• Digiramepanorama_fish_eye
    1901 posts
    a year ago

    This weekly thread is principally intended for you to show others the photos made with Canon cameras of all sorts: SLR, DSLR, Mirrorless, M-series, APS-C, film, etc. BUT all brands of camera will be accepted, including photos taken with your phone. We do enjoy reading an accompanying text explaining your photo and any special techniques you may have used. Comments and helpful criticisms on others' photos are also welcome: we can all learn something from each other. We look forward to seeing your photos.

    This is being posted Saturday 10/21/23 around 8:45 pm PST time. I will be active here while David is away, but we hope that all of you will join in and comment on each others' photos.

    New contributors to this series of threads are always welcome!

    Digirame

  • Digiramepanorama_fish_eye
    1901 posts
    a year ago

    I will start off with one autumn flower that I took on the 23rd of September. I will post more pictures later. It's late for me. 😀

    This is such a pretty flower. Does anyone know the name of it?
    Resized2DPR13.jpg


    Model - Canon EOS M50m2
    ExposureTime - 1/200 seconds
    FNumber - 13
    ISOSpeedRatings - 1600
    ExposureBiasValue - 0
    FocalLength - 200 mm
    Lens Model - EF-M55-200mm f/4.5-6.3 IS STM

    Resized2DPR13.jpg

    JPG, 156.6 KB, uploaded by Digirame a year ago.

  • a year ago

    Thanks for starting the new thread, Digi. I look forward to seeing what you have all been up to in my absence!

    I am pretty sure this is a hydrangea (or hortensia). It is helpful to include some leaves to aid identification. Hydrangea leaves have jagged edges and I can just see one at the bottomn right. The blue colour indicates that the soil is acidic: alkaline soil will produce pink flowers.

    David

  • stevet1panorama_fish_eye
    778 posts
    a year ago

    David,

    I've been told that in the olden days, people would bury old iron nails in the soil, so that they would rust and deliberately turn the soil acidic to produce that blue color.

    Steve Thomas

  • a year ago

    I am sceptical, Steve: my hazy memory of A-level Chemistry tells me that iron oxides are not acidic. There are other easily acquired substances that can do the job! Like aluminium sulphate.

    David

  • mocha123panorama_fish_eye
    411 posts
    a year ago

    Hi all,

    An autumnal woodland walk.

    dpr001.jpg

    The one that got away. (Aperture f/7.1 <> (SS): 1/400 <> ISO 125 <> EC: -0.33 <> PASM Mode: Custom <> Metering: Partial <> Focus Mode: AI Servo <> FL: 450mm <> Lens: Tamron SP 150-600mm f/5-6.3 Di VC USD <> Camera ID: Canon EOS 7D Mark II).

    dpr002.jpg

    More fungi at this time of year. (Aperture f/8 <> (SS): 1/160 <> ISO 640 <> EC: 0 <> PASM Mode: Aperture Priority <> Metering: Evaluative <> Focus Mode: One Shot <> FL: 90mm <> Lens: Tamron SP 90mm f/2.8 Di VC USD Macro <> Camera ID: Canon EOS 70D).

    dpr003.jpg

    'Oh what a tangled web we weave'. (Aperture f/10 <> (SS): 1/400 <> ISO 1600 <> EC: 0 <> PASM Mode: Aperture Priority <> Metering: Evaluative <> Focus Mode: One Shot <> FL: 300mm <> Lens: Tamron SP 70-300mm f/4-5.6 Di VC USD <> Camera ID: Canon EOS 7D Mark II).

    dpr004.jpg

    Ready to fall. (Aperture f/7.1 <> (SS): 1/1000 <> ISO 200 <> EC: 0 <> PASM Mode: Aperture Priority <> Metering: Partial <> Focus Mode: AI Servo <> FL: 600mm <> Lens: Tamron SP 150-600mm f/5-6.3 Di VC USD <> Camera ID: Canon EOS 7D Mark II).

    dpr005.jpg

    It's squirrel time as the nuts fall. (Aperture f/7.1 <> (SS): 1/1000 <> ISO 4000 <> EC: 0 <> PASM Mode: Custom <> Metering: Partial <> Focus Mode: AI Servo <> FL: 300mm <> Lens: Tamron SP 70-300mm f/4-5.6 Di VC USD <> Camera ID: Canon EOS 7D Mark II).

    dpr005.jpg

    JPG, 508.6 KB, uploaded by mocha123 a year ago.

    dpr004.jpg

    JPG, 380.3 KB, uploaded by mocha123 a year ago.

    dpr003.jpg

    JPG, 224.8 KB, uploaded by mocha123 a year ago.

    dpr002.jpg

    JPG, 352.2 KB, uploaded by mocha123 a year ago.

    dpr001.jpg

    JPG, 351.9 KB, uploaded by mocha123 a year ago.

  • mocha123panorama_fish_eye
    411 posts
    a year ago

    Hi Digirame,

    That looks a nice unblemished flower, lovely colour as well. 👍

  • Digiramepanorama_fish_eye
    1901 posts
    a year ago

    David,

    Thanks for letting me know about the flower. It's nice to hear from you as well.

  • Digiramepanorama_fish_eye
    1901 posts
    a year ago

    Steve,

    Thanks for your comments concerning the hydrangea. I've seen them both blue and pink where I live.

  • Digiramepanorama_fish_eye
    1901 posts
    a year ago

    Mocha,

    Thanks for noticing that the hydrangea is unblemished. It did look really nice for an early autumn flower.

  • JACShelp_outline
    878 posts
    a year ago

    [deleted]

  • Digiramepanorama_fish_eye
    1901 posts
    a year ago

    Mocha,

    That's neat you caught the heron losing its dinner. Yes, that can happen sometime. More fungi is exactly what I'm seeing now too. Did the dragonfly get caught in a web? That's a good background for the dragonfly. Are those horse chestnuts that David showed us? I saw some where I live. When they fell, they would split open. I would have to stand far from them, because they could hurt. The squirrel looks very similar to what I find.

  • stevet1panorama_fish_eye
    778 posts
    a year ago

    Dig,

    I do too in my side yard.

    I think there's some cross-pollination going on from the two bushes 😀

    hydrangea.jpg

    hydrangeas(2).jpg

    Steve Thomas

    hydrangeas(2).jpg

    JPG, 115.6 KB, uploaded by stevet1 a year ago.

    hydrangea.jpg

    JPG, 116.3 KB, uploaded by stevet1 a year ago.

  • stevet1panorama_fish_eye
    778 posts
    a year ago

    David,

    I can only relay what a 92 yr. old woman told me what her grandmother used to do.
    Who knows if they understood chemistry? (shrug)

    Steve Thomas

  • stevet1panorama_fish_eye
    778 posts
    a year ago

    I read a suggestion that one could put a color polarizer on your black and white setting. It turns the deep blue sky even darker.
    Here's one I took this morning with that technique:

    img_left tutn_0476.JPG

    Steve Thomas

    img_left tutn_0476.JPG

    JPG, 62.0 KB, uploaded by stevet1 a year ago.

  • Photobygmshelp_outline
    730 posts
    a year ago

    After a few busy weeks and not the best weather we did enjoy a hike again.The weather is more like fall, as it should be this time of the year in our region.
    But still some sun during our hike today and a lot of mushrooms 😎

    Canon EOS 5D Mark IV - Canon EF 28-300mm f/3.5-5.6L IS USM:
    5D4_1273.jpg

    Canon EOS RP - Canon RF 35mm F1.8 MACRO IS STM:
    IMG_1527.jpg


    IMG_1525.jpg

    Canon EOS R - Canon RF 24mm F1.8 MACRO IS STM:
    IMR_8617.jpg


    IMR_8597.jpg

    IMR_8597.jpg

    JPG, 594.9 KB, uploaded by Photobygms a year ago.

    IMR_8617.jpg

    JPG, 1.6 MB, uploaded by Photobygms a year ago.

    IMG_1527.jpg

    JPG, 761.4 KB, uploaded by Photobygms a year ago.

    IMG_1525.jpg

    JPG, 549.6 KB, uploaded by Photobygms a year ago.

    5D4_1273.jpg

    JPG, 1.7 MB, uploaded by Photobygms a year ago.

  • mocha123panorama_fish_eye
    411 posts
    a year ago

    Hi Photobygms,

    Love the first photo and your fungi, especially photo 3 it takes you into the forest. 👍

  • Photobygmshelp_outline
    730 posts
    a year ago

    Thanks, it was very nice to be in nature again.👍