View allAll Photos Tagged shutter
Taken at Kylemore in Connemara as this stranger took pictures of what is possibly the most photographed view in the West of Ireland - Kylemore Abbey.
I hope she got her shutter speed right!
In this photo, I wanted to show motion. I acheived this by lowering the shutter speed to around 1/60 and lowering the ISO down to 400. I did this because as you lower the shutter speed, you are increasing the amount of light the camera takes in during the time when the shutter opens and closes. This means that if you were previously at a high ISO, you would need to lower the ISO to compensate for the amount of light being let in via the shutter.
Abandoned house in rural Ontario. I love the brick work & original shutters. It was last lived in during the 60's. There is no indoor plumbing in this house.
Todd, James, Troy & Jay at Shutter+Light, East Santa Ana Blvd, Santa Ana, California
Laguna PolaWalk 01/25/15
Daniel Radcliffe.
From The Films That Never Were.
www.facebook.com/Shadrachart 
©shadrachdelmonte
Black SP-F with 35/3.5 SMC
This camera belonged to my father in law and after several years of negotiating he agreed to pass it on !
The beautiful back streets of the medieval town of Siena, in the heart of Tuscany.
Looks best on black.
Comments as always welcome, but please no flashy award codes.
shot from tagaytay highlands
Its almost a year since I purchased Photomatix software for HDR, but I can say that I’m fairly new to this type of post processing. Been using one raw file on all my HDRs since I normally cant afford to shoot several shots with various exposures.
The shutter & aperture assembly consists of five layers of 0.01" (0.25mm) and 0.02" (0.51mm) stainless steel.
The aperture is a rotary waterhouse stop, with openings for f/4.5, f/8 and f/22. The other small holes are to make contact with sprung pogo pins, which act as a detent to hold the aperture plate in place, and report the aperture value to the microcontroller.
Similar to Lux, the 645PS (working name) uses a single-leaf shutter, controlled by a solenoid. When activated, the solenoid causes a slider with a small pin in it to shift. As the pin moves horizontally, the leaf rotates and the film is exposed.
Love these modern, yet period styles, window shutters from a photography viewpoint as the angles and control of lighting makes for an interesting subject
Just caught this out of the corner of my eye, while wandering around Gamla Stan, as seen down a narrow ruelle. A warm summer day and this is what you get: instant beauty.
This gas station opened in 2001 and closed 2014 after the Super Kmart it sits in front of started liquidating.
Former Kmart Express gas station - Brookpark Road - Brooklyn, Ohio
I'm getting very close to launching a kickstarter for my new shutter speed tester. It's called the Phochron XA. Software is done, the second pass proto is done. I just need to start drumming up interest.
I've sent one to Mr. Mark O'brien to bring out to the guys at the film photography project (FPP) for evaluation.
Here's a shot of it's sensor stuck into the rear end of an old box camera for testing its consistency and what speed it's actually running at.
Check my album for more shots of it in action.
Stay tuned....