Norm Dulak
12-06-2012, 04:43 PM
Nikon D7000 w/Nikkor 28-300mm f/3.5-5.6 vrII lens at 300mm, hand held
ISO Equivalent 400; f/7.1, 1/1600 sec.; uncompensated matrix metering
PP: PS CS6 levels, curves, very modest SH, no crop, sharpen
The ice formations of Antarctica never cease to amaze me. In this one at Paradise Bay, there is a tremendous range of blues, from the delicate hue of the sky blue, to the rich cobalt blue of the deep ice crevasses. And I think that the irregular shapes of the ice peaks and the striations on them add further impact to the image.
Do you agree? How could I make this better?
Norm
<iframe width="468" height="60" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" src="http://mer54715.datafeedfile.com/widget/aff_widget_prdt_generate-2.0.php?aff_num=10536&aff_net=1&widget_num=1759"><p>Sorry your browser does not support iFrame</p></iframe>
ISO Equivalent 400; f/7.1, 1/1600 sec.; uncompensated matrix metering
PP: PS CS6 levels, curves, very modest SH, no crop, sharpen
The ice formations of Antarctica never cease to amaze me. In this one at Paradise Bay, there is a tremendous range of blues, from the delicate hue of the sky blue, to the rich cobalt blue of the deep ice crevasses. And I think that the irregular shapes of the ice peaks and the striations on them add further impact to the image.
Do you agree? How could I make this better?
Norm
<iframe width="468" height="60" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" src="http://mer54715.datafeedfile.com/widget/aff_widget_prdt_generate-2.0.php?aff_num=10536&aff_net=1&widget_num=1759"><p>Sorry your browser does not support iFrame</p></iframe>