Crushing hard on the tonality I'm getting out of these D200 files. Which shouldn't be surprising, given how many portfolio images I still have from the D80.
2 notes
·
View notes
Aigle,château entouré de vignes par Jean-Daniel Echenard
Via Flickr :
Aigle,canton de Vaud,région du Chablais--En plein vignoble se dresse l'imposant Château d'Aigle, forteresse édifiée au XIIe siècle par la Savoie et remaniée par les Bernois dès la fin du XVe siècle. Une grande majorité de la récolte de raisins sert à la fabrication de vin blanc sec,une toute petite partie pour du vin rouge.Un musée sur le vin et étiquettes de vin se trouve dans cet édifice.
0 notes
flickr
nan goldin homage! by Sam Wilson
Via Flickr:
let me know what you think :)
1 note
·
View note
離陸 nikonD200 Tamron SP 500mm 500mm JPEG Fine MF F/8, 1/250 MODE/A ISO100 #nikon #d200 #nikond200 #ニコンd200 #ニコン #tamron #タムロン #tamronsp #タムロンsp #航空機 #航空写真 #飛行機 #写真好きな人と繋がりたい #ニコン好きな人と繋がりたい #写真 #camera #カメラ #一眼レフ #カメラマン https://www.instagram.com/p/CqUJs-5P-VA/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
Looking down Laurel towards Brynmawr Meadows with downtown in the background. #adobe #lightroom #nikon #d200 #dx #28_105mm #laurelavenue #brynmawrmeadows #downtownminneapolis #fallcolorsstarting #october #october7 #brynmawr #brynmawrmpls #urbanlandscape #cityscape #minneapolis #minnstagrammers https://www.instagram.com/p/CkThhxjr4RY/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
I was lucky enough to be near enough to take a road trip with some friends to view the solar eclipse in the path of totality!
Here are some shots I got on my DLSR:
Wrote about how the process went below the cut, if you’re curious:
Camera setup
Camera info: I used some second-hand old DSLR camera to get this shot. If you want to take a photo, try to find a camera with a electronic viewfinder/live view— I used a Nikon D200 which has an optical viewfinder that you cannot look through during the partial eclipse unless you want to laser concentrate the sun into your eyes. So, I had to keep trial-and-erroring photos then looking at the LCD screen’s playback to line up the shot during the partial eclipse. I accidentally broke part of my tripod 30 minutes into partial, so big shoutout to my friends for team effort helping me deal with that.
For protection: obviously, eclipse glasses for viewing the event. (Look away every so often for your own safety— it is the sun, after all). For the camera I used a solar filter Mylar sheet that I cut into a circle, glued to some cardboard I fitted into an octagon and slipped over my camera lens. That’s why everything except the sun is pitch black! I gave the camera a break from the sun by covering the lens up every few minutes, just in case. I use a special lens that I couldn’t fit a solar filter over, even if I spent $60+ on one. DIY for the win.
The lens: A 150-600mm lens. As I mentioned, my tripod had a little incident so I couldn’t stabilize it enough to use past 500mm without some serious motion blur, but around 150mm and 350mm the photos looked good enough for me. At this point I ripped off the tape on my optical viewfinder and the protective lens and took photos as normal. I kinda just set a fixed aperture with f-stop at 16 and ran with it. I think I also turned the ISO up. You’ll forgive me for not documenting the whole process of the sun and the entirety of totality— some things you just want to see with your own two eyes.
I am not a professional photographer, solar or otherwise, so don’t take what I say for what you should do, but everything seems to work, so if you are looking to photograph a solar eclipse, these are a few things to start with! Though, don’t break your tripod and make sure you can easily find the sun with an electronic viewfinder. Then you can just press your remote-shutter button and stare at the sun at the same time.
17 notes
·
View notes
Photography can be expensive. But it doesn't have to be. A few days ago I picked up a used Nikon D200. I paid about 90 Euros for it. Yes, it's only 10 megapixels. But this picture will probably never be seen anywhere but online. And I could easily print it in A3.
This was shot with the high end Sigma 35 mm f/1,4 Art, but even that I bought for less than 300 Euros some months back.
8 notes
·
View notes