PS: For all the hobbit fans out there ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7q7WFMuxsg
Nicely done.
Satisfactory, acceptable, has potential, could to better, must try harder - just a few phrases I grabbed from my very old school reports that are not applicable to this photograph...
A very nice capture and the river in that setting suits the long exposure.
Colin
Love this shot.
A couple of questions about the Singh-Ray Vari-ND: (1) Does it deliver accurate colour off the bat, or do you have to remove a colour cast in post? (2) How/Where does a poor old NZer get one of these most economically?
Cheers
Tim
Hi Tim,
It's glass based, not resin based, so doesn't suffer from some of the issues other products like the Lees big-stopper are known to suffer from. I haven't tested it for colour characteristics, but nothing leaps out at me as being a problem. With landscape like this it's never accurately white balanced anyway (always done visually), although on this occasion the camera was on auto-white balance and off memory I didn't have to change anything. In summary, it's nothing you need to worry about.
As far as I know, they're only sold directly from Singh-Ray -- that where I've got all my filters from.
The tranquillity just oozes Colin. Very nice indeed. (not sure about the white border but.....)
Thanks John,
It looks tranquil, but at the time it's noisy - the water is cold - the rocks are slippery below the surface and hard above it - sandflies are biting and the cows in the paddock nearby are smelly!
But apart from that, great
I tried a black boarder and a middle gray one -- white worked best, but I may experiment more. I try to make it more of a matte than a boarder; primarily to adapt my standard 2:1 aspect ratio into something that perfectly matches a 1920 x 1080 monitor.
#1 is for me. The left corner in #2 drags my attention away to nowhere.
Had a hard time jumping between the two to fully compare. In the end I think the first overall. I like the light and clarity of the pool of still water on the lower right contrasting with the motion of the water to the left, gives a point of dynamic contrast in the image. As well the lower bordering rocks frame the pool better and also provide a defining line for the river flow.
My only point of confusion in comparing the two was the light on the surrounding forest. Perhaps a place halfway between the two? The first seems too light and the second too dark when comparing.
#2 is nicer with more trees..