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Knotweed in the marsh meadow

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CL with TL 35 lux

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From last Summer in London ..


Leica CL + Elmarit-R 28mm f/2.8
ISO 2500 @ f/4 @ 1/20

(Some of you have seen this photo before if you participated in the Rangefinder Forum "Postcard #11" exchange recently.)

enjoy,
G

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A shallow pond in a dark wood.    TL 35mm 1.4

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vor 6 Stunden schrieb wda:

Persicaria, more likely; certainly not Knotweed.

Thanks David,

you are right. It is Persicaria bistorta, we call it in Germany the "toothbrush".

Andreas

Edited by Ando
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8 hours ago, Dippy said:

OK, that looks amazing (and loaded with calories of course). My mother used to make pain Peru for us and it was always one of my favourite things. It never looked this good though. 

Thanks.  

My 15yr son ordered it, we were in New Orleans for my nephew's wedding and it was something he had to have for breakfast, he can handle the calories at this point :).

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Art by nature - blossoms on the surface of water. Not arranged by me - just found. CL and L Macro 60 mm.

 

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Edited by HeinzX
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3 hours ago, albert said:

A shallow pond in a dark wood.    TL 35mm 1.4

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Albert, there was something about your brooding landscape which prompted me to fiddle with your file. I finished up with slightly different emphsis, possibly nothing like you saw and captured, just a different interpretation of a rather busy woodland watery scene.  Would you like me to post it for you to see?

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29 minutes ago, wda said:

Albert, there was something about your brooding landscape which prompted me to fiddle with your file. I finished up with slightly different emphsis, possibly nothing like you saw and captured, just a different interpretation of a rather busy woodland watery scene.  Would you like me to post it for you to see?

 

Please  post your interpretation. I would love to see it. Thanks much for working with it as I really was dumbfounded with the mid-night black of the dog  

 

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36 minutes ago, albert said:

 

Please  post your interpretation. I would love to see it. Thanks much for working with it as I really was dumbfounded with the mid-night black of the dog  

 

I increased the contrast very slightly and applied an eliptical filter to concentrate attention on the central part. I then experimented with split tones to introduce a slightly warmer feeling to the scene. I accept this might be far from reality as you saw the scene. But I find it fascinating exploring the visual possibilities by experimenting in Lightroom. I haven't attempted to reveal more detail in your dog. His silhouette tells its own story. (The Jpeg file contains very little hidden information in the dog. Maybe the DNG has slightly more potential)

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Edited by wda
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14 minutes ago, wda said:

I increased the contrast very slightly and applied an eliptical filter to concentrate attention on the central part. I then experimented with split tones to introduce a slightly warmer feeling to the scene. I accept this might be far from reality as you saw the scene. But I find it fascinating exploring the visual possibilities by experimenting in Lightroom. I haven't attempted to reveal more detail in your dog. His silhouette tells its own story.

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My wife and I like yours better. Guess what? I have only used Photoshop for my sixteen years as a forum member. I don’t know anything about Lightroom. Perhaps. It is time to learn. Thank you very much. 

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Albert, you probably could achieve a similar result in Photoshop but nowadaays I find Lightroom does 95% plus of what I want. I cherish its cataloguing capability for managing my digital pictures. But, like most software, the rewards come after investing time in learning how use the various tools.

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18mm  at f/11 for 24sec

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7 minutes ago, rpoppes said:

18mm  at f/11 for 24sec

 

Mosteo-arthritis impressive.  (I have left this delicious auto-correction example for your amusement. Will try again)  Most impressive. Blocking filter?

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Invasion of The Canadians   18-56   Always bring your camera

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The Prime Minister  18-56

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