Thanks for this Weeman,
Mmm my interests, craggy wild coasts where it’s possible to get low angle shots at high tide, cliffs, sea stacks,
Rivers, waterfalls, weirs , rural buildings, villages, mountains, hedges :) people.
A mix of everything and anything.
It will be photo trip.
If I meet new people along the way, all the better.
Will be just myself, my car, tent and gear.
Derek
PS, I was wondering today where do photographers go now for serious CC of their images?
I think it’s the enforced policy of today’s belief that says you can’t or shouldn’t criticise/critique another person/work for
fear of being un-pc. It’s the everyone is right and everyone belongs syndrome or my opinion doesn’t or shouldn’t matter!
In other words, the slow death of democracy and freedom of speech is happening.
As for serious critique I think the majority of images today are very average so people tend to look and move on.
Photographers are a vain group of people and don’t accept criticism too well, and that includes me also!
I know we all want to move on and improve our photography but I would like to think that when we look at our
own images we should know where we went wrong in the taking of it and learn to correct it next time around.
Thanks for that Miki G. It’s a belter, and even more so as you were just trying it out in less than ideal conditions. Mmm I might have to look into this stuff a bit more. Look forward to seeing more of these from you.
Did it require much pp ?
Cracking shot, is it a single image or multiples stacked. Could you post what you used equipment, settings, tracker if used.
Would love to give this type of thing a go, I have been reading up on it but would love to here how and what you use.
Derek
I know nothing about canon adapters, but you will need to know what mount the lens actually is, so you can get the correct adapter. (Nikon, pentax, m42) or whatever it is. Does your lens have an A setting on the aperture ring, so you can control the aperture from the camera, if not you will have to use the ring to change your aperture.
Derek.