara y tenerla en mi colección de Nikon).
This image from my Album: Love Cameras..
ENG: A little review of our summer vacation. We love this place with its fantastic view to the Alps. ☻ This time there is a 48MP photo version. For a few days we stopped in Füssen, directly at the German-Austrian border. And since the days were very very warm, we also spent quite a long time at the Hopfensee and could enjoy this wonderful sunset.
Hopfen am See is a district of the Bavarian town of Füssen in the Swabian district of Ostallgäu in Germany and almost a stone's throw from Austria. The air and Kneipp spa, which is characterized by tourism, is located on the northern shore of the Hopfensee about four kilometers northwest of Füssen and offers a beautiful view towards the Alps.
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GER: Ein kleiner Rückblick auf unseren Sommer Urlaub. Wir lieben diesen Ort mit seinen fantastischen Blick zu den Alpen. ☻ Diesmal gibt es eine 48MP Foto-Version. Ein paar Tage lang hatten wir Stopp in Füssen gemacht, direkt an der deutsch-österreichischen Grenze. Und da die Tage sehr sehr warm waren, sind wir auch ziemlich lange am Hopfensee gewesen und konnten diesen wunderbaren Sonnenuntergang genießen.
Hopfen am See ist ein Stadtteil der bayerischen Stadt Füssen im schwäbischen Landkreis Ostallgäu in Deutschland und fast einen Steinwurf von Österreich entfernt. Der vom Tourismus geprägte Luft- und Kneippkurort liegt am Nordufer des Hopfensees etwa vier Kilometer nordwestlich von Füssen und bietet einen wunderschönen Blick in Richtung der Alpen.
Praktica Mtl3
Carl Zeiss Jena Pancolar 50mm F/1.8
Heliopan UV/Haze (49mm)
Fujicolor C200
Tetenal C-41
In this 190 megapixel panorama photo was created from 26 individual photos (2 rows of 13 images) shot with a 85mm F/1.4 lens.
Emerald Bay State Park is a state park of California, USA, preserving Lake Tahoe's Emerald Bay, a National Natural Landmark. The park contains the only island in Lake Tahoe, Fannette Island. Emerald Bay is one of Lake Tahoe's most photographed and popular locations.
Here is how we did it:
Knowing that we would have to make composite images for each of the reproductions and that each of the details of the Edo Pop prints would be a different size, photographer Charles Walbridge started with the size of the baffles and worked backwards.
First, Walbridge converted the twelve by nine-foot baffle to 144 inches x 108 inches. Knowing that this type of print should be a 100 DPI final image, he knew needed to photograph the prints in sections to build a final file that was 14,400 by 10,800 pixels.
Above: Charles Walbridge photographs a section of "Ichikawa Yaozo III as Umeomaru" by Kabukido Enkyo for Edo Pop.
• ~35 Megapixel Rendering
• SweetFX / ReShade
• Hatti's Cinematic Tool (FreeCamera, Timestop, FOV)
• SRWE for Hotsampling
Fujica St-705
Asahi Super-Takumar 24mm F/3.5
B+W Light Yellow 021 (58mm)
Agfa APX 400asa
Kodak D-76 Straight
ISO 25,600 with 45.7 megapixels? No problem!
Earlier in August I had the incredible opportunity to run around with a pair of Nikon D850 bodies, testing them out day and night along the coast of Maine and New Brunswick. This shot is from the cliffs of Grand Manan.
The Nikon D850 is the successor to the D810, but it's quite an upgrade! The sensor is backlit, and from my experience that plus the Expeed 5 processor in the D850 provide amazing results for high ISO images at night. At 20 seconds, f/2.8, 14mm, and ISO 25,600 the results are great and using some noise reduction goes a long ways. I also did some star stacking of 10 shots at 10 seconds each at ISO 26,000 and then stacked with Starry Landscape Stacker (Mac only but it can be done manually in Photoshop) to produce pinpoint stars and a very clean sky.
The flip-up LCD screen and illuminated buttons are very nice additions and make shooting low and/or in the dark easier. I also used the flip-out screen when shooting with the tripod a bit high, I could swing the LCD out and down a bit for easier viewing. And it's a full touch screen LCD, making picking a focus point in live view and zipping around 100% previews pretty easy.
This shot consists of 3 exposures blended for depth of field and low noise. All shots are taken with the Nikon D850 and Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8 lens @ 14mm. The sky is 1 shot at ISO 25,600 for 20 seconds, and the foreground is made of 2 exposures, 1 at ISO 1600 and f/4 for 60 seconds during blue hour to get the very very close shrubs in focus, and 1 at ISO 1600 and f/2.8 for 16 minutes in complete darkness for the background cliffs and water. I didn't use a blue hour shot for the background cliffs and water because I find the blue hour shots result in harsher shadows than really exist in total darkness, and I wanted the Milky Way reflection in the water and in the right spot to match the Milky Way in the sky, which means that in situations like this I have to take a foreground exposure (at least for the water) generally right before/after taking sky shots.
Stay tuned for some more posts and articles with this camera!
Visit my website to learn more about my photos and video tutorials: www.adamwoodworth.com
• 26 Megapixel Rendering (DSR,Cropped)
• Dead End Thrills' Cheat Table
• SweetFX (SMAA,Border Shader)
Canon PowerShot SX70 HS
20.3-megapixel CMOS sensor delivers photos with fine detail
Bridgecamera segment!
Competitive price.
Curved grip lets your fingers comfortably and naturally reach the shutter, minimizing potential for shake at long zoom lengths
Keep your image steady
The camera's hand grip has been specially designed to help you operate buttons easily, so you're less likely to introduce hand tremor into the image when you're at high zoom.
The SX70 HS also features intelligent image stabilization that knows how to compensate for specific types of motion.
For example, when shooting stills, the camera's Macro image stabilization mode makes adjustments that keep a close-up sharp and steady, while Panning mode reduces the jumping and jittering that can accompany a wide swing of motion.
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morning sun
Measured EV - 6.12
MF
Focus Mode - infinity (257)
Manual Exposure
Easy Mode - Manual
Continuous Drive - Single
C1
Canon Exposure Mode - Program AE
F4.5
ISO 100
44 mm
0.25s
Image Stabilization - On (2)
Ok, so I'm a bit proud of this one.
The basic description would be a male long hoverfly (Sphaerophoria scripta) on a wood anemone (Anemona nemorosa) which doesn't sound overly exciting in itself, but zooming in on this one reveals lots and lots and lots of details!
It's a two-exposure focus stack (combined using Zerene Stacker) and with the 50+ megapixel resolution the compoud eyes and metallic thorax of this one looks bloody great to be honest. Flickr shows shots in higher resolution nowadays, but there is still more to the shot which can't be seen without downloading it. Maybe I'll make a cropped version and post later.
Monument Valley Utah! Nikon D810 Dr. Elliot McGucken Fine Art Landscape & Nature Photography for Los Angeles Gallery Show!
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Videos!
John Wayne Country! Monument Valley Utah! Nikon D810 Dr. Elliot McGucken Fine Art Landscape & Nature Photography for Los Angeles Gallery Show!
Enjoyed photographing John Wayne Country & Monument Valley during a breaking thunderstorm with glorious dark clouds and storm clouds all around! Stormy weather always rocks! Also shot it all with the Nikon D810 and the wonderful Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G ED AF-S Nikkor Wide Angle Zoom Lens as well as the new Tamron Tamron AFA012N700 15-30 mm f/2.8-Di VC Wide-Angle Lens for Nikon F (FX) Cameras!
Feel free to ask me any questions! Always love sharing tech talk and insights! :)
And all the best on Your Epic Hero's Odyssey!
Will be busy printing and framing in nice large, matted formats and frames and museum glass! Five of these photos will be printed on 40" x 60" Fuji Crystal Super Glossy Archival prints Face Mounted to Plexiglass ! I think I know which--will share photos of the photos hanging on the walls!
East Mittens, West Mittens, and the Merrick Butte!
I wonder what the three grooves are? (Arrowed)
1 pixel is about 0.26 arc seconds (0.00007259 of a degree.)
When the pic was taken, the moon was 372550 Km from me. A quick bit of trigonometry reveals that 0.26arc sec represents 472 meters
Each pixel is 472x472 meters. I don't think we'll see the moon landers just yet but those trails are about 4pix wide, so nearly 2km wide.
I need a bigger telescope...
• 35 Megapixel Rendering
• SweetFX / ReShade
• Hatti's Cinematic Tool (FreeCamera, Timestop, FOV)
• SRWE for Hotsampling
A 440 megapixel* panorama of the sunset at Glacier Point in Yosemite National Park, USA. Created from 225 Exposures
(5 horizontal x 5 vertical x 5 different exposures) using a Sigma 35mm prime lens on a Nikon D7100.
The picture covers an horizontal angle of about 200 degrees
(*) trying to display it in full in you web browser may cause it to run out of memory
This shot was taken last September 3rd, 2011, but I was just finally able to get the software for the camera to install on Windows XP and download these shots from the camera. The only problem with that is, it's been so long since I took the picture, I don't even remember what it is. I believe it was in Fairfield, maybe at the park. Other than that, I don't have a clue as to what it is.
Camera: JamCam 3.0
Megapixels: .1
Picture size: 480x640
DPI: 96
Date: September 3rd, 2011
Location: Fairfield, Illinois, U.S.A.
Jam020b
Marbled Godwit - Limosa fedoa - stretching its wings.
"Unfortunately", this is a full frame shot. I was to close, or had "too much" lens, to capture a whole bird in the frame. I wish that Canon produced more lenses with a built-in teleconverter. With a simple flick of a switch, I would have been 240mm further away. On the positive side, when zoomed in at this 50 megapixel photo, detail is incredible :)
Photographer's problems :D
I provide detailed information on how to photograph at this location in my guide: www.greggard.com/location-guides/southwest-florida-bird-p...
Photograph captured with a Canon EOS 5DsR camera paired with a Canon 600mm f/4 IS II lens and 1.4x extender, at 840mm
If you are interested, more of my bird photography can be found at www.greggard.com/birds
» Been very long since I made a panorama. I use to shoot these all the time, but somewhere when discovering cinematic photography I forgot about it...
Last weekend I had an opportunity to shoot a pano again. Screwed on my kitlens(!!) and shot 6 images in a row.
The outcome can be much better but this is a 300DPI, 95 Megapixel image... and that is rather 'small' ;)
Have a great day people, spring is not far away =D
» Press L to view large on black.
» © Jeff Krol 2013 | Do not use/modify without my authorization.
» Contact me if you are interested in buying or using my photographs.
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80 megapixel panorama image was shot from Alcatraz Island looking into the San Francisco Embarcadero Center and waterfront.
A sub-one megapixel camera from Sony. Picked it up in a flea market for 2 USD. The replacement rechargeable battery cost me almost 9 times more. Allows you to store up to 4 (four) images per 3.5", 1.44 MB onboard floppy disk. I still had TWO disks tucked away in my old files. (Note to self, clean out files.) The large, brick-shaped camera delivers tiny images - about the dimensions of a good-sized postage stamp. Yet the unit came with a F/1.9, 10x zoom lens, and a top shutter speed of 1/4000th of a second. Image sharpness? I have no idea, I would have to get a USB floppy drive first. Until then, this Sony can ride my collection shelves.
Malibu Pier Sunset & Dusk! Nikon D3X HDR Socal/Malibu Landscape / Seascape Photography 14-24mm f/2.8 G ED AF-S Nikkor Wide Angle Zoom Lens
Preparing for some gallery shows this fall to celebrate 100,000,000 views! Printing a few dozen photographs in ~ 30"x40" formats and mounting/framing. Here are some close-to-final edits. HDR photography 7 exposures shot at 1EV and combined in photomatix: 36 megapixel Nikon D3X with the awesome Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G ED AF-S Nikkor Wide Angle Zoom Lens. 45SURF Hero's Odyssey Mythology Photography!
Epic Scenic HDR Landscapes / Seascapes of the Malibu Canyons & Beaches Shot with Nikon D3X: Hero's Odyssey Mythology Photography!
Shot with the Nikon Nikkor wide-angle 14-24 mm 2.8 lens!
Seven exposures @ 1EV finished in photomatix.
Enjoy the Hero's Odyssey Mythology Photography, and all the best on a hero's odyssey of your own making!
These were shot with Nikon's best Nikon D3X with the 14-24mm wide-angle Nikkor lens. 7 exposures were taken at 1 EV intervals, and combined in photomatix to bring out the shadows and highlights.
Rather large HDR (high dynamic range) photo--you can see great detail both near and far! View the detail at full size!
The Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G ED AF-S Nikkor Wide Angle Zoom Lens rocks!
High Dynamic Range (HDR) photos rock in capturing the full dynamic range of the scene!