View allAll Photos Tagged sample
The Standard Assessment of Mitigation Potential and Livelihoods in Smallholder Systems (SAMPLES) Program aims to identify pro-poor mitigation options in smallholder farming systems, focusing on opportunities to both benefit farmers’ food security and contribute to climate change mitigation.
This photo was taken at the SAMPLES Annual Workshop June 25-28th, 2013 in Nyando District, western Kenya. Photo by K. Foster (ICRAF).
First, a note: I am not a professional, nor do I pretend to be. The usual frantic pace of the end of the semester has kept me from “playing” with the new toy for any length of time.
Conditions of the test
This particular gym is dark and has mixed lighting. Without an Expodisk, the D200 (and the D50 I used last year) rendered images with a strong yellow and/or green cast.
Settings
I used a variety of settings during this tournament. All pictures were shot using auto ISO and auto white balance. The picture controls were normal, with sharpening set to 7. Noise reduction was set to low. I finally settled on the manual mode, 1/400th of a second with an aperture of f2.8. I used a variety of auto focus modes but most of these were shot in single point mode. The metering mode was centerweight.
I used a Nikor AF-S 80-200 f2.8 for all of these shots.
Post Processing
I used Capture NX to convert the files from RAW to JPEG—after I backed everything up, as Capture NX supposedly doesn’t play well with OS X 10.5. The first images are straight from Capture NX, with no additional processing except for a little resizing in Photoshop (the JPEG files out of NX were over Flickr's 10 mb file size restriction). The second example was post processed in Photoshop CS3 with the Define 2.0 plugin.
Conclusions
The D300 is a complicated beast, far more so than the D200. I’ve used a variety of focusing modes: the 3D tracking is a wonder to behold, in the right conditions. A basketball court full of players with similar uniforms isn’t the best situation. I’ve had good results with focus priority (9 point), but I seem to get the best results with the good, old fashioned single point mode.
The auto WB is a wonder. Exposure is quite good, although I was admittedly pushing it with these images. The end of the gym I usually shoot from has an overhead track that prevents any light from reflecting back onto the players’ faces, resulting in a bad combination of dim light and silhouetted players. The D300 handled the situation quite well.
The noise is quite acceptable for my use. Yes, it’s there and quite evident, particularly at 100%. Given that most of these shots were taken with an ISO of 2000 or above, I don’t think that’s bad.
What’s also present is detail: in one shot, the threads on the player’s uniform are quite visible. I could not have done that with the D200 under these conditions, period.
I printed a 13” by 19” shot from a different game that looked good at normal viewing distances (I did clean it up with Define). That might be stretching it, but it also gives you an idea of how much the high ISO game has changed in the past few months.
I’m not a pixel-peeper, so I’ll let viewers form their own judgments. I’ve only held a 40D in a store, I’ve never used a Canon dSLR and I’m neither inclined nor qualified to render a judgment on the image quality of the respective devices. I’m a neutral party in the Canon/Nikon war. Both companies make fantastic cameras, and I’m sure the 40D is capable of giving fine results in similar conditions.
A SOOC test to check some details here and there- comments are welcome but please only about the original size. View the exif data and enjoy 150cm2 of my kitchen. I want to post another sample of a daylight shot soon.
Apparently the siren is crisp, the chili label may have been too close even for f/8...
The centre of Chorley still has many of the local and speciality shops that seem to have vanished from other towns.
...still they had time to serve us a sample of home made granola in natural yoghurt, and some home made apple compot off Joels moms garden...
Day 9 of the Red Velvet Sewalong is live, with a close look at the Invisible Pocket construction in short video bites and a discussion of sample sewing to build intuitive sewing knowledge. Today's progress shot is harder to achieve, so I made it a 2 pointer!
SAL technician preparing liquid samples for measurement by thermal ionization mass spectrometry. (Seibersdorf Analytical Laboratory, Seibersdorf, Austria, 12 March 2007)
Photo Credit: Dean Calma/IAEA
Sample of transfering two frames (each frames starts with a long frame-marker) by blinking with the scroll-wheel-leds and sampling it with a usual soundcard.
Unedited sample photos taken during our test of the Jolla smartphone. For the full review check out www.stuff.tv/jolla/jolla/review
Scene from photostory where Rod and Danielle select their wedding cake.
Cake is now available.
See the story here:
vansdolltreasures.blogspot.com/2012/03/rod-and-danielle-s...
Rendered for the DAZ3D, May 7, 2013, weekly member challenge
"Sample 2008"
USED: Bell Flower Garden (red/yellow) in YR_Teracotta Pot and capsule (as covers - from Everyday Morphing Primitives), Victoria 5 (as Bot), DarkStar (with Bumpiness textures as main textures), primitive CUBEs are counters
Rendered in Daz3d… postwork done in Paint Shop Pro 7
ENJOY!
Rendered in Honor of my friend Teri who wrote a wonderful story... it starts out like this....
"Sample 2207" by Teri
Each day, as she had for the last 9,875,213 days, her assignment was the same, “Tend, protect, and preserve specimen sample 2207.” She had no knowledge of where samples 1 to 2206 were located, or if they even existed. Similarly, she lacked any knowledge of samples 2208 or higher. Her entire databanks were filled with the knowledge needed to care for her sample....
To read the rest of her story check out our blog... ozlandbard.blogspot.com/2012/05/sample-2207-by-teri.html
Some of my samples from a two day workshop taken by Dawn Thorne at Stirling University. (Embroiderers' Guild, Scottish Regional Summer School)
Blogged www.ominnimo.blogspot.com
This high-volume air sampler is used to collect airborne radionuclides in the environment. The efficient device is used when samples must be collected quickly. It is an important tool in the radiation monitoring activities of Hanford’s emergency preparedness program as well as routine environmental surveillance.
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Courtesy of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.