µµµµ Sunday 'Scapes µµµµ

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Post your 'scapes be they land, sea, sky, city or body.

As always, please follow the posting rules and they are:

NONE!

If you desire, EXIF, please. Thanks.
Member said:
Member said:
Bill Turner
Please do not copy or edit my photos without my permission.
 
Christmas at my sister's in NH

Minx River-Christmas Day

Model: E-520, ISO: 100, Exposure: 1/125 sec, Aperture: 4.0, 14-54II
Focal Length: 14mm



Ravine out their backdoor at sunset
ISO: 400, Exposure: 1/80 sec, Aperture: 11.0, Focal Length: 14mm



Walking the dog
ISO: 100, Exposure: 1/125 sec, Aperture: 4.0, Focal Length: 32mm



Brad Ross
 
Taken with an OM 35-70 f4 lens with E300. Hand held ISO 100, 1/160 sec, f5.6 70mm. Hope you enjoy.



--
Denis de Gannes
 
I like to look at this one from time to time during December (with "non-existent" sunlight) and wish for February ASAP.:)



edit: taken with E-400, 7 hand-held vertical shots.
--
Nature produces the most beautiful Art.
 
Spectular scene, thanks for sharing.

Denis de Gannes
 
Thank you Denis, I'm glad you like it.

And even though I'm not a Macro kind of a guy, I like your vibrant contribution to this thread.

--
Nature produces the most beautiful Art.
 
I was out hiking and saw some people on the hilltop:



Exposure: 0.002 sec (1/500)
Aperture: f/8.0
Focal Length: 100 mm
ISO Speed: 160



Exposure: 0.008 sec (1/125)
Aperture: f/9.5
Focal Length: 12 mm
ISO Speed: 160

--
http://www.flickr.com/photos/75673106@N00/
 
Brad, I used The Panorama Factory V here, and I'm quite pleased with the result especially when considering it was without tripod and at 14mm FL.

Now in December we get around two and a half hours of daylight; and no sunlight reaching the ground level until late February.

Thanks for looking!
--
Nature produces the most beautiful Art.
 
but I can still never get enough of them.:)





--
Nature produces the most beautiful Art.
 
We stopped on an elevation overlooking a stretch of desert.

That elevation was litterally filled with such stone-heapings, left there by countless visitors before us. People have an odd urge to leave their mark when visiting a special place. Placing rocks on top of eachother sure is better than spraypainting or carving names...

Some of the little heaps resembled buildings, other resembled people.

I looked in my Libya galleries to find a picture, but oddly I seem not to have placed any pictures of that spont online in the "travel" galleries. Probably because my family was always in those shots and those pictures are in a separate spot.

But this is the view from that statue-filled elevation (over the shoulders of one of our crew members - you can see in front of him that there is plenty building material lying around scattered) :



--
Roel Hendrickx

lots of images : http://www.roelh.zenfolio.com

my E-3 user field report from Tunisian Sahara: http://www.biofos.com/ukpsg/roel.html
 

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