View allAll Photos Tagged testing.
Depois de quase uma semana de namoro, terminei os testes da minha nova lente, uma tamron 28-75 f2.8.
Relatório:
Exelente.
Ótima definição e nitidez mesmo em 2.8 e 28mm
Foco rápido apesar de não ultrasônico e um pouco barulhento.
Qualidade de imagem fantástica.
Em macro ela também e muito boa, eu daria nota 9 sendo que 10 é para a minha 100mm da canon
O buquet dela também me agrada muito.
Não gostei do anel de foco que não pode ser usado manualmente quando o foco está em automático, isso é um problema pois acidentalmente você pode trava-lo enquanto o motor da camera tenta movimenta-lo.
O melhor de tudo é o preço: U$350,00 nos EUA
Muito boa para eventos, fotos do dia-a-dia, estúdio-moda, estúdio-culinária e macro. Eu não usaria o macro dela para foto de jóias, prefiro o da 100mm.
Resultado, vou vender a minha 28-135 IS
After almost a week of dating, finished the testing of my new lens, a tamron 28-75 f2.8.
Report:
Exelente.
Great definition and clarity even at 2.8 and 28mm
Focus fast despite of not ultrasônico and a little noisy.
fantastic quality of image.
I´s also very good in macro, I would note it 9 when 10 is my 100mm canon.
The buquet also pleases me greatly.
Didn´t like the ring of focus that can not be used manually when the focus is on automatic, this is a problem because you can accidentally hangs it as the engine of the camera tries to move it.
Best of all is the price: $ 350.00 U.S.
Very good for events, day-to-day photos, studio-fashion, cooking and macro-studio. I would not use it for macro picture of jewelry I prefer the 100mm.
Result, I will sell my 28-135 IS
A very low-tech test shot of the Keay Street diorama, with the bits I've made so far fairly crudely set up in place, to get a rough idea how things might look (and the giant Venetian blind at the rear won't be making an appearance in the final pictures....). The terrace of houses at the rear of the picture needs windows and interiors/a roof, chimneys, etc, the whole right side of the factory on the street needs building, and the windows need finishing, drainpipes, etc, adding - so a huge amount of work still to be done...
Just testing out my new softbox as PAN this week was a washout. Big thanks to Justin for the loan of the light stand :)
Strobist Info: 580EXII in Softbox camara Left cactus V4, Jessops Flash camara right optical slave to blow out backgound.
The splashing of this common garter snake caught my attention as is swam searching for food and testing the water with its tongue. I was rather fascinated by it as it dove underwater and sometimes under the silt. Occasionally it would pop up with a big tadpole. He was hard to photograph because he was very fast slipping quickly behind grass, under water and the sun glared on its wet skin.
(Tualatin River Wildlife Refuge)
this is a page of test prints for an idea. it was just made to see how the ink would work and to clean the screen. 5 layers on illustration board!
nice final prints coming soon
I'm open to sell (25 bucks) or trade this one...send me a message if interested!
Atomic Testing Museum documents the work conducted at the Nevada Test Site and its impact on the nation. This interactive museum houses artifacts on loan from personal collections, the Smithsonian Institution, Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and pieces of the Berlin wall and World Trade Centers.
Test Roll of Lomography CN 400 in my new Lomogrpahy Konstruktor DIY SLR.
Held a Holga 60mm close up lens in front of the lens barrel and worked quite well. Little over exposed though.
Overall the pictures are okay. I don't think I'd be using it that often, the 1/80 shutter speed is just a bit too slow unless you stop and stand still.
Also it likes to eat film.
Test roll: almost all images are ruined. On the lower & left side of the negative. Why, I don't know. (BTW some images don't have this problem.) What's happened??
The only thing visible above water at the EMEC tidal test site - these are the pilings for one specific turbine. We were told three others are also being tested on site, but all evidence of them was hidden below the water...
DH88 COMET
This DH88 won the 1934 England to Australia Air Race in 70 hours and 54 minutes.
After the DH88’s success, G-ACSS was evaluated by the RAF with the serial number K5084 and appeared as such in the 1936 Hendon Pageant. It suffered several accidents in the hands of the RAF and was eventually sold as scrap. However, it was rescued when bought by F Tasker and restored at Essex Aero Ltd at Gravesend. Renamed ‘The Orphan’ it gained fourth place in the England-Damascus Air Race of 1937.
After this G-ACSS was renamed yet again and as ‘The Burberry’ set a new record for the out-and-back times to the Cape, and also set a record when it travelled from England to New Zealand and home again in only ten days, twenty-one hours and twenty-two minutes.
After these record breaking flights G-ACSS was abandoned at Gravesend and spent WWII stored there. De Havilland apprentices statically restored it for the 1951 Festival of Great Britain, where it was displayed hanging from the roof. It was given to the Shuttleworth Collection in 1965 and a restoration to flying condition was begun. About fifty organisations supported the project and restoration was carried out first at RAE Farnborough and then at the British Aerospace works at Hatfield. This culminated in the first flight in forty-nine years on Sunday 17th May 1987.
Following the closure of Hatfield in 1994 the aircraft returned to Old Warden where, initially, the runway was too short to allow safe operation. The runway was lengthened by 1999 but then, in 2002, the Comet suffered undercarriage failure when landing after its first test flight and research showed that as originally designed the legs were liable to failure under certain conditions. Subsequently modifications to the structure were approved and implemented and the aircraft flew again. After successful test flights on 1st August 2014 it is now a regular performer at Shuttleworth air displays.