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20th December 2011, 09:48 PM
#1
Alki Point Lighthouse
In West Seattle they call it "Alki Point", a Chinook Indian word meaning "all in a good time."
The Government did not build a lighthouse on this point until 1913, however it is written that some local landowners would hang a latern from a tree to help mariners. This was in the 1880s, but in 1887 the US Lighthouse Service made some improvements to the lighting apparatus and began paying the landowner $15.00 a month to maintain the light.
The current tower in the photo here was built in 1913, when the US Lighthouse Service built a full-fledged station. This tower stands 37 feet tall, is made of concrete, and originally housed a fourth-order Fresnel lens. The lighthouse marks the southern entrance to Elliott Bay and Puget Sound. Mount Rainier can be seen in the background.
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20th December 2011, 10:40 PM
#2
Re: Alki Point Lighthouse
Just a thought, Frank, but to me the water in the foreground seems excessively sharpened. Is it like that on the original?
When I get problems like this (frequently) I sharpen on a duplicate layer then add a mask which can be edited to reduce the sharpening effect where it looks wrong.
Everything else looks good.
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21st December 2011, 12:22 AM
#3
Re: Alki Point Lighthouse
Thanks Geoff. I checked the SOOC and it was fairly sharp and may have gone too far as I sharpened for the lighthouse. I didn't apply any specific area sharpening but It's easy enough to tone the sharpeness of the water down a bit. Thanks for noticing!
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