View allAll Photos Tagged telephoto
I went with to Portland Bill last night with Chris Brocklebank , we both have new glass to play with, I'm shooting telephoto and Chris the opposite end of the range with a fisheye
the sky was quite bland so this sky was borrowed from a previous shot
Don't look too close ;-))
I´m looking at some slides I have taken over the years, now. What really marvels me is how easy it is to bring them back to life, when a lot of their sparkle has been lost through time, and in some cases dissapearing dyes, specially from not such good films as Kodachromes were at being archivably stable. One such film was Agfachrome, which faded more than others. This is an Agfachrome slide taken in Yucatan in or around 1973...
copyrighted © Marzouq Almosawy
All images appearing in the Almosawy Photostream are the exclusive property of him and may not be reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without the written permission of Marzouq Almosawy.
15/9/1996.
Chapel with Korinthian sea and mt. Parnassos as Backround.
Film: Fujichrome Velvia 50ASA.
Camera: Pentax-LX.
Lens: Tamron SP 500mm.
Exposure: f/8, 1/125 sec.
Another image from 2009. This is what you get when you shoot sunset with a 400 + 1.4x converter. Cropped to 4x5 ratio only.
View on black so you are better able to see the layers in the foreground.
Seen from a lay-by north of Athabasca Falls, this is Mount Christie (L), Brussels Peak (C) and Mount Lowell (R) around 7am. Thanks to Ian and Paul for identifying the peaks :)
I had to wear a ghillie suit in order to get close to these guys because of how alert they were. Even so, they didn't take their eyes off me!
Best viewed large - press 'L'
OK to use on ABCTV weather
Foothills free of snow with houses and roads, backed by soaring granite mountains rich with forests. The snowpack provides water for the coming warm seasons.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Mortons Overlook.
Best viewed on black.
For prints please visit www.ImidgeryByKMidgett.etsy.com
I sort of surprised myself on just how much of an effect a telephoto lens can make on a photo. If you compare this photograph, with the previous on the photostream, they look completely different, yet were only taken 50 feet apart from each other. I used the 105mm lens in this photograph to make the mountains appear a lot larger. It seems to have worked well. It adds a new interest to the desert scene.
Hope you guys like it!
Also, I'm heading out to Colorado tomorrow for four days, so hopefully, I'll get some great photographs!
It's hidden behind the burns...how do I always manage to do that? Brian is so tall anyway that he takes up a lot of space, and yet once again he's hidden behind the results of expired film and dirty rollers. (Or, in the dreamworld, a giant piece of wheat.)
Taken before the winter really hit on the South Downs near Lewes - a few shafts of brief sunlight brought out the beautiful contours of this lovely landscape .I have posted a similar one from the same trip before with walkers on the horizon but somehow like this one more without the distraction of the figures. I think the landscape speaks for itself . Thanks for you views