@Peas dig that traffic shot! Great action capture.
Here's an alt edit of the flatirons, think I like it a bit better than the first. I was stubborn about getting rid of the ground on the original edit, mostly because there's a little person walking up the hill and I liked having him in the photo. This one is a little more abstract looking though. Thoughts?!
Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
I tried some bird photography yesterday. Bird photography is fucking hard. Third pic is my favourite but it pains me that the shutter speed was too low.
I've been eying a super-wide zoom (16-35) and I have a trip in May I want to use it on (Canadian Rockies). How long before the trip should I buy it? I could dip into savings and buy it today, but I would rather not. But am I going to be mad I didn't play with it for a month before my trip?
@muninn Thanks man, I've been back and forth about the vertical thing! I've actually got the last one I did as a vertical on my phone background and I really like it that way also. Almost looks like an alien when done like that. Hmmm... maybe I'll try to shorten them up a bit and do some verticals.
@Brovid Hasselsmof Bird photography is pretty tough. Smaller birds are especially tough with their quick movements. Really dig that first one the best as it's the sharpest and I have a tendency towards loving blue backgrounds (for everything apparently), that spot to the right of the bird is really triggering my OCD though. Unless it was an aesthetic choice just plop your mouse down on that sucker with the healing brush!
minor incidentexpert in a dying fieldnjRegistered Userregular
That first bird shot is pretty goddamn great. The composition is awesome, too.
Everything looks beautiful when you're young and pretty
+1
Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
I don't know if I have a healing brush in my photo program. I've never done any processing except cropping and adjusting contrast/brightness/saturation.
0
minor incidentexpert in a dying fieldnjRegistered Userregular
Pro-Tip for anyone who's getting into photography: Adobe's "Photography" plan is only $10 (USD) per month, and includes full versions of Photoshop and Lightroom (with syncing to mobile Lightroom). It's the best money you'll invest in photography, after your camera and lens.
I don't know if I have a healing brush in my photo program. I've never done any processing except cropping and adjusting contrast/brightness/saturation.
Haha no worries, it is an amazing tool though if you happen to get any adobe program. And as MI said, photoshop and lightroom are more than worth $10 a month in my opinion as long as you can afford it! I really do love that first photo, beautiful capture - I was just being nitpicky ;P
I passed the test for my FAA Part 107 (commercial licence for Unmanned Air Vehicles). Pretty tough test and glad I studied up over the last couple months. Couldn't resist going out this morning as it was an incredible post-snow sunrise. Wintry Denver by Lee Stonehouse, on Flickr
@Rothgarr nice! Is that first one a vertical pano?! Great colors on it, dig the tilt shift vibe in the others too. What are you shooting with?!
Thanks! No vertical pan on the first one -- just zoomed and cropped. Anything that looks tilt-shifted is done manually in Photoshop -- the originals are all sharp top to bottom. I'm using an old DJI Phantom 3 Pro. Wish I had the funds to upgrade, especially since I'm getting all kinds of motor errors now...
...
I passed the test for my FAA Part 107 (commercial licence for Unmanned Air Vehicles). Pretty tough test and glad I studied up over the last couple months. Couldn't resist going out this morning as it was an incredible post-snow sunrise.
...
@Prospicience
How hard was the Part 107 test and do feel like it was worth it? What drone/camera do you use?
I've had a little interest in drone photography but probably not enough to go through the whole process to get a license. Since I am unlikely to sell any images maybe the license isn't even necessary.
CommunistCow on
No, I am not really communist. Yes, it is weird that I use this name.
I passed the test for my FAA Part 107 (commercial licence for Unmanned Air Vehicles). Pretty tough test and glad I studied up over the last couple months. Couldn't resist going out this morning as it was an incredible post-snow sunrise.
Oh, yes, when I said "a bit higher up" I meant "about 30,000 feet higher up" -- these are your normal sort of window-seat-on-a-flight shots. I think the reason these didn't go into the enormous pile of previous shots that aren't good enough is a newer lens; the ZD 12-40/2.8 is really _very_ sharp, which seems to help more than I'd expected it would.
Oh, yes, when I said "a bit higher up" I meant "about 30,000 feet higher up" -- these are your normal sort of window-seat-on-a-flight shots. I think the reason these didn't go into the enormous pile of previous shots that aren't good enough is a newer lens; the ZD 12-40/2.8 is really _very_ sharp, which seems to help more than I'd expected it would.
@djmitchella Do you have any specific strategies for shooting out of a plane window? I've always found it rather difficult. The best I could come up with is to use a shirt over the camera like a tent to try and prevent reflections from internal lights. That has never really worked out well.
No, I am not really communist. Yes, it is weird that I use this name.
I avoid the internal reflections problem by not taking photos at night -- looking back through all the ones I've taken, there's a few around sunset but even those are pretty iffy. By day, it's usually so much brighter outside than in that it's not a big deal -- it's more awkward trying to find a bit of window that doesn't have forehead/finger smears on it, or unfortunately located condensation.
(not sure about polarizers, but I did fly on one plane where instead of sliding covers to cut out the light, the windows were some sort of LCD panel that dimmed itself automatically, which made it much harder to take photos through it).
+1
firewaterwordSatchitanandaPais Vasco to San FranciscoRegistered Userregular
Hello photo thread! Finally finished reading the back half of this thread - you folks really take some wonderful shots! Super impressive and inspiring stuff. I've been slowly but surely getting serious about photography over the last two or three years. I bought my current camera, a D5200, back in mid 2016, and have been aquireing lenses here and there since, and taking as many photos as possible. I do a lot of travel, both for work and play, and have had a blast capturing memories from each new and wonderful spot.
I'm currently in New Zealand, and have been really working on practical photography education by taking as many dang photos as possible. Figured I'd post some here (some of these went into the SE++ thread as well); I love to know what I'm doing right and wrong if anyone has any pointers. Most of my shooting down here has been on the 35mm Nikkor f1.8 DX, though I also brought my Tamron 18-200mm superzoom. Also have a cheap Sigma macro lens and the Nikkor 70-300mm back home, but didn't bring them this time.
Hello everyone! There are a lot of inspiring photos in here. I'm not sure if I've posted in this thread before (if I have it's been a very long time); I've been shooting casually for quite a while now but I'm generally too self-critical of my work to actually share it anywhere. That said, I've been trying to branch out into different shooting & editing techniques lately to try and push myself to actually improve, and in doing so I've decided I need to overcome my social anxiety and start sharing photos and actually interacting with people (not sure why I end up with social anxiety about even posting to online forums, but here we are). Here are some things I've shot over the past few months.
Some behind-the-scenes shots of a friend's music video shoot:
Yeah, really dig some of those aerial shots @djmitchella. Especially like the power lines and the rockies with the clouds hovering over them in the distance. If you're ever in Denver again, feel free to hit me up. Looks like you were recommended and hit up some great spots from based on what you said in your thread though!
@firewaterword love those last couple shots. That moonrise photo is especially gorgeous.
Good to see you posting again @Blakout. That red Thunderbird shot has some amazing contrast being surrounded by all those grays. Really love that neon is making a comeback in the past couple years.
My favorite photographer whom uses a ton of neon coloring right now and double exposure is Nick Fancher. Ran across him on instagram a little while back, talk about amazing portraitures.
firewaterwordSatchitanandaPais Vasco to San FranciscoRegistered Userregular
Thank you @Prospicience ! Had a lot of fun playing around that night. Really validated my choice to lug a tripod halfway across the globe. Still, probably took a hundred or so and had a half dozen turn out OK. Really bumped up against the limitations of my superzoom, but it was a good object lesson in working with what ya got.
Ended up hiking up that volcano in the background last week, will try to post some photos from that at some point. Light wasn't great for it, but the views were wonderful as usual.
Good to see you posting again @Blakout. That red Thunderbird shot has some amazing contrast being surrounded by all those grays. Really love that neon is making a comeback in the past couple years.
My favorite photographer whom uses a ton of neon coloring right now and double exposure is Nick Fancher. Ran across him on instagram a little while back, talk about amazing portraitures.
Thank you! I desaturated the foreground handrail and the wall with the "No Parking" sign, which were orange and blue respectively, but I tried to leave some other bits of muted color so it didn't veer too far into "Selective Color" territory. I'd also taken a second exposure with a different CPL turn to merge in and kill the reflections on the top of the car, but I apparently shook while shooting it and it was too blurry to use. I tried to make due with burning down the harsh reflections a little and adding a red 'Color' layer over some of the body panels.
Nick Fancher is great, and this is the first I'd heard of him. My main focus/passion is automotive photography so I'm pretty clueless outside of that world. I've been doing a little more portraiture lately though and I've been enjoying it, so some inspiration from that realm is great.
Semi-related, went to the local Cars & Coffee this weekend. I've only had time to edit one shot so far:
I think that's the perfect use of selective coloring. People shit on that technique a lot, but that's basically all you see now in formats like instagram anymore - is crazy amounts of curve layers and selective coloring/boosting of specific colors. The verbage of "selective coloring" just doesn't seem to be used because I don't think that's what it's thought of anymore. Unless it's a red flower popping out of a gray background.
Really though, I didn't even notice it was selective coloring until you mentioned it. Love me some creative car photography. I've been interested in seeing more Eric Pare style light painting with some car photography, think you could get super creative with it. Light painting with inanimate objects in general is great because you can practice as many different techniques as you can handle because the model never tires (pun not intended).
Couple photos from a friend's birthday hike I'd forgotten about. Awwww by Lee Stonehouse, on Flickr
This one is my favorite I've done so far with that camera, it really is a perfect street photography camera. Going to try to do more street photography this summer with it. IMG_6016 by Lee Stonehouse, on Flickr
Blackout, I really love the car photos. Did you intentionally have the Subaru with the color smoke not level compared to the horizon. I also like how you made the horizon completely flat except for the mountain in the middle.
No, I am not really communist. Yes, it is weird that I use this name.
Blackout, I really love the car photos. Did you intentionally have the Subaru with the color smoke not level compared to the horizon. I also like how you made the horizon completely flat except for the mountain in the middle.
Sort of? I didn't notice that it was crooked until near the end of the edit, and by that time it looked strange to me when I straightened it. Probably a case of staring at it for too long. To be honest I had no real plans for the picture, it was just a quick side shoot of my car while I was lightpainting my brother's Mustang; it ended up looking pretty bad so I decided to just have fun with the edit. I think I used about 5 different exposures of the car itself? Here's a before & after:
I feel like this is probably a bit over-edited and not-quite-in-focus, buut here's my son learning to ride without training wheels:
Posts
https://kennethdhughes.myportfolio.com/tsukiji-ginza
This one in particular:
https://kennethdhughes.myportfolio.com/ueno
I like them as verticals.
Cool stuff man, as always.
Question time!
I've been eying a super-wide zoom (16-35) and I have a trip in May I want to use it on (Canadian Rockies). How long before the trip should I buy it? I could dip into savings and buy it today, but I would rather not. But am I going to be mad I didn't play with it for a month before my trip?
@Brovid Hasselsmof Bird photography is pretty tough. Smaller birds are especially tough with their quick movements. Really dig that first one the best as it's the sharpest and I have a tendency towards loving blue backgrounds (for everything apparently), that spot to the right of the bird is really triggering my OCD though. Unless it was an aesthetic choice just plop your mouse down on that sucker with the healing brush!
My Portfolio Site
https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/photography.html
Haha no worries, it is an amazing tool though if you happen to get any adobe program. And as MI said, photoshop and lightroom are more than worth $10 a month in my opinion as long as you can afford it! I really do love that first photo, beautiful capture - I was just being nitpicky ;P
I passed the test for my FAA Part 107 (commercial licence for Unmanned Air Vehicles). Pretty tough test and glad I studied up over the last couple months. Couldn't resist going out this morning as it was an incredible post-snow sunrise.
My Portfolio Site
Watch my music videos
I also really love making things look mini, like this other shot I took last year.
Watch my music videos
Thanks. Yes, a drone. I love tilt-shift-looking stuff, too. Here's another I took:
Watch my music videos
And yeah, those aerial shots are super cool!
@Sublimus not weakness... that is a great lens, looking forward to seeing what you photo with it!
My Portfolio Site
Thanks! No vertical pan on the first one -- just zoomed and cropped. Anything that looks tilt-shifted is done manually in Photoshop -- the originals are all sharp top to bottom. I'm using an old DJI Phantom 3 Pro. Wish I had the funds to upgrade, especially since I'm getting all kinds of motor errors now...
Watch my music videos
@Prospicience
How hard was the Part 107 test and do feel like it was worth it? What drone/camera do you use?
I've had a little interest in drone photography but probably not enough to go through the whole process to get a license. Since I am unlikely to sell any images maybe the license isn't even necessary.
I was just in Denver recently -- here's some photos from a bit higher up, and some from the city itself:
Also, got me new lens.....16mm is SO WIDE.
Watch my music videos
It's very inspiring
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
@djmitchella Do you have any specific strategies for shooting out of a plane window? I've always found it rather difficult. The best I could come up with is to use a shirt over the camera like a tent to try and prevent reflections from internal lights. That has never really worked out well.
Also I know normal plane windows interact weird with polarizer filters. So don't use those.
(not sure about polarizers, but I did fly on one plane where instead of sliding covers to cut out the light, the windows were some sort of LCD panel that dimmed itself automatically, which made it much harder to take photos through it).
I'm currently in New Zealand, and have been really working on practical photography education by taking as many dang photos as possible. Figured I'd post some here (some of these went into the SE++ thread as well); I love to know what I'm doing right and wrong if anyone has any pointers. Most of my shooting down here has been on the 35mm Nikkor f1.8 DX, though I also brought my Tamron 18-200mm superzoom. Also have a cheap Sigma macro lens and the Nikkor 70-300mm back home, but didn't bring them this time.
Anyway! Some photos!
Drums of Fire
Classic Chevy
Takapuna Moonrise
Drums of Fire II
Some behind-the-scenes shots of a friend's music video shoot:
Some assorted car things:
Lovely warehouse fire in my town:
Watch my music videos
@firewaterword love those last couple shots. That moonrise photo is especially gorgeous.
Good to see you posting again @Blakout. That red Thunderbird shot has some amazing contrast being surrounded by all those grays. Really love that neon is making a comeback in the past couple years.
My favorite photographer whom uses a ton of neon coloring right now and double exposure is Nick Fancher. Ran across him on instagram a little while back, talk about amazing portraitures.
My Portfolio Site
Ended up hiking up that volcano in the background last week, will try to post some photos from that at some point. Light wasn't great for it, but the views were wonderful as usual.
Thank you! I desaturated the foreground handrail and the wall with the "No Parking" sign, which were orange and blue respectively, but I tried to leave some other bits of muted color so it didn't veer too far into "Selective Color" territory. I'd also taken a second exposure with a different CPL turn to merge in and kill the reflections on the top of the car, but I apparently shook while shooting it and it was too blurry to use. I tried to make due with burning down the harsh reflections a little and adding a red 'Color' layer over some of the body panels.
Nick Fancher is great, and this is the first I'd heard of him. My main focus/passion is automotive photography so I'm pretty clueless outside of that world. I've been doing a little more portraiture lately though and I've been enjoying it, so some inspiration from that realm is great.
Semi-related, went to the local Cars & Coffee this weekend. I've only had time to edit one shot so far:
Really though, I didn't even notice it was selective coloring until you mentioned it. Love me some creative car photography. I've been interested in seeing more Eric Pare style light painting with some car photography, think you could get super creative with it. Light painting with inanimate objects in general is great because you can practice as many different techniques as you can handle because the model never tires (pun not intended).
Couple photos from a friend's birthday hike I'd forgotten about.
And some more Rolleiflex film shots.
This one is my favorite I've done so far with that camera, it really is a perfect street photography camera. Going to try to do more street photography this summer with it.
My Portfolio Site
All of those are great, but I love this in particular - the sense of scale is amazing.
Sort of? I didn't notice that it was crooked until near the end of the edit, and by that time it looked strange to me when I straightened it. Probably a case of staring at it for too long. To be honest I had no real plans for the picture, it was just a quick side shoot of my car while I was lightpainting my brother's Mustang; it ended up looking pretty bad so I decided to just have fun with the edit. I think I used about 5 different exposures of the car itself? Here's a before & after:
I feel like this is probably a bit over-edited and not-quite-in-focus, buut here's my son learning to ride without training wheels:
edit: Skip to 5:25 ish to see a speed edit of this shot.