• Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:09 a.m.

    Thanks,
    A little more momentum would be good. As mentioned twice already above. Alan is waiting to get a set from you too :-)

    To everyone else here too, please also consider adding your own Portfolio side.

    There have been so many excellent contributions from so many here in Wormsmeat's forum.
    The portfolio page is nice way to highlight your work.

    All you need to do is to send Alan an e-mail with your 12 selected photos + some intro text, and perhaps some photo captions if you want.
    to alan.dprevived@outlook.com
    Alan will do the all the rest to create your own page.

    (btw, putting your photos in something like a dropbox and just sending Alan the link , would allow you to send bigger photos)

    Would be nice to see the site grow some more :-)

  • Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:18 a.m.

    Thanks Florida!
    Software is a bit unrefined . Work in progress?
    Yes, if you have any specific tips for that, it would be great to hear from you,
    I'm working with Alan at the moment to suggest some improvements and test the results of his work.

    Seems to be progressing quite well, and quite fast.
    The next thing, coming soon, will be to add a possibility for users to make comments or add likes directly on the portfolio page,
    so the portfolio owner can get some feedback

  • Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:21 a.m.

    Nicely framed scene. It does look a bit blue but not too bad

  • Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:28 a.m.

    These are good. I like the perspective of the first taken from low down with the yellow lines taking you into the distance, all the way to OZ perhaps?

    The second is a great Autumn lake view on a bright and colourful day. The reflections are good. Putting the lake's bank in the middle of the frame is a good choice for such a reflection shot and that little yellow pier makes for a nice point of interest between the forest and the lake

  • Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:44 a.m.

    Thanks for showing us this shot!!
    It looks like you have found a way to solve a problem that has puzzled me for years :-)

    ... If you see some bright dew drops hanging on say thin branches and glistening in the sun it looks quite impresive to the naked eye, because those specular reflections on the drops are so much brighter.
    But when you focus on them, the twigs and drops are both in sharp focus but the little drops become almost insignificantly small in the photo and they almost disappear when the brightness of the shadows is turned up in the pp
    So I've tried defocusing such a scene, so that the little drops become bigger bokeh balls . Now they look impressive and colourful, but the branches are completely out of focus and the shot doesn't work for me

    If I'm interpreting your shot correctly, it looks like your solution here is to take both of those shots mentioned above and add them together with a double exposure editing technique. Now you have the best of both of them .
    I must try that sometime.

  • Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:46 a.m.

    superb collection!

  • Members 796 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 9:48 a.m.

    I'm seeing a Chinese Dragon in there somewhere :-)

  • Members 568 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 10:13 a.m.

    That's more or less right, but done in camera 😁
    The difficulty comes in aligning the two shots adequately in camera. And underexpose each shot so as not to blow the highlights when added together. Of course you could take two shots seperately and align in post... Or use a tripod!

  • Members 806 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 11:14 a.m.

    Q1040321.jpg

    Q1040321.jpg

    JPG, 1.6 MB, uploaded by Daneland on Dec. 3, 2023.

  • Members 861 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 12:31 p.m.

    "Lala and the Laundry"

    lalaandthelaundry.jpg

    a question for anyone who knows....see those kinda circular ring shapes showing up toward the bottom - what is that, and why does it only happen when I use profile correction in ACR? That's what is causing it. Not enough light?

    lalaandthelaundry.jpg

    JPG, 2.3 MB, uploaded by OpenCube on Dec. 3, 2023.

  • Members 789 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 1:19 p.m.

    Always like these shots. The focal points of the F&M bag and the guy in glasses vie for your attention.

  • Members 789 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 1:21 p.m.

    Not sure what you mean. Are you talking about the digital noise?

  • Members 861 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 1:30 p.m.

    Here. It is noise, but it appears in a ring like pattern. It only shows up, after applying the profile correction. Without that correction, that ring like pattern is not visible.
    image.png

    image.png

    PNG, 65.4 KB, uploaded by OpenCube on Dec. 3, 2023.

  • Members 269 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 2:17 p.m.

    Terrible Weather = Grand Day Out

    On Saturday I'd planned to once more head over to the Dunnerdale fells, which lie on the outskirts of The Lake District, here in northern England, with the intention of visiting the fells surrounding Caw. The forecast for the day was clear skies, no wind and very cold.

    As we drove along the narrow and windy roads that lead to Dunnerdale, I noticed a few flakes of snow falling and commented with some surprise that I wasn't expecting to see any of that, but felt quite excited that there might be a bit of snow on the ground when we reached our destination.

    About five minutes later, we were driving in heavy snow and after witnessing a number of cars losing control and pulling over, we decided to turn back.

    Having driven most of the way to The Lake District from Lancashire, I wasn't keen to write the day off entirely but also didn't want to end up stuck in snow somewhere (my X3 is all wheel drive, but it's not a proper off road vehicle). After considering options, I figured I knew the ideal destination, we could head over to Ings, which is on the A591, a major road leading into The Lake District and park up with some confidence we'd still be able to get back home again later. From there we would hike up to Sour Howes and Sallows, two mid level summits that lie roughly half way between Troutbeck and Kentmere.

    I've visited these summits a few times in the past (I even made a video describing the walk on a summers day a few years ago, where it looked very different to the landscape we saw on this trip - the video can be found here on Youtube for anyone interested in taking a look), so even though the snow had started to fall when we arrived at Ings, I knew the route pretty well and was comfortable we'd be safe enough venturing out and seeing how far we could get.

    As we made our way along the route, the snow continued to fall and by the time we'd reached Whiteside End, which is where the steeper part of the climb up to Sallows begins, we concluded we'd gone as far as we could safely manage (about 3 miles and 500ft of ascent, there would have been about another mile, but a further 800ft of ascent if we'd continued and we were both getting a bit weary after trudging through the snow) so instead we looped back via a different route that initially veered East towards Staveley for a bit, before curving back towards Ings.

    Upon our return to Ings, we found the A591 towards Windermere and Ambleside completely blocked with a queue of traffic stretching off out of view in both directions that was not moving at all. Fortunately, we needed to head in the opposite direction towards the motorway, which was practically empty and my car happily pulled itself out of the 8 inches or so of snow that had fallen around it, so we were a lot more fortunate than the poor souls stuck in that queue, although it was still a slow and treacherous drive back to the motorway.

    Nigel will be pleased to hear that all images were taken hand held with the Nikon Z7 + 24-200, not my favourite lens, but under the conditions it performed admirably, plus I wanted to be as light as possible and given the conditions I wouldn't be swapping lenses. On that note, the camera spent most of its time caked in snow as I had it out on a sling strap for the entire 5+ hours of the walk, which it seemed quite happy to cope with as long as I dusted it off every so often.

    Unfortunately the camera found itself on the receiving end of worse accidental abuse as, shortly after taking picture #6, I slipped crossing the brook and fell in, momentarily dunking the camera and lens in the water, drenching myself in the process, although as you might expect, my main concern was getting the camera out and dried off as quickly as possible.

    Fortunately, there was a derelict building right beside the stream (the insides of which could form the subject of an entire photographic project on its own), so we took shelter in there while I dried the outside of camera off with a microfibre towel I'd packed for this exact purpose. There were no obvious signs of water ingress, being dry inside the mount, battery compartment and card cover, plus there was nothing sloshing around inside the lens, so I think I got lucky, although time will tell, no doubt. I continued to use the camera without issue for the next couple of hours of the walk.

    Despite wet gloves and trousers I was fine too (I had spares of the former, but had to put up with the latter), but as photographers, we all know what really matters in these instances.

    All images processed from individual raw files in Capture One Pro 23. The dynamic range on most of these was razor thin, so the main processing added to practically all of the images is simply tweaks to the black point and white point on the histogram so there's at least some contrast in the images. They've all been left in full colour too, even though a few might pass as toned black and white.

    I don't really have titles for most of these, if I tried I'd probably end up with things like "Tree", "A Group of Trees", "A Tremendous Amount of Trees", there's a bit of a theme going on, so I wont bother.

    1.

    DSC_8887.jpg

    2.

    DSC_8895.jpg

    3.

    DSC_8903.jpg

    4.

    DSC_8904.jpg

    5.

    Since discovering the 65:24 crop with the GFX, I've become quite fond of it. It does put a bit of a dent in the resolution on Z7 images, but for subjects like this it really seems to work and the full res image is still 26MP.

    DSC_8908.jpg

    6.

    This is a shot within a shot that I didn't see while out in the field, which is a shame as I'd have liked a higher res image of this, which is only about 17MP. Admittedly, that's still more than my first four ILC's could manage (Canon D60 - 6MP, Nikon D200 - 10MP, D300 - 12MP, GH4 - 16MP), but I think I may have become a bit of a detail junkie these days having been spoiled with the GFX over the past few months, even the Z7 feels like a bit of a compromise, even though it's really not at all.

    DSC_8913.jpg

    7.

    DSC_8956.jpg

    8.

    This is the brook I fell into. The building we sheltered in while I dried my camera off was immediately to my right when I took this. You can see it on the right hand edge of the previous shot.

    DSC_8967.jpg

    9.

    The ever adorable Herdy, absolutely loving that straw they're eating.

    DSC_8985.jpg

    10.

    DSC_9028.jpg

    11.

    DSC_9032.jpg

    12.

    DSC_9034.jpg

    13.

    DSC_9036.jpg

    14.

    DSC_9053.jpg

    15.

    DSC_9062.jpg

    16.

    DSC_9063.jpg

    DSC_9053.jpg

    JPG, 727.0 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_9036.jpg

    JPG, 1.1 MB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_9062.jpg

    JPG, 595.1 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_9063.jpg

    JPG, 387.1 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8913.jpg

    JPG, 1.6 MB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_9034.jpg

    JPG, 758.5 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_9032.jpg

    JPG, 759.5 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8967.jpg

    JPG, 1.0 MB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_9028.jpg

    JPG, 1022.9 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8895.jpg

    JPG, 1.2 MB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8985.jpg

    JPG, 521.3 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8956.jpg

    JPG, 638.6 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8904.jpg

    JPG, 796.3 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8903.jpg

    JPG, 976.0 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8887.jpg

    JPG, 730.0 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

    DSC_8908.jpg

    JPG, 500.3 KB, uploaded by SteveMonks on Dec. 3, 2023.

  • Members 313 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 2:50 p.m.

    I hope that this boulder does not tip over...
    Some blue cast with blue sky and being in shadow is probably expected..

  • Members 313 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 2:58 p.m.

    Those figures are always fascinating to look at. Too bad that Hercules lost his arm in fight with lion...

  • Members 313 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 3:01 p.m.

    Great portfolio, lovely shots showing nice vistas of Alps.

  • Members 313 posts
    Dec. 3, 2023, 3:05 p.m.

    +1 for #2
    The bird is small so in second shot clouds in bottom make it more interesting IMO.