Morristown NJ, Wide :)

kirbinsterkirbinster Registered Users Posts: 301 Major grins
edited July 15, 2011 in Street and Documentary
Just a few wide angle shots from the streets of Morristown NJ taken with my Nikon D5000 an Sigma 12-24 lens:
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Nikon D700, D300, D5000 , Nikon 85mm f/1.8, 28-300 AF-S VRII, 70-300AF-S VR, 70-200 AF-S VR f/2.8, 10.5mm Fisheye, Sigma 12-24mm, Nikon 24-70 f/2.8, 2 SB-600 Speedlights Manfrotto 190MF3 tripod & 322RC2 ball grip head. - NJ, USA
Flickr Photobucket

Comments

  • redleashredleash Registered Users Posts: 3,840 Major grins
    edited July 14, 2011
    I like the text in #2 and the crisp lines and bright colors in #3. Seems like a nice lens.
    "But ask the animals, and they will teach you." (Job 12:7)

    Lauren Blackwell
    www.redleashphoto.com
  • kirbinsterkirbinster Registered Users Posts: 301 Major grins
    edited July 15, 2011
    I had a Sigma 10-20 when I was only shooting DX, but picked up the 12-24 when I got the D700. Both are excellent sharp lenses for outside use. While Nikon's super wide is much faster, it is also triple the price on the used market. The ultra-wide Sigmas are great, I don't however like thier longer lenses, just not sharp enough for my taste.
    Nikon D700, D300, D5000 , Nikon 85mm f/1.8, 28-300 AF-S VRII, 70-300AF-S VR, 70-200 AF-S VR f/2.8, 10.5mm Fisheye, Sigma 12-24mm, Nikon 24-70 f/2.8, 2 SB-600 Speedlights Manfrotto 190MF3 tripod & 322RC2 ball grip head. - NJ, USA
    Flickr Photobucket
  • WernerGWernerG Registered Users Posts: 534 Major grins
    edited July 15, 2011
    I grew up in Morristown in the '50's and don't recognized anything except the last building but I'm too old to remember what it is.rolleyes1.gif

    I like the first two very much. Nice seen and executed.
  • bdcolenbdcolen Registered Users Posts: 3,804 Major grins
    edited July 15, 2011
    Boy, does that third one bring back memories - Morris County Courthouse - where I covered the Karen Ann Quinlan trial in the fall of 1975. Hard to believe there were hoards of reporters, from all over the U.S., Europe, and Japan, swarming that same building, with t.v. trucks lining the streets.
    bd@bdcolenphoto.com
    "He not busy being born is busy dying." Bob Dylan

    "The more ambiguous the photograph is, the better it is..." Leonard Freed
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