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67 Degrees South

ondrovicondrovic Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
edited March 25, 2005 in Landscapes
This is where the water ran out and there was only ice ahead...

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    ondrovicondrovic Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
    edited April 8, 2004
    67 Degrees South
    This is where the water ran out and there was only ice ahead...
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    ondrovicondrovic Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
    edited April 8, 2004
    The view at 67 degrees south
    This is what it looks like at the very end of the world...
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    gubbsgubbs Registered Users Posts: 3,166 Major grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    Wow! Cool shots, I'd love to head down there
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    gusgus Registered Users Posts: 16,209 Major grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    ondrovic wrote:
    This is what it looks like at the very end of the world...
    I always thought of it as the beginning.

    Cool shots. Ive been as far as Macquarie island & was glad to turn around.

    PS..care to share your B&W method ?deal.gif They are great thumb.gif
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    David_S85David_S85 Administrators Posts: 13,190 moderator
    edited March 24, 2005
    ondrovic wrote:
    This is where the water ran out and there was only ice ahead...
    Magnificent photos. This wouldn't happen to have been in Nov. 2004, would it? I have a friend that went down for a several days recreation of (part of) the Endurance adventure down there.
    My Smugmug
    "You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
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    wholenewlightwholenewlight Registered Users Posts: 1,529 Major grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    I love these shots.

    I particularly like the way you capture the stark feel and remote'ness of the lanscape. Your contrasty B&W look even has a similar feel to Frank Hurley's original Endurance photos.

    END%20Front%20distant.jpg

    http://www.shackleton-endurance.com/images.html

    Went to your ondrovic.com website also - tons of additional great shots!
    john w

    I knew, of course, that trees and plants had roots, stems, bark, branches and foliage that reached up toward the light. But I was coming to realize that the real magician was light itself.
    Edward Steichen


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    NirNir Registered Users Posts: 1,400 Major grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    Fantastic!
    __________________

    Nir Alon

    images of my thoughts
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    ondrovicondrovic Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    Humungus wrote:
    I always thought of it as the beginning.

    Cool shots. Ive been as far as Macquarie island & was glad to turn around.

    PS..care to share your B&W method ?deal.gif They are great thumb.gif
    The original was shot in color in raw mode. I used 80% red channel 20% green channel in those shots. In the shot with the ship up in the ice, I also stretched the contrast of the sky quite a bit (it was a bit milky - not a bright blue like in the others). Using mostly the red channel also acted like a red filter on B&W film.

    You'd have to work hard to take a bad picture down there!
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    ondrovicondrovic Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    David_S85 wrote:
    Magnificent photos. This wouldn't happen to have been in Nov. 2004, would it? I have a friend that went down for a several days recreation of (part of) the Endurance adventure down there.
    No, this was January of 2004. I think I'd rather stay on the ice than cross the Drake again though.
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    ondrovicondrovic Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    I love these shots.

    I particularly like the way you capture the stark feel and remote'ness of the lanscape. Your contrasty B&W look even has a similar feel to Frank Hurley's original Endurance photos.

    Went to your ondrovic.com website also - tons of additional great shots!
    Thanks!!!! You can see almost all of the pictures from the trip here:

    http://photography.richardondrovic.com/gallery/71931
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    Tim KirkwoodTim Kirkwood Registered Users Posts: 900 Major grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    Wow these are great! I really enjoyed them a bunchthumb.gifthumb.gif


    Thanks for sharing your adventure.

    Tim
    www.KirkwoodPhotography.com

    Speak with sweet words, for you never know when you may have to eat them....
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    wxwaxwxwax Registered Users Posts: 15,471 Major grins
    edited March 24, 2005
    Crackerjack shots, ondrovic. thumb.gif Love the B&W conversion, it looks great.
    Sid.
    Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
    http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
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    KalamataKalamata Registered Users Posts: 97 Big grins
    edited March 25, 2005
    Great shots, black and white seems to be in its element in the artic regions. I seem to recall while in the USCG early 60's a CG photographer's mate won a first prize in a national comp for his picture of his icebreaker at Mcmurdo sound.
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    AngeloAngelo Super Moderators Posts: 8,937 moderator
    edited March 25, 2005
    really terrific shots. thanks for sharing. clap.gif
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