It was a circular glass floor which Photoshop's reflection removal tool cleaned up nicely. Even though it was glass I had to crawl on my hands and knees to its edge.
It was a circular glass floor which Photoshop's reflection removal tool cleaned up nicely. Even though it was glass I had to crawl on my hands and knees to its edge.
Now, which one will fit?
Aberfoyle Antique Market outside Toronto.
This is lovely when seen big, and we are able to explore all the little detail.
@NCV has written: @Wormsmeat has written:I feel quite dizzy looking at this shot.
How did you get this one?
It was a circular glass floor which Photoshop's reflection removal tool cleaned up nicely. Even though it was glass I had to crawl on my hands and knees to its edge.
A really interesting view! On first glance I thought "How did Wormsmeat manage that with coping with vertigo...?" Well done!
Alto Adige Romanesque
What an amazing place! Someone had a very active imagination!
Now, which one will fit?
Aberfoyle Antique Market outside Toronto.
Now that would make a great jigsaw!!!
Down memory lane
Sectional cabinet in living room. Such cabinet was in almost every apartment
What a fascinaring series. If that cabinet were restored it would probably be quite valuable now!
Return To The Bluebell Woods
Above The Parapet
These almost work 😁In the second I would have tried to get rid of the one foreground flower that's OOF and obstructing the main subject group - perhaps just weight it down with something if you don't want to pick it. (I get rather blaze about bluebells after having them come up as weeds in my vegetable garden)
Into The Upper Woods
Beyond this area, the pine woods loomed, dark and forboding. I didn't think I'd find much of interest up there on this evening, so I decided to head back the way I'd come and then branch off back up the slope, but slightly further North where another ruin can be found. But first, another shot from a little further up the path.
Into The Sun
This was the view as I headed back down the path I'd just come up. I quite liked the long shadows that were now being cast across the meadows of bluebells.
These are lovely. Well done. Bluebells are surprisingly trickt to capture well in my experience.
Early Purple Orchids
These have been popping up all over Sizergh Fell, just a few minutes walk from home. I took focus bracketed shots and stacked in Ps, but getting the closest focus point was tricky for the closer shots in fading light.
There's some variation in colour;
Orchids are always impressive. I like the way you have put the plants into a landscape context.
Apart from judging the closest focus point, I found that getting a wind free moment was almost impossible, even a 5 frames a second, I got of unusable stacks.
Yours are nice and sharp. Has the Olympus got a higher frame rate for stacking?
@NCV has written: @Wormsmeat has written:I feel quite dizzy looking at this shot.
How did you get this one?
It was a circular glass floor which Photoshop's reflection removal tool cleaned up nicely. Even though it was glass I had to crawl on my hands and knees to its edge.
We all have an irrational fear of class floors. I have done strength calculations for glass floors like this, and they are super safe to walk on, with a failsafe layer. But I think I would be afraid to walk on this one too.
Typical cellar box, there was one for each apartment, as pantry and place to store different stuff. Such boxes are in cellars of most buildings from soviet era.
Interesting photos!
These cellar rooms are also to be found in old apartment houses, such as where I live, built before 1900.
Ouch. I'm not good at heights, such view is not for me.
Our TV tower has similar floor windows at height 190 meters, when I visited it I avoided them though I know that they are safe.
3 views along the path
here's the first 3 shots I've processed from a walk last weekend, I haven't been hiking much in the last weeks, so it's good to get started again :-)
Nice scenes, seems like spring is on fullest there. On second image I'd probably centered this road, right now it seems to be off.
Alto Adige Romanesque
We were up in the Austrian part of Italy to conclude a financial matter, but at the same time, I managed to see a little of a couple of places on my Romanesque hit list. I was with my wife, so the photography was a bit rushed. Photography, is something best done alone unfortunately.
We stopped off in Termeno, in the heart of the wine growing area in Alto Adige. I wanted to see the "Chiesa Madre di San Giacomo di Castellaz", with its strange late Romanesque frescoes. Entering this tiny little church is a big surprise, when you see the richness of the frescoes. I was a bit pushed for time and the light inside was difficult. It is just a couple of hours up the Autostrada, so I think I will return here and also visit couple of other similar locations, with more time to explore the place photographically. We stocked up with wine from the numerous "Cantine", down in the village.
Interesting frescoes, not the usual biblical representation of saints, I guess.
Being only or one of few photographers in group is difficult, photographer will be in hurry always and others waiting. I try to avoid group travels for this reason, as usually in such case schedule is tight and not accounted for photography. Only groups I enjoy is traveling with photo groups where there is plenty of time allocated for getting shots done. Or travel alone.
@Woodsider79 has written:Early Purple Orchids
Orchids are always impressive. I like the way you have put the plants into a landscape context.
Apart from judging the closest focus point, I found that getting a wind free moment was almost impossible, even a 5 frames a second, I got of unusable stacks.
Yours are nice and sharp. Has the Olympus got a higher frame rate for stacking?
No higher frame rate, though it does use the electronic shutter. I think I was just lucky with a still evening.
@Vahur has written:Down memory lane
I visited open air museum, which contains mostly old farm houses from all corners of country. But to my interest was building which was brought there recently and represented typical kolkhoz apartment building from 1960 for dairy barn workers. Such apartments were quite common in country villages during soviet era.
View of building. You can see places where it was cut into pieces and later connected again.
Loved this series Vahur. You and the Olympus captured the lighting well. Some absolutely fascinating details in these.
I was reminded of a post-Chernobyl setting.
Well, all these are straight out from camera and some may benefit from post processing, e.g. this first image may benefit from better contrast. But in some shots I used this handy computational button on camera to turn HDR on and get more dynamic range in JPG-s.
I agree about post-Chernobyl, as it was quite surreal to walk in these apartments: I felt like I was traveled back in time 30-60 years, intruded into someones home and expected owners to step in any minute and start shouting at me. Real time capsule, which I haven't experienced in other museums.
Return To The Bluebell Woods
I had a nice little set of images that I was quite happy with, all ready to go from a walk in the woods earlier this week, but then I made the mistake of going out again last night and ended up with these images instead.
All images taken with the GFX100S on a tripod, equipped with either the 20-35 f/4 or 45-100 f/4 plus a CPL. Processed from individual raw file in Capture One Pro 23.
Great pictures, again. Thanks for taking me along, I felt like I participated there reading the description and looking images. Seems like in this case your quest for bluebells was sucessful.
Return To The Bluebell Woods
I had a nice little set of images that I was quite happy with, all ready to go from a walk in the woods earlier this week, but then I made the mistake of going out again last night and ended up with these images instead.
All images taken with the GFX100S on a tripod, equipped with either the 20-35 f/4 or 45-100 f/4 plus a CPL. Processed from individual raw file in Capture One Pro 23.
Caught In The Spotlight
The shots from earlier in the week were more of the usual woodland images that just happened to have some bluebells in them. This time around I wanted to get in closer and focus on these elusive little flowers themselves, which is out of my comfort zone in more ways than one, particularly in the knees department. I shot quite a lot of these intimate portraits, but to be honest I'm not happy with many of them, this is one of the rare ones I like.
Above The Parapet
Looking for close up compositions is quite a different challenge to my usual woodland observation techniques. In the case of bluebells, I just tended to look for groups with open space in the background, picked out by light breaking through the woodland canopy. I did take some shots of flowers around the base of trees, but I'm not really satisfied with most of them. This one kind of works, but it's nothing special. After as much knee grumbling as I could take, I gave up and returned to my default behaviour of looking for woodland images that happen to have bluebells in them.
Indiana Jones and the Bluebells of Doom
This meadow of bluebells looked pretty nice, but I couldn't find a particularly nice way to frame it, so I thought, "I know, I'll try sticking a person the shot" and, being the only person around, I got the job. I'd like to say I was getting a nice rest leaning against that tree after all of that kneeling on the woodland floor nonsense I'd been doing earlier, but unfortunately, with a maximum 10 second timer and a strip of semi quagmire to cross to get in position, there wasn't a lot of rest to be had taking this.
This was the 4th attempt at nailing this. The first attempt had me stood in hero pose over to the right, with one foot on the wall, which didn't look right somehow. Take 2 had me square in the middle of the frame, completely hiding the bluebells I was supposedly photographing. Take 3 was similar to this, but I'd chosen my reference focus point poorly and was a bit fuzzy as a result, but on this 4th attempt I was more or less happy, either that or just fed up with trying. Taking decent pictures of yourself is hard, but, as my experience over the years has taught me, if you can, it's generally much better to do it yourself than handing your camera to someone else (I've got an extensive back catalog of pictures taken of me at the top of mountains by friends and strangers using my camera that are very, very suboptimal).
At this point, I think I'd been wandering around the lower woods for about two hours and was getting ready to head back to the car, but here, I'm stood on what was once one of the main cart tracks through the area, it's flooded with mud nowadays that washes down the slopes into here and collects due to the stone walls lining the track, but fortunately that was only a bit squishy due to the lack of rain we've had over the past couple of weeks. From this spot, it's only a short walk up the track to reach the upper woods, an area which I tend not to frequent these days, I can't think why, but I wonder if it being at the top of the hill and being quite unfit have anything to do with that? Anyway, I decided to head up the path and take a look around the upper woods, to see if anything interesting could be found.
A Narrow Old Track
On the way up the main track, there's a little branch that heads back downhill. I assume this was a cart track, but it's quite narrow and on the historic maps (1830ish) it doesn't seem to lead anywhere, mind you, back then, this was all fields, so perhaps it was just an access track to reach the lower fields at the bottom of the hill?
Into The Upper Woods
As I've mentioned before, Brinscall Woods is kind of split into two halves by a well maintained path that runs between them. The upper woods as I've called it, is to the East of this path, lying between the path and the open moor. On modern maps, this is known as The Wheelton Plantation and is largely covered in Pine, however, back in the days before the nearby reservoirs were built and this land all became part of the water catchment area, it would have been open moor, with a number of small farms dotted around it.
Here, I'm heading towards the ruins of Heaton House farm. I've not explored this area extensively, really just walked through it occasionally, but I don't think there's a lot left of the farm, mostly just a few boundary walls, but by the time I got up here, I was in the last 90 minutes or so before sunset, so the light was getting quite low and casting long shadows wherever there was a gap in the woodland canopy.
Beyond this area, the pine woods loomed, dark and forboding. I didn't think I'd find much of interest up there on this evening, so I decided to head back the way I'd come and then branch off back up the slope, but slightly further North where another ruin can be found. But first, another shot from a little further up the path.
Back Down The Path
As I headed back down the path, I quite liked the look of the tree I'd photographed on the way up, but from its other side where there was a nice cluster of bluebells around its roots. I think I ended up back on my knees again taking this, they certainly didn't thank me when stood up afterwards.
Hatch Place
Hatch Place once stood a little to the North East of Heaton House Farm, presumably named after the stream it stood beside (home of the (in)famous Hatch Brook waterfall that's lured many a day tripper to their doom, expecting to be thrilled by this spectacle of nature, only to either not find it or be disappointed by something a lot less impressive than the pictures available on Google would lead you to expect). Again, there's not much to be seen of the original farm nowadays, but the low stone walls provide excellent shelter for meadows of bluebells dotted around this part of the woods.
By this time, the sun was rapidly sinking towards the horizon. This is more or less taken from the same spot as the previous shot mere minutes later, but you can see how much the light in the foliage has changed.
Into The Sun
This was the view as I headed back down the path I'd just come up. I quite liked the long shadows that were now being cast across the meadows of bluebells.
A Bit of a Reach
I spotted this tree on my way back down through the lower part of the woods, it overhangs one of the main paths. In the fading light, it looks like it's reaching out to grab you.
Those bluebells are really lovely! You caught them well, I especially like the first two in the light and those carpets of bluebells are just something traditionally English. They seem to love ancient forests :-)
Until I read the comments, I didn't realise that you're standing on a glass floor here. Puts a whole new perspective to it :-)