Originally posted by: aircooled
pic2 - particularly like the dog running in this one.
very nice! you know her, or just took advantage of the opportunity for a great pic?Originally posted by: DurocShark
Dayum!
Originally posted by: aircooled
very nice! you know her, or just took advantage of the opportunity for a great pic?Originally posted by: DurocShark
Dayum!
Originally posted by: jonMEGA
Originally posted by: aircooled
very nice! you know her, or just took advantage of the opportunity for a great pic?Originally posted by: DurocShark
Dayum!
took advantage of the opportunity for a great pic
Originally posted by: sohcrates
this is one of my favs. took it at niagara falls. used a neutral density filter to get flowing water
Originally posted by: jonMEGA
Originally posted by: sohcrates
this is one of my favs. took it at niagara falls. used a neutral density filter to get flowing water
Couldnt you have just used a slower shutter speed for the same effect ?
Originally posted by: sohcrates
Originally posted by: jonMEGA
Originally posted by: sohcrates
this is one of my favs. took it at niagara falls. used a neutral density filter to get flowing water
Couldnt you have just used a slower shutter speed for the same effect ?
with a slow shutter speed and high aperture, even during the day, the picture was blown out with anymore than 1/4 second or so even at iso 100. neutral density gives me 3 extra stops to work with, so i was able to get 1/2 second exposure, which made the water look much cooler without destroying the exposure
edit: so yes, i *did* use a slow shutter speed
Originally posted by: GTaudiophile
Fine, I'll post some faves (until my bandwidth is shot):
Muir Woods (G2)
That's the nice thing about mechanical film cameras. You can hold the shutter open as long as you like. Most electronic cameras and particularly digicams only allow 30 second shutters max.
Originally posted by: Beau
http://www.pictars.com/users/B...-lion.jpg/preview.html
Originally posted by: LordMorpheus
where were those taken? I want to go.