Post your pictures with any relevant comments. If others like it, click the like button.
Alan
Post your pictures with any relevant comments. If others like it, click the like button.
Alan
A picture of a dragonfly. Taken in Turunc, Turkey. No editing apart from a crop.and tad of sharpening.
Good idea!
Here I got to touch one of those famous 'hot pixels' everyone loves so much! It felt great, but a bit rough around the edges. 😉
You call me a pixel pusher? by simple.joy, on Flickr
I found you by Marc Aubry, sur Flickr
Fujifilm X-T5
XF56mmF1.2 R WR
A few from our holiday in Luxemburg
Did take too much gear with us, didn't use all but the one of the used lenses did actually malfunction while using it
It can happen with some of the Canon EF (L) lenses, the Error 01 message and in this case a broken wire is to blame, and you end up with a lens with a stuck aperture wide open. I did use it that day with the aperture stuck at f2.8 😒
(Canon EOS 5D Mark IV - EF24-70mm f/2.8L II USM)
The lens is now queued to be repared 😊
Edit removed one photo...
And now the other photo (removed from previous reply)
also from our holiday in Luxemburg
Did take too much gear with us, didn't use all but the one of the used lenses did actually malfunction while using it
It can happen with some of the Canon EF (L) lenses, the Error 01 message and in this case a broken wire is to blame, and you end up with a lens with a stuck aperture wide open. I did use it that day with the aperture stuck at f2.8 😒
(Canon EOS 5D Mark IV - EF24-70mm f/2.8L II USM)
Is it allowed to comment pictures or our likings here? Or are the alternatives to push the button or leave it untouched?
Push the button. No comments on other photos.
The Bard of Salford- John Cooper Clarke
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cooper_Clarke
Saw him over 40 years ago. If you ever get the chance to see him live, do so ...
This is the Votivkirche in Vienna, which has recently been cleaned. The church was completed in 1879, in thanksgiving for the Austrian emperor's survival of an assassination attempt. It is 99 m (325 ft) high. There is a lot of interesting info on Wikipedia.
The tree on the right prevented me from taking a square on shot. The lens was the Laowa 15mm shift lens, shifted up by the fullest extent. Aperture was f/8, fwiw!
David