>>   http://homepage.mac.com/ramarren/photo/PAW7/21.htm

Thanks for all the compliments and comments ... Some responses to  
individual questions.

From: Joe Barnhart
> ... I see the shot was 1/20 sec with your DA70 -- tripod?  I've  
> considered getting something like a combo walking stick/monopod for  
> hikes.

With the tripod, Joe, using the remote release on 3-second delay so I  
get the full mirror pre-fire vibration reduction. The detail  
resolution in the full resolution image is stunning and would not be  
achievable with a monopod or hand-held, I don't think.

I have a good monopod now ... the Bogen/Manfrotto 3245 Automatic  
fitted with a 3229 swivel head (with RC2 clamp so my cameras always  
have an RC2 adapter on them now and fit everything). A little bulky  
collapsed but very handy in use. I use it mostly with the 50-200  
lens, it makes a decent sort-of walking stick but I wouldn't want to  
rely on it to take a serious walking stick load.

From: Shel Belinkoff
> Hi Godders ... quite a nice scene.  you were working with good  
> light, too.
> About what time was it when you were up on Twin Peaks?  The lower left
> corner seems overly dark and lacking detail on my screen.

This exposure was made at 7:37am yesterday morning. I was up there  
shooting from about 7 to 8:30. (The EXIF data is off by an hour as  
I'd forgotten to reset the K10D clock for DST.)

There's plenty of detail even in the dark areas in the full rez  
rendering and print, but down-sampled for the screen it mushes into  
darkness. I tried lightening it a bit but prefer the tonal balance in  
the full rez image as it is here.

> Have you ever been to Mt. Davidson early in the AM or just before  
> dusk when
> the cross was lit up?  That's always struck me as an overlooked photo
> opportunity.

Never been to Mt. Davidson at all... !

From: Sonny Carter
> Nice shot.   I wonder if you have a version in color?  It seems the  
> soft
> veil would make it almost monocromatic.  Just a thought. ...

Thanks Sonny. I have a color rendering as well, now, but it poses a  
somewhat different interpretation of the scene. I'm not sure yet  
whether I want to publish or print it, but I suppose I will  
eventually. It's color is subdued still but hardly monochromatic!

Yes, the fog can be a bit thick on the western side of the city.

From: Cotty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Very nice! Photoshop vignette?

I used Lightroom's Lens Correction panel in the Develop module to  
exaggerate the natural vignette of the lens by a little bit. It gets  
heavier in these down-rezzed versions compared to the full rez print,  
as above.

From: Brian Walters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I really like the way the dark foreground creates a frame for the  
> central part of the image.  I know others would like to see more  
> detail in the darker corners but I'm not so sure about that - I  
> think the extra detail in the shadows would lessen the impact.

Shel says "to-MAY-toe" and Brian says "to-MAH-toe" ...  ];-)

From: Boris Liberman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Clear winner!
> But wait, you shot it with 70 mm lens. This is forbidden ;-). One  
> cannot shoot landscapes with tele lenses ;-)

Most of my favorite landscape shots were made with a 50-135mm lens ... !

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> While I  liked this a lot, Godfrey, and said so, my eye puzzled  
> over the
> three faint  squares above the first spire of the Bay Bridge. At  
> first I thought
> maybe they  were reflections of buildings. Taking a second look  
> now, I realize
> they must be  part of Oakland. :-) Duh. Anyway, they are a little  
> confusing,
> so I guess, if it  was my photo, I'd probably clone them out.  
> Besides this is a
> shot of SF, not  Oakland.

In the full rez print, there is quite a lot more detailing in the  
distance that delivers the eastern end of the Bay Bridge as well as  
more of the Oakland shore. Downsampling the image for the web loses  
most of it, unfortunately.

From: Cotty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> There's also a hot-air balloon above left of the pyramid building ;-)

LOL ... that one I've removed now, both from the image and from the  
sensor (did that jiggle-and-clean thing again, poof! it's gone). That  
and one other very small speck are the only dust marks I've found ...  
not bad for an f/11 aperture setting, given I was in a big lens swap  
mood yesterday and kept swapping back and forth between four lenses  
between almost every other shot!

(This morning's outing was very different ... I did fifty-two  
exposures all with the DA21...)

thanks again
Godfrey

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