Had to switch to my Sony DSC-QX10 for today as I needed to be portable. Here are a few snaps from my lunchtime walk out (I do love this little camera).
Had to switch to my Sony DSC-QX10 for today as I needed to be portable. Here are a few snaps from my lunchtime walk out (I do love this little camera).
Pictures from my Leica and Fujifilm cameras
Film Photography for the 21st Century
...they still make film!
Medium format and 35mm film photography from an amateur snapper.
A camera lover with the heart of a Womble
reviews, thoughts & experiences with 35mm compact cameras, rangefinders & lenses
My Further Wanderings in Analog Photography
the old fashioned way
Recent pictures and ramblings about photography
Pictures and thoughts from my adventures, as I try to improve at this hobby of mine, photography.
The Ramblings of an Obstinately Old-fashioned Photographer
Minimalism - Textures - Abstraction
A Journal in Pictures and Words
Portrait | Editorial | Interior
Hi I'm Martin Smith, a amateur photographer that likes to shoot solely film. I use black & white with the odd colour image thrown in and mainly use a Leica M4-2 with Summicron 35mm and 50mm lenses. I tend to shoot anything I like, objects, scenes, landscape or street life.
photography
Photo-of-the-day ⎟Study Images + Portfolio Images
Images and photography blog of Peter Sanderson
franklehnenphotography.com
One roll of film for 52 weeks
reframing the world one picture at a time
Thinking With A Camera
blog
my surroundings
la fotografia è un fatto personale
whispers of life, scribbles of poetry,spasms of creative non-fiction...
March 17, 2016 at 2:14 pm
I love these! They are clearly in the sun, but not directly so you don’t get the rays clashes with any of the objects (unlike mine-lol).
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March 17, 2016 at 2:51 pm
Yes I strategically put the camera in a point of shade (when possible)
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March 17, 2016 at 3:16 pm
The lead shot is so clear, its lines so crisp, it seems almost to ring out or resonate. Interesting method, hiding the camera in shade to reduce the glare. I’ve been using color filters to try and sharpen and dramatize the glare I’ve captured, rather than try to reduce or eliminate the glare while shooting. I may try your method.
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March 17, 2016 at 3:24 pm
Thanks.
I employed a couple of techniques here, sometimes they are appropriate sometimes not. The shade is the first one, you have to be aware that your shots may be silhouettes particularly when shooting directly at the shading object. The second is from my video camera days by putting a light behind the subject you enhance the edges with a nice halo, works very well with portraits – not that i ever do portrait photography
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March 17, 2016 at 4:21 pm
Brilliant shots SilverFox 🙂
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March 17, 2016 at 4:25 pm
Fox, not fix… I hate trying to comment on my phone when it autocorrects!
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March 17, 2016 at 4:22 pm
Thanks
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March 17, 2016 at 4:27 pm
I silver-fix-ed it, no one will ever know
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