Very inviting. What's on a menu?
Very inviting. What's on a menu?
Like that shot! Serenity, cold, calm, beauty. Perfect mood capture.
Wild, colorful and intriguing.
Though there are American Robins, there are no "Canadian" geese 😀 Of the two Canada Geese photos the one I've attached is the more successful IMO, for the reasons given by ChrisOly. For me the story is "Look at me! I'm the star! I'm the boss!" So this shot works best.
The Mallard ducks: the colors and clarity are very nice, though I'm not sure of the rest. They seem to be thinking they wish they'd flown south already!
I'm reluctant to guess since I've been spectacularly wrong before, lol, but it feels like infrared. The glowing softness of the whites and lighter tones, along with the very black blacks, is much more appealing to me than a "sharp" capture would be. The difference IMO is documentary vs. mood, and the mood as I see it is the experience of a idle meander through mounds of stuff that were once someone's treasured memory, no longer desired. "Make me an offer!" they say to the stranger who has no emotional attachment whatsoever.
Fifteen minutes before Noon. A sense of expectancy.
The outdoor porch area of an open-air, beach-side bistro in Carlsbad, CA.
The breakfast crowd is gone and during an uncharacteristic lull at this busy place the tables are set, napkins folded, water glasses ready and waiting for the lunch crunch that will descend imminently.
Rich
I love the pov of the three umbrelllas, with a lot of underneath view and each slightly askew from the others. The perspective makes it difficult to see the end of the row, which makes it feel like the tables go on and on. I love that part.
I'm rarely a fan of out-of-focus foreground, and have no idea why. Cropping the foreground at the closest-to-us point where the first table begins keeps my eye from wandering to the bright area underneath.
You've written your knowledge of the current scene and what is coming; however, that seems unnecessary to me. I feel the visual story speaks for itself very well.
Great carousel, colours, movement, child play, fantasy world. Visually captivating.
SPARRING
For lack of recent work, I once again turn to an older image, taken from a documentary series of a group of semi-pro boxers preparing for an upcoming boxing gala event.
Here, the focus and DOF on just the one eye, and nose squashed by the glove, is effective. You can feel the tension and excitment.
Boxing has never been a sport for me, but this photo is good!
Water
1932 Art Deco Filtration Plant still in full use.
It's great when buildings like that not only fulfil a purpose, but also look good too.
The captures here have nice light!
IMO, number 1 & 3 could be straightend up a tad by changing the perspective a bit
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(/a/C3RFLcqtPRoQcqorxI2FF5FjJjOlw2Ka9fQmGqWtY4e2BbARxPVd0Sp0Hsx3uGcN/18964/?shva=1)I was very happy that these two stopped for a rest and let me get close.
Very clear and sharp , lots of details with the eye in focus like it should be ;-)
Nice posing and compostions !
Finding Uncle Montfort's Horse Farm - A Photo Story
While traveling through Virginia last month, I took the notion to look for what was left of my Uncle Montfort's horse farm. My uncle and aunt were very wealthy (no, I didn't inherit a thing), had several homes but the most lavish was an estate in the Shenandoah Valley. I knew the manor house, Buena Vista, was gone now, but I thought there might be remnants of the horse farm so we went snooping around outside Berryville, where I knew the house was. Finding nothing online about Buena Vista or my aunt and uncle, I had only my own memory to work with, and I was 7 the last time I was there. I remembered another house on the estate, nearer to the horses, a house that appealed more to me, since Buena Vista was just too overwhelming, so we looked for it. We found it on Audley farm, just outside Berryville. It looked like what I remembered, and is still a horse farm. Phones and Google help us figure stuff out quickly, and while still at the gates I learned that Uncle Montfort did indeed purchase Audley in 1920, and kept there the first Triple Crown winner, Sir Barton, whose statue still graces the main office of the farm. I knew he had race horses but had no idea one of them was racing history! I was pretty darned excited to track down this family story. When I'm excited I forget how to take pictures so some of these are less than stellar, which is why I'm offering them as a story.
The entrance is still commanding. I could see where younger trees had replaced some of the older and larger ones in my old family photos.The extensive stables and paddocks are still spread over the hills.
I hate I didn't get a better picture of the horses, but I had lost my mind by the time I spotted them.
The view looking towards the Blue Ridge is still as spectacular as it was almost 70 years ago when I last saw it.
That's an interesting story with some great photos to back up your memories from 70 years ago.
I espcially like these 3 shots
The horses have a wonderful light on them. But as you implied, the fence is obscuring them a bit.
The whole area here looks really beautiful with those lush greens and autumn colours!
Tree in a snow-covered field
I have nothing new of interest, so here is a memory from back when MinnieV and I were together in another forum 😊
Ellensburg by Linda Shorey, on Flickr
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Lovely, snow transforms everything!
Nice composition and good snow texture and contrast here. It makes me want to put on my snowshoes!
Fifteen minutes before Noon. A sense of expectancy.
The outdoor porch area of an open-air, beach-side bistro in Carlsbad, CA.
The breakfast crowd is gone and during an uncharacteristic lull at this busy place the tables are set, napkins folded, water glasses ready and waiting for the lunch crunch that will descend imminently.
Rich
Nice matching colours.
Brings back memories of several past holidays, where I've also chanced on similar scenes of table on a sunny balcony with sun umbrellas, all waiting expectantly for the next guests
I'm busy at the moment so after today I wont be online for a few days. Here's a photo of mine from 1974.
A Cool street photograpy shot indeed! With a clever title that makes all the difference.
With the chap here in the jacket, giving his advice and suggestions to the worker, it reminds me of the very old song from Bernhard Cribbins called, "The hole in the ground", it didn't end up too well for the chap in Jacket and bowler hat :-)
I'm stuck at work so I'm sharing these from a few years ago. Canadians visiting our local pond for a 6 week Winter vacation.
How could I improve these images? Both with setting up the shot with my camera and in post?
I don't think you need to improve anything in the 2nd one!
Nice colours, a good moment, nice and sharp. All with nice light with some reflections too.
With F5.6 and 1/4000s you've frozen the action, capturing all the little water drops in the air. And the DOF is narrow enough to blur the forground a little and blur the background a lot; separating the main bird nicely.
Hi, this is my first contribution to this site, after being introduced to it by fellow site member ‘Fireplace33’.
If asked, I call myself a travel photographer, and tend to like taking action or ‘fun’ shots over portraits.
Occasionally, I take set shots like these:
I used a single OCF through an umbrella to highlight the subjects, whilst trying to make use of the sunset and capture the surrounds.
As I don’t do this very often, I always feel like I am rushing before the moment disappears…
The models are myself and my wife, using a tripod and timer for the selfies.
CC is welcome. I would love to hear your thoughts…