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love is in the air

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St.john's newfoundland Canada

Fun street called "George Street"
 

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The weather cooperated for the first time in years.

Cincinnati, OH - 11/21
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Nikon D50/18-200 VR
22mm
1/10 sec/f3.8 (handheld)
iso 200

Ballonarama! I had planned on going this year, and showed up at 6:30. I guess it's only 4-6, so I missed it this year:( You'd think they would let it go on later into the night.
 
First day out with my first DSLR. Unfortunately it was a very cloudy day so I just did some white balance touch up in LR to compensate.

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Lovely light and great sky.

Welcome to the land of visual sacrifice. You brought the primary horizontals parallel to the frame, but the vertical lines of the museum, of which there are many, make it a bit slanted.

Dale

Thanks, Dale. You may be right, but, perhaps because I've been looking at photos too much today, I'm not seeing the troublesome verticals on this one. Which ones spoil it for you? I'll try to fix it.
 
Thanks, Dale. You may be right, but, perhaps because I've been looking at photos too much today, I'm not seeing the troublesome verticals on this one. Which ones spoil it for you? I'll try to fix it.

Too many pictures? Never!

You don't need to redo this at all. I was just pointing out that photos are seldom perfect. People see different things in the same image. I had training in drafting in High school and that has made sensitive to vertical alignment in photography. Your photo is, as I said, very nice. I really do envy the understanding and control that you and John have over exposure.

Dale
 
Too many pictures? Never!

You don't need to redo this at all. I was just pointing out that photos are seldom perfect. People see different things in the same image. I had training in drafting in High school and that has made sensitive to vertical alignment in photography. Your photo is, as I said, very nice. I really do envy the understanding and control that you and John have over exposure.

Dale

Well, thanks, but I think exposure is really a small part of the equation. I try to "expose to the right," and I choose my apertures very carefully, but the real trick is finding (or planning for) the right light. Good post-processing can do a lot to fix a poor exposure, but no amount of it can fix poor lighting. I think what makes Doylem's pictures so special is his ability to capture light that is particularly revealing for a given composition. I'm not denying the importance of a good exposure, but I think it follows several more important considerations.

And you're right: there's no such thing as too many (good) pictures. :)
 
I very much hope that you and those close to you are safe in the face of this adversity.

Thanks. I'm fine... though when there's this much rain you soon find out where the roof leaks...

Just sorted out a name for my new business doing landscape photography workshops. Drumroll... Magnetic North Photography...

We've got the domain names sorted out, a website to build, venues checked out, a schedule ongoing. Could be fun... :)

A shot of Cockermouth before the floods hit (more rain expected tonight: cold comfort to all the people who won't be going back to their homes any time soon)... :(

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Thanks. I'm fine... though when there's this much rain you soon find out where the roof leaks...

Very glad to hear it.

Has Wordsworth's house survived intact? I've not seen any mention on the TV reports.
 
Very nice colors!! Your white balance is a little blue, but very nice

Thanks for the nice comment. Darned white balance, guess I got lazy.


It is a real shame to see such a historic location ravaged by flooding. It is obviously a remarkable meteorological event if it is doing damage to places that have stood unmolested for so long.

Have you gone out to try to capture the results of the flooding. It would be interesting to see before>during>after shots. This is a chance to hone your disaster photography skills, though no one would ever ask for such a thing!
 
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