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The Lights danced and shimmered across the night sky in a complex, choreographed sequence. Teasing and tantalising, moving in waves. First appearing just above us … and then rising far above. As quickly as they appeared, they would dim and disappear only to reappear in another part of the sky. A big thank you to everyone who took time to comment and take a look at my photo. Much appreciated!
This is a 9 frame sequence taken in less than 1 second of a gyrfalcon attacking a flock of snow geese. You can see his single target near the center of the sequence with blood on its back. The falcon flew in multiple times and hit the single bird with its talons. Shortly after I captured this sequence, a bald eagle flew in and took a single bird. I'm guessing the eagle grabbed this falcon's meal. Skagit Valley, Washington. November, 2019.
Sharing an frame from my time lapse sequence I took during sunset after an afternoon rain. The golden lights from the sunset, lighted up the whole sky with it's golden light. One of my favourite moments during that evening.
HAK Imageworks / © All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce this image on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer. The image and timelapse is available for licensing by contacting the photographer at peacezxp@gmail.com
Note: this photo was published in a 2009 Squidoo blog titled "Sunscreen." It was also published on Wikimedia Commons, with the same caption that I used, on Jan 30, 2010. And it was published in a May 12, 2010 blog titled "Free camping in Central Park this summer: NYC deals." It was also published in an Aug 18, 2010 blog titled "Why Introverts Like to Be Alone." And it was published in an Aug 20, 2010 blog titled "Très Trivia! Are You in the Know?"
Moving into 2011, the photo was published in a Jul 19, 2011 Matador blog titled "Camp for free in a New York City park this summer." And it was published in an Aug 19, 2011 blog titled "Going solo in NYC." It was also published in an undated (late Dec 2011) blog titled "セントラルパークは、南北に4キロメートル、東西は800mの広大な公園。"
Moving into 2012, the photo was published in an Oct 24, 2012 blog titled "Przekazał 100 mln dol. na Central Park."
Note: A large percentage of my "landscape" photos (including the ones in this set) are now copyright-protected, and are not available for downloads and free use. You can view them here in Flickr, but if you would like prints, enlargements, framed copies, and other variations, please visit my SmugMug "NYC HDR" gallery by clicking here.
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I tried an HDR (high dynamic range) photo once a year ago, but for some reason never pursued it. But it seems that more of and more of the "interesting" photos that I see on Flickr are HDR shots, so I decided to give it another try. The first of these HDR shots were taken from the rooftop of my apartment building at sunset, on the Sunday evening of 4th of July weekend. Subsequent shots (including this one) have been taken out on the street, from the terrace of my apartment at night, and walking through Central Park at mid-day...
This photo is one of a group of ten that I took in the "Sheep Meadow" area at the south end of Central Park. I knew that the trees, the grass, the buildings, and the sky/clouds would be stationary, and I figured that I could pick a time/scene where most, if not all, of the picnickers and sunbathers were reasonably stationary. But there were always a few people in motion, especially the young kids; and though the "ghosting" effect of their movement is sometimes interesting, I think I've concluded that it gets annoying after a while. But aside from that, it is possible to take these HDR sequences (which, in the case of these Sheep Meadow shots, involve the merging of 5 separate images into one composite) in a handheld fashion, without a tripod.
I still have a *lot* to learn about this stuff, but even as a first attempt I'm staggered by what the tonal-mapping software programs (Photomatix, in my case) are capable of doing...
Based on my own photographs. Created using layers and masking in Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo X2.
Thanks for all views, comments, group invites and fave adds.
First trial on the GoPro's burst-mode to capture something that I see everyday. Creating the final image itself was fun and now I gotta work on the timing to create even better ones. Enjoy
...Went out to a local lake and this crane flew by; so here are the results. haha
* Canon EOS REBEL T5i
* Canon EF-S 55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS II lens
* Corel PaintShop Pro X4
This Bald Eagle realized he missed a duck and just got grass. In the following pictures he will get rid of the grass, make a 180 degree turn, dive onto another duck and lift it to a tree where he will be eating it. Happy Eagle. Not so for the duck.
Landscape at Sunrise
Tonglu (3036 m)
Singalila National Park, Eastern Himalayas
Beautiful Bengal, India
I recorded these sequences at 200 fps, rendered at 25fps (i.e. slowed to 1/8th speed). Stopped down to circa F16 to try to keep them in focus for as long as possible when they shoot forward toward their nest. Sony A1ii ( in S&Q Mode - HD, not 4k) & 70-200mm lens probably mostly approx. 135mm.
Created for Magic Troll Artistry's "Bridges" challenge and for Hypothetical Awards' "Urban Abstraction" challenge. And how about one more ;-) … Vivid Imagination's "Waterfront Art" challenge.
This is a mash up of six photos I took of the Lefty O'Doul Bridge at 3rd Street in San Francisco. I was shooting without a tripod and wasn't really trying to hold still but Photoshop managed to do a great job of aligning them regardless. I used the "difference" blend mode repeatedly to expose all six bridge positions. The blends are also responsible for most of the color effects you see.
In case you're wondering why the bridge was being raised at that moment, look over at the right side of the image below the green pavilion. You'll see a small yellow fishing boat in the water. What you can't see so well is the mast of the boat which extends into the sky above the pavilion. No way that little boat could have made it under the unraised bridge with its mast intact!
Manipulación Digital
Mexico, D.F.
Junio 2009
Gustavo Sánchez
Modelo: Gerardo "Mussgo" Heras
Truco: Ollie
La Foto: Tomamos la foto con la camara de bolsillo montada en un tripie con el modo de secuencia rápida, Después en photoshop monté todas las capas y fui borrando los fondos dejando solo al personaje y después hice los arreglos de siempre.