Haven't been out much lately...but been working back through stuff from last year and doing a whole lot of Keywording and re-editing...this one is from last March:
79-0171 by Steven Szabo, on Flickr
Haven't been out much lately...but been working back through stuff from last year and doing a whole lot of Keywording and re-editing...this one is from last March:
79-0171 by Steven Szabo, on Flickr
Originally posted by HeavyD
you know you are making the right decision if Toma opposes it.
Ultracrepidarian
Ultracrepidarian
Ultracrepidarian
Nice shots man, what lens are these shot on? I just picked up a Sony 85 1.8 to try out something different.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Here's a few recent, Sony A7iii w/ 16-35 f4
DSC02095 by Spencer, on Flickr
DSC02017 by Spencer, on Flickr
DSC02362 by Spencer, on Flickr
DSC02355 by Spencer, on Flickr
Thanks! All are using the Zeiss 100
Ultracrepidarian
nice to see some landscape shots again here
IMG_2781 by earl dieta, on Flickr
DSCF0319 by earl dieta, on Flickr
DSCF0494 by earl dieta, on Flickr
Great shots Earl! That dino one especially is very cool
Ultracrepidarian
6x17 really is a lot of fun even if it is a pain in the ass.
Worth it. I shot 2.35:1 cinematic aspect for a while and shit looked gorgeous if it was set up right. Was actually thinking about picking up an anamorphic lens to shoot 2.35:1 again on a phone.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Originally posted by SEANBANERJEE
I have gone above and beyond what I should rightfully have to do to protect my good name
I've always liked the ultra wide aspect stuff. Most of the prints I make are cropped 2:1 or close to it, for some reason it just looks better on a lot of photos, particularly landscapes.
Yeah, cinematic/panoramic aspects just have a really neat look to them. 6x17 is a bear to set up but the resolution is killer (~300MP TIFFs with just a flatbed, drum scanning would be massive) and let's face it, I can't afford an Xpan.
What you're doing is much more impressive - I just use the crop tool in Photoshop Great pics by the way.This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
On the topic of ultra high resolution, I've been using Topaz Gigapixel to up-res my photos to ~300ppi even for 4foot prints and I find it works incredibly well. It's particularly nice for drone photos where you are only getting 20MP from a tiny 1" sensor. I guess you don't need it for those 300MP TIFFs, but if you have lower resolution scans you wish were higher resolution, I highly recommend that software.
Last edited by Mitsu3000gt; 07-24-2020 at 03:33 PM.
Thanks! Yeah modern up-resing software has come a loooong way over the years. I don't really need the resolution per se... I just feel if I'm going to deal with 6x17 I may as well suck as much out of it as I can, haha.
Short trip last weekend up to Ram Falls. I'll be back!
Ultracrepidarian
It's been almost 10 years from when I got my first "real" watch from @Justing . I've added a couple more over the years but I keep coming back to this as a favourite.
Ultracrepidarian
Snapped some photos of the place we are staying at.
If anyone is shooting DQHD, please post your stuff. I'm running a 32:9 monitor (5120x1440) and content is sparse.
Originally posted by InRich
tell her I'll pick her up in the vetteOriginally posted by InRich
The X5 i bought earlier this year really is FULLY LOADED though not a single option missing including infrared night driving
It's pretty high res so most photographers won't really want to post that kind of stuff without gross watermarks in fear of people stealing it for credit or to print without consent.
What kind of pictures do you like and I can email you a few options.
If looking for resolution dimensions:
https://design215.com/toolbox/megapixels.php
Ultracrepidarian
A few frames from the summer
Wanna Race? by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_1955 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_6135 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_6143 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_9138 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_6181 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_6602 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_0422 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr
DSC_8192 by Erik McRitchie, on Flickr