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On 5/9/2019 at 5:48 AM, John Miranda said:

Road, between Arizona and California.  The picture was inspired by our dogs, that had to relieve themselves en route.  M10 Summarit 35mm.

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I like this empty road which goes somewhere unknown to me ...

On 5/8/2019 at 11:04 PM, Shlomo said:

Parking garage in Porto, Portugal.

M10, Summilux 28mm.

This is a photo I really like.There is nothing very special but the geometry, the tones, the lines and the way to frame it make it special to me. Well done, love your style 🙂

robert

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42 minutes ago, robert blu said:

This is a photo I really like.There is nothing very special but the geometry, the tones, the lines and the way to frame it make it special to me. Well done, love your style 🙂

robert

Thank You very much, Robert, very kind!

Greetings from Berlin.

 

Shlomo

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5 hours ago, Chaemono said:

There is an imaginary diagonal line from the cow in the lower right corner to the US flag suggesting that it is American prime beef. The lamp post obstructs it, though. You could easily remove it with the Content-Aware Fill function of Photoshop. It’s one of its most valuable tricks. See here: https://www.digitaltrends.com/photography/how-to-remove-an-object-in-photoshop-content-aware-fill/

Thanks for the suggestion, but my preference is to not alter my street photography images in post-processing other than basic exposure, tone, cropping and occasional conversion to b&w. 

I ditched my Adobe Creative Cloud subscription about 2-1/2 years ago when I completed my transition to Capture One Pro. For my occasional pixel mashing needs, I use Affinity Photo. Now, no subscriptions and I'm very happy with the results I'm achieving. Affinity Photo has an awesome magic brush to remove telephone wires, etc, but I rarely need to use it.

Regards,
Bud James

Please check out my fine art and travel photography at www.budjames.photography or on Instagram at www.instagram.com/budjamesphoto.

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Compagnie Nathalie PERNETTE "La Figure de l'érosion" au Panthéon

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Town Forest, St Johnsbury, VT

M10 | 90/2.8

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Taken this afternoon at low tide. West Wittering at the entrance to Chichester Harbour, with clear views of the Solent and Isle of Wight. Southern England is so special at this time of year!  M10-P + 50 APO.

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Edited by Peter Kilmister
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Some images that I took in Chicago a few weekends ago using the Voigtlander 35 1.4 MC. 

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Edited by hcklr
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Roman campus  (La Sapienza)

L1001379 by scott kirkpatrick, on Flickr

L1001443 by scott kirkpatrick, on Flickr

L1001446 by scott kirkpatrick, on Flickr

L1001445 by scott kirkpatrick, on Flickr

L1001451 by scott kirkpatrick, on Flickr

all M10-D 28 asph

Edited by scott kirkpatrick
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Some shots with my M10 and Summicron 35 ASPH.

Regards,
Bud James

Please check out my fine art and travel photography at www.budjames.photography or on Instagram at www.instagram.com/budjamesphoto.

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Dozing cat.  50mm Summicron 

 

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Fun to use the RF for work taking candids at FSBOHOMES.com
Voigtlander 75/2.5 Color-Heliar LTM 1/250 f/2.8 ISO 3,200 DNG/LR no NR

Edited by Rollin
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Travel photos in Yunnan, China.     M10 + 35/2

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ludlow ca m10p 35fle

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m10p 35fle

navajo nation

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HMS Warrior
Portsmouth Historic Dockyard

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M10/Elmarit-M 28 ASPH

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Warrior is a magnificent 19th century steel-hulled, steam-driven ship. She was never used in battle. Mainly because nothing could compete with her. The first ship with moveable guns. She has been well preserved in the old dockyard at Portsmouth and well worth a visit.

It was not much after her being commissioned that the Royal Navy developed the rangefinder for targetting   their guns. That development of the range finder was begun by Admiral Dreyer. His son, Admiral Sir Desmond Dreyer, served as Gunnery Officer on the cruiser HMS Ajax at the Battle of the River Plate in the early days of the second world war when the battleship Graf Spee was scuttled in Montevideo harbour. Desmond Dreyer developed the rangefinder using analogue methods that led to the rangefinder we all use on Leica M cameras. Desmond was a lovely chap. He lived in Cheriton, Hampshire and I feel privileged to have known him and met him and his second wife, Jessica. His first wife predeceased his second marriage. Sir Desmond became Admiral of the Fleet Far East, then First Sea Lord  (the most senior position in the Admiralty) until he resigned in the late 1960s.

This is all from personal memory, not from Wiki stuff. His development of the use of rangefinders is important to the history of Leica M cameras. I just want to share it with you so it goes into the archives for historical records. One sad development was that German rangefinder copies were better refined than than the Royal Navy versions and installed in more modern ships. The battleship HMS Hood was lost due to this accuracy in a fleeting encounter with the Bismarck pocket battleship. However, the guns on the Bismarck had their rangefinders unable to target Swordfish torpedo bombers flying into the strong wind. The rest is history.

I hope you don't mind me sharing these memories. They are in honour of a dear old man who was so welcoming ... and also my love of M Cameras. The two are linked.

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