• Members 1247 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 5:07 a.m.

    Plenty to chat about before we get to the image. I enjoyed another your little anecdotes about one of the rarely mentioned perils of long exposures that you shared with your original posting of this set. Some four years or so ago I posted a shot here that also featured the handrails on a ladder going over the edge of a jetty. A very different photo to yours but we used similar handrails in a similar way. I was dumb enough to think I could go down those steps and get a shot of the piles beneath the jetty with the water breaking into them. This was not a good idea as I discovered someway down the ladder. Your "feeling tottery" brought it all back.

    This is wonderful. Along with others in your series, it should be made into a print.
    In no particular order. The complementary colours with the delicate touches of the warmer tones against the darker.
    The lines of yellow/gold that intersect on the rails and then a similar intersecting line along the edge of the stone.
    The highlights on the steps paralleling the edge of the stone.
    The subtlety of an intersection we don't see but we know it is there - on the continuation of the horizon line and the stone edge.
    There's a wonderful tension between the total tranquility of the scene and the ladder rails. They speak of action and danger that has been and is to come. But not now.
    When I looked at this as big as I could get it, I was puzzled by many white specks that go right across the image in the lower half. I can't see them against the dark sky at the top? I don't think it was on the lens? Possibly on the sensor? If you are going to (and I think you should) make this into a large print, you might want to check this out.

  • Members 861 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 5:25 a.m.

    I would like to add, the perceptions of this image are a complete 180° of the words used to make that face with the Adobe fairy blood extractor prompt.

  • Members 1247 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 5:31 a.m.

    Here's where I go all croppy again. I like lichen too. Have a look at these cropped in much closer so the lichen colours/textures plant are detailed. In both shots that qualities of the rock textures and planes still comes through when you are up close.
    Number 2. Again, if it was me, I'd be looking to crop to get closer to the lichen detail and colour. The fan like forms centre right are eyecatching as well. What I have tried needs polishing but something along the lines...
    rockface 3.jpg

    rockface 3.jpg

    JPG, 319.6 KB, uploaded by MikeFewster on Aug. 17, 2023.

  • Members 1247 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 6:15 a.m.

    There's considerable irony here. Generally, it's me suggesting crops to other people's photos. I do this so often it becomes embarrassing and I'm already at it in this week's thread.
    You are both right. It should have been cropped exactly as suggested by Rich and then completed by Simplejoy.

  • Members 842 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 7:42 a.m.

    Thanks for the feedback Mike.
    The shot has a lot of contrast with the b&w nature of the light. In addition it also has the contrast of the solid stationary form of the icicles with the flowing frothy water running below. I 'm also for cropping to highlight the important parts but IMO this image would lose out if cropped from below.

    There are two opposing principles at work here. One being to crop out unnecessary background. The other being to give the subject "room to breathe". The photographer must make a compromise to satisfy both in a reasonable way. I think it works here. Maybe a little crop could be made but I wouldn't want to lose much of that nice b&w sea.

  • Members 842 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 7:53 a.m.

    Good capture!
    At first, looking only at a small screen on my phone while on holiday, I didn't really notice that it was a big ship between the buildings. With a second look, especially after seeing the crop, that was posted later, it became obvious even on my small screen, and the image grew on me.
    It reminds me of a shot I made a few years back in Budapest during an air show where I got lucky and caught a WW2 bomber between two rows of buildings like this. Maybe I can find it and post here when I get home

  • Members 842 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 7:56 a.m.

    That's a scary birdhouse !

  • Members 842 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 8 a.m.

    Good shot. Seems the worshippers here don't mind photographers. In churches you would shooed away if a mass was taking place.

  • Members 842 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 8:01 a.m.

    Cool shot. The processing works well

  • Members 842 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 8:05 a.m.

    Nice memories and a great photo to keep them alive.
    Lush green and the mist, separating all the layers of the receding hills. A good combination.

  • Members 509 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 8:08 a.m.

    White specks: good spot, I hadn't noticed those. They don't show up in an A4 print, they are quite small. I can see them in a couple of other images as well. I suspect they are very fine grained noise exaggerated by the processing. I can share another anecdote as well. I use a small collection of ND filters - usually I two or three in use. On this trip I couldn't find one of my most used filters in my bag so I had to wing it a bit, really stopping down much further than I would like. I also miscalculated the required exposure and the resulting files were extremely dark. I think that led to some noise I'm not accustomed to with this camera that my processing has exaggerated in a selective way so that only some of the noise became visible. Maybe. Can't think what else it might be. Attached is an unedited version of the file: you can see just how much processing was required!

    GFX14206.jpg

    Update: The cause of the white specks is hot pixels. They're not really white, at 400% you can see they are coloured speckles. I've largely (but not completely) dealt with them in post using "Astrophoto denoise" and "Hot pixels" fixes, applied through masks to restrict operation to the bottom of the frame. In the field, Long exposure noise reduction is good at suppressing these, but doubles the exposure time, which I don't like. The GFX50s can normally cope without LENR but I guess the underexposure here was asking too much. Thanks for pointing those spots out. When I have tried long exposures with my m4/3 cameras or my Fuji XT100, I get an absolute blizzard of "snow" from hot pixels from almost every long exposure. LENR is mandatory with those cameras to suppress the hot pixels. Interestingly, my older 16MP APS-C cameras didn't suffer from the white speckle blizzard even without LENR. I wonder if someone can explain this...(in a separate thread possibly).

    GFX14206.jpg

    JPG, 1.3 MB, uploaded by DavidMillier on Aug. 17, 2023.

  • Members 1662 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 8:23 a.m.

    I like all of your shots - the last one is the most interesting to me though! Love the interesting silhouettes and the use of color. I feel like the colors on the water look like a lens defect to me, which is why I would get rid of them and go full B&W there, apart from the reflections. I'd also crop it slightly and adjust the color of the sky. To me it would feel more balanced that way, but I suppose it's always very personal when it comes to colors...

    DSC_8609_Fireplace33.jpg

    An outstanding shot either way - really well seen and captured!

    DSC_8609_Fireplace33.jpg

    JPG, 861.1 KB, uploaded by simplejoy on Aug. 17, 2023.

  • Members 523 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 2:37 p.m.

    I very much enjoyed the backstory about this spectacular image. One of photography's gifts is its time machine ability to take us back to a specific moment, and to recall all the details. A gift from the photographer is when he/she can express all those memories to us in an engaging, fun or poignant way.

  • Members 523 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 2:59 p.m.

    Thank you, Lou. No, I wasn't familiar with Nan Madol. What an incredible story; thank you!

    Your edit is beautiful and offers much more impact than mine. I'm smiling because for the past couple of years I have not been the least bit shy in pushing the vibrance and saturation of colors. I love that look! For these two photos, I purposely went a bit more to reality. Of course, now you've easily convinced me to return to my happy place 🙂

    Thanks so much for your time and interest, Rich. I think what is difficult for me with b&w of this photo (and some of the others I tried) is that it feels so "busy" with all the tiny specks of lichen in so many places - especially with the rocks being their own kind of photo op with forms and shadows. However, I did try one more b&w edit this morning (Thursday) with the other photo. See further below.

    Thank you so much, Chris! The first couple of times I photographed years ago, I tried to get a wide view - basically, the whole cliff. I was very disappointed with my results. A couple of years ago it hit me I should be looking for smaller stories, so I was more prepared in June when I found the swallows nesting, and even more so this week. The cliff is north-facing, so living at latitude 46 degrees, it doesn't get winter sunshine on its face. I'm going to have to brave slippery roads, I think, because now I want to photograph these rocks when icy or snow-covered!

    Thank you Minnie! I just wrote to Chris that I want icy or snow-covered this winter - maybe I can hire a driver 😁

    Thank you very much, Mike. I happened to have a closer shot of #2 and I happened to have already done three edits, lol. This morning I decided to go a couple more times, including attempting a b&w (thanks to Rich!). I cropped it somewhat, to be similar to yours. I've learned so much from you folks about these photos already, and I learned more this morning about how the colors are displayed when converted. For example, I don't recommend going heavy on color saturation prior to conversion because some of those yellows are extreme 🙂 I also learned that I don't want super clarity or sharpness because that just brings out the "little bumps" of lichen that I don't care for. I might have to try more abstract, but here is this morning's effort.

    P8141412 new wb 8-17 bw my preset.jpg

    P8141412 new wb 8-17 bw my preset.jpg

    JPG, 2.9 MB, uploaded by LindaS on Aug. 17, 2023.

  • Members 567 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 3:04 p.m.

    The title was in reference to the 800th edition Linda. I have posted a number of car images in the past for 100 numbered editions. There is an 800 in the image on the car. As to the puffins, yes I had it in my image collection from a trip we took about this time last year to Newfoundland in the gift shop of 'The Rooms', a small museum of sorts and an attractive new building. An image below of The Rooms and another taken inside The Rooms, not in the gift shop.
    Andrew

    I wanted desperately to capture puffins as Roel did in his image but we were not allowed to get near enough to them to get much in the way of a worthwhile shot. All mine were taken from a tour boat that was rockin' and rollin' in choppy waters. Try that with a 400 mm lens on a m4/3 body!

    Z8210133 -1XX2.jpg

    and the rooms, a panorama of the building

    Untitled.jpg

    Below is the best puffin image I managed from the rocking boat that was required to stay a minimum distance, which I don't recall, from the small island, a protected bird refuge.

    P8201726 -1XXX.jpg

    P8201726 -1XXX.jpg

    JPG, 17.9 MB, uploaded by 19andrew47 on Aug. 17, 2023.

    Untitled.jpg

    JPG, 3.2 MB, uploaded by 19andrew47 on Aug. 17, 2023.

    Z8210133 -1XX2.jpg

    JPG, 31.1 MB, uploaded by 19andrew47 on Aug. 17, 2023.

  • Members 523 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 3:18 p.m.

    Many thanks. I have an M4/3 also. I'm so wobbly now, that 300 mm on solid ground is a problem 😀

  • Members 567 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 3:20 p.m.

    That is a museum display! I edited the post as you were replying and posted the best image I managed, which was not very good.

  • Members 523 posts
    Aug. 17, 2023, 3:21 p.m.

    Thanks, just realized and edited my previous comment. Hard when we're communicating in real time, isn't it!