.. moon rising in the East .. across Roebuck Bay !
-- Edited by jonathan on Friday 6th of May 2011 01:48:32 PM
Firefly said
05:46 PM May 6, 2011
Stunning!!
Cruising Granny said
10:31 PM May 27, 2011
Great shot! That's hard to get without timed film etc.
jonathan said
07:11 AM May 28, 2011
thanks ladies ..
actually Chris, using a small 8.0 meg Olympus but with lens open for almost 3 secs .. reason that it retains the foreground image (without blur) is because there is no actual movement .. its the tidal flats with water inlay .. not 'waves' as it may seem
Jon
_wombat_ said
07:30 AM May 28, 2011
It amazes me how many people take shots like that and leave their flash on, and then say why did that not look as good as in real life, so that a really good shot of the staircase to the moon turn off your flash and use a tripod with a cable release or remote control unit, another way is to set the timer on the camera for say 5-10 secs, so that you are not touching the camera at time of exposure. (and on the tripod)
-- Edited by _wombat_ on Saturday 28th of May 2011 07:31:38 AM
jonathan said
08:42 AM May 28, 2011
quite right mate .. then there's that other input by people, down on the mudflats that just love taking pictures back in our direction .. kinda spoils the moment .. just wonder what they do achieve ..
.. moon rising in the East .. across Roebuck Bay !
-- Edited by jonathan on Friday 6th of May 2011 01:48:32 PM
thanks ladies ..
actually Chris, using a small 8.0 meg Olympus but with lens open for almost 3 secs .. reason that it retains the foreground image (without blur) is because there is no actual movement .. its the tidal flats with water inlay .. not 'waves' as it may seem
Jon
It amazes me how many people take shots like that and leave their flash on, and then say why did that not look as good as in real life, so that a really good shot of the staircase to the moon turn off your flash and use a tripod with a cable release or remote control unit, another way is to set the timer on the camera for say 5-10 secs, so that you are not touching the camera at time of exposure. (and on the tripod)
-- Edited by _wombat_ on Saturday 28th of May 2011 07:31:38 AM
quite right mate .. then there's that other input by people, down on the mudflats that just love taking pictures back in our direction .. kinda spoils the moment .. just wonder what they do achieve ..
Jon