Not just texture but nice layered effect which is flattened somewhat by the ens so one has to work out what one is seeing. VEry interesting shot, Richard!
Don
Don Ricklin - Gear: Canon EOS 5D Mark III, was Pentax K7
'I was older then, I'm younger than that now' ....
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Agree with the texture and the flatness of the scene rendered due to the focal length and DOF. Also agree with the HDR, might be fun depending on lighting and time of day. From a comp standpoint I love the closed barrier with the pedestrian. Who is breaking the rules, him or photographer? i also like that he is exiting the arch and not centered. Neat all around.
You're gonna go nuts when you get back to shooting FF in both a good and a bad way (you know that 5D is whispering to you right now!) I'm going to hold off commenting on the image for the time being as I'm not on the best machine to view it (too much scrolling up and down.) But it does look nice.
You're gonna go nuts when you get back to shooting FF in both a good and a bad way (you know that 5D is whispering to you right now!) I'm going to hold off commenting on the image for the time being as I'm not on the best machine to view it (too much scrolling up and down.) But it does look nice.
Thanks. Apart from some very casual film shooting in the distant past, I've only used crop sensors. I look forward to going nuts someday with FF.
This is my first post, I think (?) in this forum as I am just beginning to appreciate the art of street photography. There are a number of things that make this image work; the textures, the colors, but for me I love the frame within a frame as one colonnade frames an inner colonnade as well as the man and I also like that he is about to walk out of the frame. Nice grab shot; well seen.
I don't care what the focal length is. Most anything 1.4 or faster is going to be really, really fun to play with. But as Patti said; it's you, not the lens that done the job. I can see now what other's mentioned about the scene feeling flattened, which is a good thing. It's hard to tell whether the subject will be passing in front of or just behind the arch he's approaching.
Thanks, BD and Ben. I think the flatness comes from the light, not the lens. Compression is usually associated with telephoto, not standard lenses. But the whole frame was in the shade of the viaduct, so there are no shadows, just diffuse light, and that's what makes depth hard to gauge.
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Don
'I was older then, I'm younger than that now' ....
My Blog | Q+ | Moderator, Lightroom Forums | My Amateur Smugmug Stuff | My Blurb book Rust and Whimsy. More Rust , FaceBook .
... I'm still peeling potatoes.
patti hinton photography
That site would be great HDR subject.
Congrats on the new lens. You and it did good.
Virginia
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Only thing it needed was a 5D to go with the 35!
Rainbow: the 5D is going to have to wait, I'm afraid, but the seed has been planted and is taking root.
Thanks. Apart from some very casual film shooting in the distant past, I've only used crop sensors. I look forward to going nuts someday with FF.
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dig the shot
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