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Indulge me with one of my favourites as this has been posted in the Forum before...

 

The Skillion, Terrigal

Central NSW

 

M9, 1.0/50 Noctilux v3

 

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Edited by MarkP
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I really like this... The variation in the way the cliff face has been eroded between the actions of both the sea and the wind blown spray has made for a really interesting composition...

 

The black and white tones work really well and the rendering of the Noctilux adds to the textures and the overall starkness of the landscape... offset by the sky and the soft, but dramatic, clouds.

 

It'll be a bugger to print I would guess... but done well it should really sparkle, especially with those heavy black tones to contrast the highlights in the water and the wet and reflective parts in the cliff erosion.

 

Excellent. I have not seen this before, so I am glad you reposted it...

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Here's a pano from stitching 4 shots in landscape aspect (M9 w. 50 'Cron III): Kata-Tjuta (with a big storm rumbling away to the left)

 

 

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Jim

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Indulge me with one of my favourites as this has been posted in the Forum before...

 

The Skillion, Terrigal

Central NSW

 

M9, 1.0/50 Noctilux v3

 

 

Mark, personally I don't think you should hesitate to post again images that have previously appeared on the Forum, whether recently or way back when. This Thread presents

a rather unique opportunity to collect landscape photos of our beautiful country altogether in one place, also there would be many who have missed the earlier posting of those images....

anyway they are all well worth a second look so keep them coming. Your Terrigal shot (above) is just gorgeous and I (like Bill) imagine it as a print...I've even been wondering which

paper would yield the best result! 

Edited by platypus
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Jincumbilly rail siding, southern Monaro, NSW.

M Monochrom/APO 50

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Love the rail siding Dee...very humorous.

 

Jim, an amazing look-alike to Albert Namatjira's water colours.  Very nice.

 

Whale Beach in film, again, great work Mark. I'm still looking at your Terrigal overflow picture.

 

Dee, the wonderful Eucumbene series...especially taken by the Eucalyptus Graveyard...a spectacular hanger, for sure.

 

266 posts...who'd thought eh?

Congratulations all, sure shows a unique series of landscapes...I'm sure it scares some people though.

 

cheers  Dave S

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The Monaro high plains and smoke from the Victorian bush fires in 2013. 

 

Aka the Monaro Volcanic Province...this area and much of the rest of the Monaro has always been naturally treeless and was not,

as is sometimes believed, cleared of forest by the early settlers.

 

M Monochrom/APO 50

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Craspedia aurantica sp. commonly known as Billy Buttons.   There are at least a dozen species of these common Australian native flowers (sub-alpine / alpine distribution), but the differences are not readily distinguishable in the field.

 

Falls Creek - this is a downhill ski run in winter.

 

35/2 ASPH, Fuji Reala

Edited by Les_Sismore
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Beautiful. The dark fences are an accent to the expanse. Someone invested a lot. Why are they so sturdy?

 

To keep the very valuable sheep in, and the rabbits out. 

 

Rabbits are introduced noxious vermin in Australia, and there have been many attempts to eradicate them using biological, mechanical and chemical methods.  Some of these control methods are ongoing and locally successful, but these pests are widespread and an immense problem for many farmers.

Edited by Les_Sismore
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Dee, so much beauty in your simplicity.  Very soothing image, lovely too.

I'm out of images so far...you and Mark and Les and others are doing a mighty job...keep up the momentum. I've only been in Leica a couple of short years...so much to do , so little time. BUT, I'm a big fan here, and will always aim to post in this thread as a priority.

 

Les lovely flowery trail. I love flower pics...they are corny, and clichéd, but for some of us they are beautiful, especially in context.

 

All the best to you both, cheers  Dave S

Edited by david strachan
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I really like this... The variation in the way the cliff face has been eroded between the actions of both the sea and the wind blown spray has made for a really interesting composition...

 

The black and white tones work really well and the rendering of the Noctilux adds to the textures and the overall starkness of the landscape... offset by the sky and the soft, but dramatic, clouds.

 

It'll be a bugger to print I would guess... but done well it should really sparkle, especially with those heavy black tones to contrast the highlights in the water and the wet and reflective parts in the cliff erosion.

 

Excellent. I have not seen this before, so I am glad you reposted it...

Thanks for your comments Bill.

 

It is indeed printed (to 24 inches) and framed. It was printed using the DeVere system ( fibre-based Fomabrom paper - looks fantastic :-)

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Beautiful. The dark fences are an accent to the expanse. Someone invested a lot. Why are they so sturdy?

True...you are looking at a big investment, good fencing is extremely pricey, but essential to keep sheep, cattle and horses safely contained.

If allowed to wander on to the road animals tend to get squished...and then (to add insult to injury) the driver of the vehicle tends to sue the owners of the squished animals.

Thanks for liking the image! 

Edited by platypus
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I recall you had more photos from Jincumbilly. Can you post them please?

Mark, unfortunately no....there was a nice colour shot, cropped to pano format, taken in 2011 (early days with the M9 and digital)...that's probably the one you mean.

Sad story....last month I deleted some of my early LR backups, as I'd read that that manoeuvre would speed up the backup process. Which it has...but somehow at the same time I managed

to delete about six hundred of my earliest image files. Nothing was lost that I've particularly missed, but the colour Jincumbilly image must have been involved as I have just looked and can't find it.

Edited by platypus
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Indulge me with one of my favourites as this has been posted in the Forum before...

 

The Skillion, Terrigal

Central NSW

 

M9, 1.0/50 Noctilux v3

 

attachicon.gifTerrigal Scillion Master DUO.jpg

Mark,

 

this picture is superb in composition and its dramatic rendering. The toning and texture emphasises the mass of the rock and makes the viewer feel being in the scenery.

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Here's a pano from stitching 4 shots in landscape aspect (M9 w. 50 'Cron III): Kata-Tjuta (with a big storm rumbling away to the left)

 

 

attachicon.gifM9-1005792-Pano-2-1.jpg

 

 

Jim

Jim,

this belongs to the best panos I've seen so far on LUF. It is inspiring because of its colors and the frame is perfect make the viewer walk into this picture.

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Jincumbilly rail siding, southern Monaro, NSW.

M Monochrom/APO 50

Dee,

 

nice to see this again. It is so funny, well framed. The best is the sheep coming just out of the door from the waiting room and grazing. These passengers will have fun....!

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The Monaro high plains and smoke from the Victorian bush fires in 2013. 

 

Aka the Monaro Volcanic Province...this area and much of the rest of the Monaro has always been naturally treeless and was not,

as is sometimes believed, cleared of forest by the early settlers.

 

M Monochrom/APO 50

Dee,

 

wowwow, this is subtle and deep. I admire its fine toning + texture which remind me of a drawing. It is an invitation for a meditation...

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