Very nice, indeed!
Good Work !
If your monitor's resolution is high enough to display it, don't hesitate to also click on the 'Expand to actual size' icon in the lightbox as well. VERY nicely done, Colin!![]()
Wot is the red lightsStrange looking place; looks a bit like something out of the Hobbit, a mysterious land.
Goes without saying it is very good.
Very impressive, just like being there.Just a bit after sunset?
Thanks Chris, Jeff, Frank, Steve, and Louise
@ Frank: I've actually got it as my wall paper at the moment (others, feel free, if you so desire) (heavily watermarked version available on request!)
@ Steve: It's an area called "The Cut" - it's an artificial cut made in a (off memory) 14km boulder bank where ships pass through to & from the port. The red lights are navigation lights.
@ Louise: Yes, about 1/2 hour. We had a dose of the "fog" which we don't see very often like that, so I wanted to make sure I captured it. Wasn't sure if it would disappear as the sun dropped behind the mountains, but luckily it remained visible. I tried a few shots before sunset, but basically all I got out of that was fried eyeballs![]()
Last edited by Colin Southern; 23rd March 2012 at 08:16 PM.
Absolutely flawless to my eyes Colin, and the scene itself seems to have a very
peaceful feeling about it.
Is it on the gallery wall yet?![]()
Simple and beautiful.
Very nice work Colin.
Hi Mike,
Thanks for the kind words - It would be a good one for the gallery wall, but extended aspect ratio shots like that take up a LOT of room, and alas, I don't really have any spare wall space for it just at the moment.
It is for sale though - $1,000,000 - personally signed and delivered anywhere in the world, along with a copy of the DNG (all other copies to be destroyed).![]()
Very very nice Colin, really like the white from and writing, inspirational.
Thanks Jason - it's nice to know I can still deliver occasionally, even though it wasn't shot with a Nikon - wasn't processed with NX2 - wasn't processed on a Mac - had an 'orrible filter attached to the front of the lens - and was 'orribly degraded by the diffraction at F32![]()
That is amazing. So, Australia has Ken Duncan, and NZ has Colin Southern? That looks as good as any of his.
- Noel
Hi Louise,
Nothing particularly tricky. Although it looks very wide-angle and panoramic, it's actually shot at 115mm (and then cropped); so detail is still visible, unlike one would get with a wide-angle lens. I've used a Singh-Ray Vari-ND filter so that I could shoot at F32 & 30 seconds (to smooth the water) - but apart from that, it's just the usual processing in ACR & then finishing touches in Photoshop.