View allAll Photos Tagged microfournerds
This stunning, (in)famous beach on New Zealand's Coromandel Peninsula is one of the North Island's most overcrowded. But when the tide comes in, tourist crossings through the natural sea arch are greatly reduced, so even at midday you can take a relatively unpopulated photo. This is also the location used in the Prince Caspian film as the magical entryway into Narnia via London's Strand tube station.
Not my usual photography trip this time. It was my Partners birthdays and she was gifted some tickets to Harry Potter world. I'd Never been (or seen more than the first 2 1/2 films).
I had a new lens arrive this week, the DJI 15mm F1.7. A alternative version of the popular Panasonic Leica lens. I'd not shot anything like this with this camera so it was very much an experiment. I was surprised how well the small Micro Four Thirds sensor coped in low light.
Built ~1850 and 1.2 km long, this is the longest and oldest extant teakwood bridge in the world. It was built entirely of wood reclaimed from the former royal palace in Inwa. No comment on the lack of safety rails in Myanmar’s building codes.
Local ride to Banbury over the weekend, exploring new streets near the new expanded access to the Railway Station I came across a company called Magna. Upon a search on Google, I found the company make injection moulded parts for the Automotive industry. Judging from the stickers on these containers, these parts a for the new Mini. Which handily is built a short distance away in Oxford.
Sunday papers. #portrait #streetphotography #streetphoto #hutongs #oldhutung #beijing #oldman #subdaypapers #papers #newspaper #winter #china #microfourthirds #microfournerds #micro43rds #panasonic #lumix #gm5 #panaleica15mmf17 via Instagram ift.tt/2Qckecd
The Seoul Lantern Festival takes place along a 1-km stretch of the urban-revitalized Cheonggyechon stream. Since 2009 the festival takes place over two weeks each November.
Known in the USA primarily as a Game of Thrones shooting location, Dubrovnik and the Dalmatian coast have been tourist destinations for Europeans since the late 1800s. The city was put onto UNESCO's world heritage list in 1979, and droves of tourists have driven the local population living inside the walls down from 5,000 in 1991 to 1,600 today.