View allAll Photos Tagged raw_bridges
With a friendly and touchy crew aboard, the 1501 straddles the Black River bridge with a hand full of cars for the CN at tunnel yard. This crew runs just a couple times a week as needed and its always nice to catch them out doing their thing.
The conductor lowers the Black River bridge into place before walking across to verify everything is into place and telling his engineer to pull clear.
Bibury, Gloucestershire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Waterfront, Bristol
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Bibury, Gloucestershire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Photo prise sur le chemin Edoin, à Saint-Armand, un lendemain de tempête
JPEG à partir d'un fichier RAW ISO 50, 1/50 sec f16 (+ 6 expos. à +/-1EV avec trépied)
Photo fusionnée et traitée avec Lightroom Classic
Early morning at the Amalfi cost and the light literally lasted 30 seconds lighting up the clouds. Luckily I was there, ready to capture the beautiful scene that uncovered.
#Sky #Rock #Nature #Outdoors #ScenicsNature #BodyOfWater #Travel #Architecture #River #Landscape #amalficoast #amalficoastitaly #bridge #snap_bridges #snap_seascape #raw_seasons #raw_bridge #italy #visit_italy #nikonz8photography #z8 #nikonz8 #1430mm
Bibury, Gloucestershire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Bibury, Gloucestershire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Nog maar een mistig plaatje van de Bolwerksmolen in Deventer. Altijd een blikvanger als je de Wilhelminabrug over rijdt.
El Puente del Milenio, también conocido como el puente de la Gaviota debido a su forma, es el quinto puente en la ciudad de Ourense, Galicia, España.
El puente se compone de dos niveles. El nivel inferior es una plataforma de hormigón que forma el puente en sí mismo y por el cual viajan vehículos y peatones. Un sistema de tirantes y dos pilares metálicos inclinados, ubicados en los extremos, sostienen la plataforma de circulación. El segundo nivel del puente está constituido por la pasarela peatonal circundante que es transitable y ofrece vistas interesantes del paisaje del río y la ciudad. El trabajo se llevó a cabo entre abril de 1999 y agosto de 2001.
Samuel Beckett Bridge over the Liffey River at night with reflection, in Dublin Ireland. Constructed by Graham Hollandia Joint Venture, and designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. The bridge is 120 metres long and 48 metres high and weighs 5,700 tonnes.
The summer river:
although there is a bridge, my horse
goes through the water.
— A haiku by Masaoka Shiki
Een bruidspaartje op de koude, mistige pier dapper en geduldig poserend voor de fotografe! Ik had met ze te doen, maar ze vonden het prachtig.
Mocht u zichzelf herkennen, maar bezwaar hebben tegen het plaatsen van de foto, stuur me dan een mail en ik verwijder hem.
Waterfront, Bristol
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Governor’s Basin at sunrise …. Check out the mine at larger sizes.
This is not an HDR shot. When I am shooting with my Nikon I use the “highlight” screen to see what highlights are “blinking” at me and I adjust my exposure accordingly to how much highlights I want. When I process the image in PS I open in RAW Bridge and typically adjust my “shadow” bar first and then adjust “exposure” tool to get the overall shadows. This may throw the highlights way too bright I then adjust down my “highlight” bar to get the overall balance I’m looking for. If this still doesn’t get my highlights to the point I want I then adjust the “white” tool to my remaining adjustment. Still in “Bridge” I adjust my sharpening to zero because I use sharpening in PS that has more detailed adjustment. I may also use the “Lens correction” and do my auto adjustment the PS shop recognizes for the camera and lens I use.
At this point I open in PS and do the fine detail of “dodging” and “burning” to get the final image I am looking for in tone. I may do some selective “color replacement” to bring out the colors (be careful using this tool. If used too much it blocks differencing tones into one and you lose detail). As a final step I do “Smart Sharpening”.
I know... changed affiliates from Giants to Astros. Still, love that they're here in downtown. Go Grizzlies!!!
(except when they're playing the River Cats).
All these recent images were shot with my Sony A3000. An ILC camera I got new w/ 18-55 kit lens for $250-ish a year ago. Sony 20/2.8 pancake I got new for $175 when it was on sale. I'm currently ONLY using Photoscape (freeware) for editing. I'm back to having no Photoshop/Camera RAW/Bridge/Illustrator once again.
So, all in all, about $500 total in costs. That's including the Zeiss Jena Tessar 80/2.8 lens and tilt adapter I use. I'll upload more recent images when I again have limited internet access. Cheers.
I’m pleased to announce my new ebook, How to Photograph and Process Nightscapes and Time-Lapses
The ebook describes —
How to shoot and process still image “nightscapes” – images of landscapes taken at night by the light of the Moon or stars
… and …
How to shoot and assemble time-lapse movies of the stars and Milky Way turning above Earthly scenes, all using DSLR cameras.
Available worldwide only for MacOS and iPads through the Apple iBookstore.
See tiny.cc/urdoqx for more about the book at iTunes.
The 400-page multi-touch book includes —
50 embedded HD videos (no internet connection required) demonstrating time-lapse techniques.
60 multi-page tutorials with step-by-step instructions of how to use software: Adobe Bridge, Adobe Camera Raw, Photoshop, Lightroom, LRTimelapse, Advanced Stacker Actions, StarStaX, Panolapse, Sequence, GBTimelapse, and more.
Numerous Photo 101 sections explaining the basic concepts of photography and video production (f-stops, ISOs, file types, aspect ratios, frame rates, compression, etc.).
Numerous Astronomy 101 sections explaining the basics of how the sky works (how the sky moves, where the Moon can be found, when the Milky Way can be seen, when and where to see auroras).
Reviews of gear – I don’t just mention that specialized gear exists, I illustrate in detail how to use popular units such as the Time-Lapse+, Michron, and TriggerTrap intervalometers, and the All-View mount, Radian, Mindarin Astro, eMotimo, and Dynamic Perception motion-control units, with comments on what’s good – and not so good – to use.
You’ll learn —
• What are the best cameras and lenses to buy (cropped vs. full-frame, Canon vs. Nikon, manual vs. automatic lenses, zooms vs. primes).
• How to set your cameras and lenses for maximum detail and minimum noise (following the mantra of “exposing to the right” and using dark frames).
• How to shoot auroras, conjunctions, satellites, comets, and meteor showers.
• How to shoot nightscapes lit only by moonlit, and how to determine where the Moon will be to plan a shoot.
• How to shoot & stitch panoramas of the night sky and Milky Way, using Photoshop and PTGui software.
• How to shoot tracked long exposures of the Milky Way using camera trackers such as the iOptron Star Tracker and Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer.
• How to develop Raw files, the essential first step to great images and movies.
• How to process nightscape stills using techniques such as compositing multiple exposures, masking ground and sky, and using non-destructive adjustment layers and smart filters.
• How to shoot and stack star trail images made of hundreds of frames.
• How to assemble time-lapse movies from those same hundreds of frames.
• How to plan a time-lapse shoot and calculate the best balance of exposure time vs. frame count vs. length of shoot, and recommended apps to use.
• How to process hundreds of frames using Adobe Camera Raw, Bridge, Photoshop, and Lightroom.
• How to shoot and process advanced “Holy Grail” time-lapse transitions from day to night.
• How to shoot motion-control sequences using specialized dolly and pan/tilt devices.
• How to use time-lapse processing tools such as LRTimelapse, Panolapse, Sequence, and Advanced Stacker Actions.
• What can go wrong and how best to avoid problems in the field.
It's a large, multi-media book available only for MacOS and iPads through the Apple iBookstore.
For technical and economic reasons, the book's size and media content prevent it from being offered via other platforms such as Kindles and Android devices. It is not available as a static PDF or traditional print book. It's subject makes use of an ebook's ability to contain interactive and video content.
See tiny.cc/urdoqx for more about the book at iTunes. Available worldwide. It's $24.95 in the U.S.
Bibury, Gloucestershire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
Rainbow Bridge traverses Brush Creek approximately two miles west of Riverton, Kansas on former U.S. Route 66, now a county road. The bridge is a single-span concrete Marsh arch bridge and is the sole surviving bridge of this type on the entire length Route 66. Built in 1923.
HDR from a single RAW, Photomatix.
I just felt like making an HDR bridge image. I was photographing the nearby junction of the Connecticut and Mascoma Rivers, and I thought this bridge looked kinda cool,
Bibury, Gloucestershire
Please do not use my photos without permission. Feel free to contact me if you have a request.
In southern Athens County, Ohio, the 64' bridge spans Middle Branch of Shade Creek. Originally built in 1881, it's been rehabbed.
18! We are transported to Lilliput. I step on an ant hill and get bitten. The ants are slightly worse off.
As shot, uped the exposure, white balance correction, and messed with the shadow slider in adobe camera raw bridge.
Working on getting myself in this type of image. its a little difficult but def. possible.
Originally built 124 years ago by the Wrought Iron Bridge Company, reconstructed off site at US Bridge. Reopened in August 2007, the wrought iron Pratt truss bridge spans Sugar Creek on Mark Road in Fayette County, Ohio. The site was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.
A more famous bridge opened the same year:
"On May 24, 1883, President Chester Arthur and New York Governor Grover Cleveland participated in the ceremonial opening of the Brooklyn Bridge. The Brooklyn Bridge was the first bridge to be built across the East River linking New York City and Brooklyn. The bridge was an engineering marvel, utilizing numerous construction techniques that had never before been attempted on such a massive scale..."
Crossing the Big Water of Fleet river in the Galloway Forest near to the town of Gatehouse of Fleet is this amazing now disused railway viaduct.
After walking across the viaduct this is the view looking back from the eastern towards the western end showing the vast curve of the viaduct.
3 image exposure bracketed HDR
Tonemapped using Photomatix Pro
Enhancements using Lightroom 2
The Red Bridge crossing the Elizabeth River at Campbell Town, Tasmania, Australia.
The Red Bridge completed in 1838, is the oldest bridge on the National Highway. The bricks (more than one and a half million) were made in the town itself. Convict-built to a European design it has needed very little repair work over the years and now carries well over a two million vehicles a year.-- (from Campbell Town website)
This picture taken with The Nikon D7000, Tamron 200-500mm lens. Aperture set to f/6.3, Shutter Speed set to 1/2000 of a second, and the ISO was set to 400. The focal length was 500mm, maximum magnification. I blew out the background in Camera RAW (Bridge), cropped, adjusted WB, pre-sharpened, and opened in CS6. Reduced noise, pulled back highlights, opened up the mid-tones, reduced noise and processed for the web.