Rocky Outcrop & Tree
by davidstorm
Shaun Wilson will recognise this tree. It was the subject of many images whilst we were in the Lakes a while back.
K-5, DA 16-45, Tripod, Hitech ND Grad.
K-5, DA 16-45, Tripod, Hitech ND Grad.
Uploaded13/10/2012 - 10:24
CategoryLandscape / Travel
Posted 13/10/2012 - 13:54
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SMarsden wrote:
Lovely..
tell me, what tripod do you use?
Hi Stew, I use a Redsnapper 283 Aluminium Tripod, it's very well made, sturdy and solid, although not the lightest but this doesn't bother me. The legs extend almost to horizontal, so it will go low, and the centre column is reversible. Great value at around £75 including the head.Lovely..
tell me, what tripod do you use?
Regards
David
Posted 13/10/2012 - 15:52
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Really nice shot David, I love the delicate muted sunlight on the foreground objects - guess there wasn't much light there at all? Sky tones are perfect too.
Maybe you could try another approach and re-shoot again on a Manfrotto? (sorry, hard to resist)
Maybe you could try another approach and re-shoot again on a Manfrotto? (sorry, hard to resist)
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Pentax K7 with BG-4 Grip / Samyang 14mm f2.8 ED AS IF UMC / DA18-55mm f3.5-5.6 AL WR / SMC A28mm f2.8 / D FA 28-105mm / SMC F35-70 f3.5-4.5 / SMC A50mm f1.7 / Tamron AF70-300mm f4-5.6 Di LD macro / SMC M75-150mm f4.0 / Tamron Adaptall (CT-135) 135mm f2.8 / Asahi Takumar-A 2X tele-converter / Pentax AF-540FGZ (I & II) Flashes / Cactus RF60/X Flashes & V6/V6II Transceiver
Posted 13/10/2012 - 16:05
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McGregNi wrote:
Really nice shot David, I love the delicate muted sunlight on the foreground objects - guess there wasn't much light there at all? Sky tones are perfect too.
Maybe you could try another approach and re-shoot again on a Manfrotto? (sorry, hard to resist)
Thanks Nigel, you are right about the light, it was nearing sunset, so it was getting gloomy. Regarding the tripod, no need for a Manfrotto, Redsnapper is better and cheaper Apologies to any Manfrotto owners, I'm only joking of course.Really nice shot David, I love the delicate muted sunlight on the foreground objects - guess there wasn't much light there at all? Sky tones are perfect too.
Maybe you could try another approach and re-shoot again on a Manfrotto? (sorry, hard to resist)
Cheers
David
Posted 13/10/2012 - 16:57
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Beautiful light, detail and clarity. - mary.
Posted 13/10/2012 - 19:45
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focus wrote:
Beautiful light, detail and clarity. - mary.
+1
Beautiful light, detail and clarity. - mary.
Timbo (Tars)
What are fractions, and rules are made for breaking.
What are fractions, and rules are made for breaking.
Posted 14/10/2012 - 12:30
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Thanks
davidstorm wrote:
Regards
David
SMarsden wrote:
Lovely..
tell me, what tripod do you use?
Hi Stew, I use a Redsnapper 283 Aluminium Tripod, it's very well made, sturdy and solid, although not the lightest but this doesn't bother me. The legs extend almost to horizontal, so it will go low, and the centre column is reversible. Great value at around £75 including the head.Lovely..
tell me, what tripod do you use?
Regards
David
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Posted 16/10/2012 - 13:58
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Nice colours and tones. But I think that it looked even better in tighter crop.
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33 posts
15 years
tell me, what tripod do you use?
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"Intellectual brilliance is no guarantee against being dead wrong" Carl Sagan