Well said, Cotty!
(I suspect, BTW, that this post is longer than all of
your other 2006 posts combined!)
Merry (or Happy, in British!) Christmas!
Rick
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote, with
uncharacteristic volubility:
I don't so much find it as confusing, just that I do
not want plastic
Well, if things are tight, the word comes out
HOOYA...
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I believe Hoya is the word shouted when the
endoscope enters.
Mark!!
Getting a bit tight for this year
--
Cheers,
Cotty
___/\__
|| (O) |
Godfrey,
Nice, but it's either a bit too straight or a bit too
crooked.
Happy Holidays,
Rick
--- Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A classic sunset scene in Green River, Wyoming ...
http://homepage.mac.com/ramarren/photo/PAW6/44.htm
Comments, critique appreciated; flames
Scott,
Inexpensive hotels that lack bedbugs, thugs, or
practitioners of the world's oldest profession do not
exist in Manhattan.
We have stayed at The Milburn, which is in the 80s
near Broadway, in a pleasant neighborhood about a 5
minute walk to Central Park and a 10 min walk to the
Natural
As will I.
Rick
--- Tom Reese [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Tom Reese and Susan Wilson will be there again
-- Original message
--
From: Walter Hamler [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Count me in. Now my wife says she will go. Also
looks like her sister has
found us a
That's the one.
I bought one and a 24-90 at the same time a few years
ago, and shot one roll of slides with each (remember
slides???). The 24-90 was clearly better in contrast,
sharpness, and light fall-off (not to mention the
extra 4mm at the wide end), so I returned the 28-70.
Rick
--- David
I haven't chimed in yet, largely because my chosen
occupation has kept me really busy lately (there are
570-odd unread PDML messages in my mailbox, too!).
I'm a physician, specifically a pediatrician, and
still more specifically a pediatric oncologist. Yeah,
I know, what a drag--a friend and
Well, I disagree with Dave. The lens is still quite
fishy at 17mm, and if you look at the curvature in
the buildings, trees, and road in the second pic, you
can see it easily.
It's a great lens. I enjoyed the 17-28 so much on my
(P)Z-1p that I asked for the 10-17 for my birthday,
and got it.
Me too, and I don't know why either.
Rick
--- David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I like it. Can't say why exactly, but I do.
Cheers,
Dave
On 1/5/07, Ralf R. Radermacher [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
http://www.fotocommunity.de/pc/pc/mypics/770012
As always, your comments and
Ordinarily, I would be taking (and posting)
winter-type photos now. However, it reached 72F/ 22C
in Philadelphia today, the rosebush next door is in
bloom, and it's not wintry at all.
So, I've returned to my collection of pix from our
trip to Germany this fall, for this shot taken on a
cold,
not attractive.
Rick
--- Rick Womer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ordinarily, I would be taking (and posting)
winter-type photos now. However, it reached 72F/
22C
in Philadelphia today, the rosebush next door is in
bloom, and it's not wintry at all.
So, I've returned to my collection of pix
Subash,
It's a very nice pic, and surprising. One doesn't
think of rounded hills in the Himalayas, but there
they are, amid the jagged peaks.
Rick
--- SJ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi,
on a ride through the himalayas/ladakh in india on
our motorcycles last
july, after a particularly hard
Another from the fall trip to Germany. A large
castle, beautifully restored, looms over the small
central German town of Wernigerode. This is a shot of
one of the gates one passes through (going steeply
uphill) to enter the castle grounds.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5425089
Why do I like this shot? Hmmm...Maybe it's the irony
of finding concrete pillars standing where one expects
trees to be standing. Compositonally, the pillar 2/3
of the way to the right is a bit of a problem.
Rick
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Taken on a morning walk yesterday.
I really like the first one. Our kids are 18 and
22, both in college.
Rick
--- Charles Robinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Found this gem while scanning an old roll of film.
Rather than cherry-picking the good shots, I'm
scanning every frame
when I pull out an old roll. Takes a while,
Sorry, Ken, it doesn't do anything for me. Apart from
there not being leaves on the trees, it doesn't look
particularly wintry.
Rick
--- Kenneth Waller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Check out
http://mypeoplepc.com/members/kwaller/offwallphoto/id2.html
Seney NWP, Upper Peninsula of Michigan
I'm ignoring the apparently endless American Fence
thread, too.
And, I really like the pic. The wide variety of
colors of light are fascinating, and the composition
and mood are great.
Rick
--- Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am still behind getting the rest of the 2006 weeks
)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rick
Womer
Sent: 8. januar 2007 04:31
To: pdml@pdml.net
Subject: PESO: Wernigerode Castle Gate
Another from the fall trip to Germany. A large
castle, beautifully restored, looms over the small
central
I like it--but what is it??
Rick
--- Tom C [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5435439
Tom C.
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
http://www.photo.net/photos/RickW
Nice, but not lovely, as the original image is. The
color adds a lot to this shot.
Rick
--- Mike Hamilton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've been lacking inspiration or motivation these
days, and so I am
trying to re-work older images. Also trying to
improve my BW
conversions.
Tell me what
John,
Showtags.exe isn't as easy as you describe, at least
for me.
I downloaded the file (HP computer running XP), usede
run from the start menu to enter the program's
location and the photo's location, and a black
rectangle flashed on my screen with scrolling text for
about 1/5second--that was
Thanks for the replies.
However, I know nothing of DOS commands, and have no
desire to learn them.
I also do not know what the Windows root directory
is. Is that the C drive? Assuming so, I put
showtags.exe and the image file there, and used run
from the Start menu, with filename.out added to
Oddly, the K10D compresses the PEF files but not the
DNG files.
My ist D produces ~13 MB PEFs. My workflow is to put
the card in a card reader, and import pix onto the
home Mac as (losslessly) compressed DNGs using Adobe
DNG Convertor. Those DNGs are 5-6 MB.
Rick
--- Mike Hamilton [EMAIL
The last apples of the season, at the local farmer's
market in mid-December.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5458065
ist D, FA 16-45, ISO 200, 1/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/8, RAW, minor
adjustments in PE4.
Comments most welcome.
Rick
http://www.photo.net/photos/RickW
It's easy--I don't have a K10D yet!
--- David J Brooks [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How are you opening PEF files. My dng converter on
the ibook is the
newest, but won't recognise them.
Dave
Quoting Rick Womer [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Oddly, the K10D compresses the PEF files
One and four are my favorites. Ice storms are
beautiful to photograph but a pain to live with!
Apparently you have power, though...
Rick
--- Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We had an ice storm in Michigan today. Shot some
pics this morning and
again this afternoon. The first is
One and four are my favorites. Ice storms are
beautiful to photograph but a pain to live with!
Apparently you have power, though...
Rick
--- Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We had an ice storm in Michigan today. Shot some
pics this morning and
again this afternoon. The first is
Rick Womer wrote:
The last apples of the season, at the local
farmer's
market in mid-December.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5458065
ist D, FA 16-45, ISO 200, 1/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/8, RAW, minor
adjustments in PE4.
Comments most welcome.
Rick
http
Lovely, moody shot. It might work a little better if
the plane of focus was at the bent fence spike,
though.
Rick
--- Ed Keeney [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://picasaweb.google.com/ewkphoto/PentaxK100DPicturesAlmostDailyJanuary2007/photo#502047314964050
Could be my best with the K100d
I emailed Jostein off-list (he's inundated at work,
and not reading the list lately).
He replied that he expects to have the submission form
working again later today (Tuesday).
Rick
http://www.photo.net/photos/RickW
I'm just getting around to looking at photos I took
last fall. I went to Los Angeles on business, and had
a Saturday afternoon to walk around downtown and
shoot.
Downtown LA has =lots= of public art, and on a
Saturday afternoon it is utterly empty. Weird for
northeastern US (or European) types,
If you check film, it's dead. Not just fogged--big
exposed stripes from the scanning Xray.
Make room in your carry-on!
Rick
--- Norm Baugher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm taking a vacation to Italy next week. I'm taking
a lot of film
(before it dies completely) and am actually checking
Congratulations! The photo is very nice, too.
My son has an Optio W20, and likes it a lot. Very
sharp, remarkably flare-resistant lens, build quality
just shy of a hockey puck. The LCD could be easier to
see in sunlight, though, and there is no viewfinder.
Overall, he's -very- happy with it.
10m bigger, I
could have had the perfect composition!
Rick
--- Boris Liberman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rick,
Rick Womer wrote:
Hence this shot, with the art unobstructed by
humans:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5465563
ist D, FA 10-17 fisheye, ISO 400, f/8 @ 1/1000
Scott,
Wow!
I was actually planning to email you this weekend and
ask if all was well, because you haven't posted many
photos lately. I'm looking forward to your new
shooting.
The kind of public-contact job you had is very wearing
(I've had them, too). Have fun with your new job!
I sure hope
Mark,
Methinks it needs a wider tonal range.
Rick
--- Mark Roberts [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've tried color and b/w versions of this one. Not
completely happy
with either yet...
http://www.robertstech.com/temp/oldtree.jpg
K10D, 77 Ltd, ISO 400
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
A bit late, perhaps, but anyway:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5458277
This is a photo of the same picturesque porch in
Westchester NY that was the subject of an autumn PESO:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5242404
ist D, DA 16-45, ISO 3200, f/4 @ 1/20, RAW via ACR
It's no accident that equipment failures occur when
the equipment is needed most. Most modern devices
incorporate a USD (User Stress Detector) chip. These
sophisticated devices use the day of the week, hour,
and secret biometric measurements (such as how hard
one hits the buttons) to detect the
Very cute girl, beautiful lighting, nicely defocused
background. I like it!
Rick
--- Scott Loveless [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Taken over the weekend. K100D, 18-55 at 43mm,
ISO800, f4.5. Auto
contrast, levels, color correction, a little unsharp
mask, and save
for web. Any feedback is
I don't get it (the photo, I mean. But it's been a
long day.
Rick
--- DagT [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Tired of fencing, close the door please .-)
http://foto.no/cgi-bin/bildekritikk/vis_bilde.cgi?id=283279
DagT
http://www.thrane.cc
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
Very nice. I've always been a sucker for photos with
lines of objects in them!
Also, you must live in a very orderly place--all the
bins are the same!
Finally, a quibble--garbage is food waste. It must
have been trash day!
Rick
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Taken on my walk
I find the backgrounds of nos. 2 and 3 a bit
distracting. Otherwise, nice!
Rick
--- Adam Maas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.mawz.ca/sets/deadheads/index.html
Trying out the Autoviewer software that Godfrey used
for his recent
GESO, and quite liking it.
-Adam
--
PDML
Here in Philly, until the mid-70's, there were
separate collection days for garbage and trash. The
garbage was collected under contract by pig farmers;
the trash was collected by city sanitation trucks.
Now they're all collected together by the city, and
the elimination of garbage from pig diets
Beautiful!
Rick
--- Tom C [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Skiing last Saturday at Bogus Basin, it was snowy up
top.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5503907
Tom C.
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
Godfrey,
For me, the stone wall divides the picture too much.
Could you please go back and re-shoot the pic with the
wall more in the foreground? And please have a pint
of real ale for me, while you're at it!
Rick
--- Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A chill, damp morning on the
Roman,
I agree with Tim. I find the rollovers a pain: the
expanded pic goes beyond the bottom of the screen on
my laptop, and when I try to scroll the cursor leaves
the thumbnail and the large pic disappears.
Rick
--- Tim Øsleby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As many has said. You really need to
Evan,
If you have a USB 2 connection on your computer and a
USB 2 card reader, there is no reason to use the cable
from the camera--unless you like s-l-o-o-o-w transfers
(45 min to 1 h for a 2 gig card full of pix) and
running the camera's battery down.
Rick
--- Evan Hanson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Welcome, Corey, and very nice pic!
A scary cautionary question to other list members for
your benefit: Didn't Tanya have a Sears lens that had
to be cut off her ist D a couple of years ago? Or was
it a Ricoh lens?
Rick
--- Corey Leopold [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello everyone,
I'm new to
Brian,
In the autofocus era, I doubt that many (if any)
zooms are true ol'-fashun focus-preserving
zooms--they all seem to be variable focal length
lenses.
That's certainly true of the lenses I can afford,
anyway (including the fairly pricey 24-90, 16-45, and
10-17). Don't know about the
A bit of a departure for me, this shot. A week or so
ago, on another Sunday afternoon with dim, utterly
flat light outside, I felt desperate to click the
shutter on my ist D. This superball was lying around,
so I played with it (photographically) for a while.
This shot was taken on the dining
I like the second one; the first one doesn't excite
me.
Rick
--- Roman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://roman.blakout.net/?blog=20070128164314
--
new photos ever so often...
http://roman.blakout.net/
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
I live a mile from Penn. Where are you?
Rick
--- J [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Are there any Pentax users in the Philadelphia area
that have a K10d
or an Ist D that I could talk with and maybe see the
cameras...As
list members know from my last posts, that I have a
lot of high end
This is another shot from my Los Angeles trip last
fall, taken on a Saturday afternoon in the lobby of
the Hyatt in downtown LA. All the shops were closed
(there and downtown), and though I waited for perhaps
15 minutes, nobody walked into the frame to enliven
the composition. I still like it.
Speaking of whom, where =is= Frank these days???
--- Christian [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Digital Image Studio wrote:
I did catch a pedestrian who was knocked over by a
bike courier
crossing one of the cities busiest pedestrian
light controlled
crossing some years back, of course the
El Capitan on a bad hair day?
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This is a broken off tree stump. The lighting,
coloring of the wood
and the sky as background cause it to look sort of
like a mountain or
something. I'm not even sure how appealing it is,
but it is rather
Odd--other peoples' gmail posts are going through
fine.
--- David J Brooks [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Back to Horde Mail i quess. My threads and replies
to threads all seem
to get to Gmail, but they don't show up on the
archives, the digest,
or this Horde mail i left open to check.
I
Dave,
I'll be flying in to Charlotte about midday on Friday,
and driving up; leaving for Charlotte again early
afternoon Sunday. What time is your flight? I'd love
to have company for the drive.
Rick
--- David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
G'day Trendsetters,
A quick question for those
I appear to have missed something. Does the updated
firmware lack the calibration mode?
--- William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Tom C
Subject: RE: K10 Debug Mode
Interesting. Nice that it's adjustable, sad that
it comes that way... out
of
It looks like a fun occasion, and the pix are great.
Wish I'd been there!
Rick
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As promised, a short gallery of pics from a street
celebration of one
thousand years of Oxford. 'Luminox' consisted of a
variety of fire
sculptures and displays located down
I suspect that it made him look too much like a
suicide bomber, leading to harrassment by Law
Enforcement Professionals.
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 19/3/07, Nick Wright, discombobulated, unleashed:
I did. Just recently sold it. It's a very very good
product.
What can I tell
Peter,
I prefer the original. The new shot contains too many
elements (like the shed) that distract from the, ummm,
characterful building.
Rick
--- P. J. Alling [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not sure it was worth revisiting but I decided to
have another go at
this image.
Jay,
I'm told I'm forbidden to view the link.
Rick
--- Jay Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well, I finally have been able to secure a nice long
Pentax telephoto
lens. The FA*250-600mm/f5.6 zoom!
I had been dreaming about the FA*600/4 ever since I
started shooting
birds, but a good
That link works! Very nice. I wonder--does the shake
reduction let you shoot hand-held, or is the lens just
too heavy?
Rick
--- Jay Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Walter Hamler wrote:
Jay, I cannot access the link. All I get is
Forbidden. Strange,
as others
seemingly have been
Shoot moreummmelectrons! That's it!
Electrons!
--- Scott Loveless [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So there I was, shopping cart loaded with a 645N and
a couple of primes, credit card number keyed in,
taking one more glance at everything just to make
sure it was right. All I had
Long time, no PESO; it has been a difficult month.
In the middle of said month we took a short trip to
New York. A few blocks from our hotel was Zabars, the
famous New York gourmet shop. I was wandering about
with my camera an hour past closing time.
Thanks, Ann!
This was taken about 10; I think Zabar's closes at 9.
--- ann sanfedele [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rick Womer wrote:
Long time, no PESO; it has been a difficult month.
In the middle of said month we took a short trip to
New York. A few blocks from our hotel was Zabars
Beautiful shot, Markus. I hate being up that early,
though!
Rick
--- Markus Maurer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Walt
I got a cityscape shot early with some very strange
partly banding at ISO
400! but the shot was heavy underexposed.
I take most of my night city photos with a -2
exposure
Very nice, Cotty, and oh-so-terribly English, don't
you know.
Rick
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Paul's first daff has inspired me to post this pic,
hot off the press.
Our daffs (UK) have been out for over a couple of
weeks now and a good
friend of my neighbour's has lived in this
at a ISO setting higher
than 400 so far and will
try to make some city street shots tomorrow
at ISO 800/1600 as a test if I can stand the
noise... :-)
Greetings
Markus
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rick
Womer
Sent: Wednesday
?
Rick Womer wrote:
Thanks, Ann!
This was taken about 10; I think Zabar's closes at
9.
ann
--- ann sanfedele [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Rick Womer wrote:
Long time, no PESO; it has been a difficult
month.
In the middle of said month we took a short trip
Wandering the nocturnal streets of the upper west side
of Manhattan, this sign interested me.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5782865
ist D, ISO 1600, RAW, DA 16-45, 1/90 @ f/4, via ACR
and PE4.
Applause, jeers, and constructive criticism all
welcome.
Rick
Yeah, and with no sense of humerus.
--- ann sanfedele [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Gee, I'm gone for a while and I come back and see
its the same old thing
everyone has
a bone to pick
ann
David J Brooks wrote:
I thought more roadrunner, speedious maximus.
Beep Beep
Dave
On
Oo la la!
I can't help wanting to pan down a little bit--to see
a little more of that glorious facade and less sky.
But it's a really nice shot, and works very well in
BW.
Rick
--- Mark Roberts [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Chateau Chambord
http://www.robertstech.com/temp/temp.htm
--
Posted a few days ago with no feedback at all. Since
I sulk when I don't get attention, I'm posting it
again:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5782865
Taken on a nocturnal stroll in Manhattan's upper west
side a few weeks ago.
Choose one:
A. So boring that I fell asleep before I
anymore!
Rick
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 30/3/07, Rick Womer, discombobulated, unleashed:
Posted a few days ago with no feedback at all.
Since
I sulk when I don't get attention, I'm posting it
again:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5782865
Taken on a nocturnal
Bruce,
I agree with Jens and Jack.
Rick
--- Jack Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think it needs an anchor of some sort. Just too
homogeneous with no
direction for the eye.
As composed, I feel the foreground should be in
focus.
Jack
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm
Another from our recent trip to New York City. This
is a nocturnal shot through the window of a
vitamin-supplement shop in the Upper West Side. It
amazes me how much merchandise they cram into a small
space in that neighborhood.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5801682
ist D, DA
Yes. It was a program in the living room of an old
Philadelphia mansion. I metered the light beforehand,
and found I could use 1/60th at f/1.7 with P3200 in my
PZ-1p. Then, the organizer decided to turn the lights
down for a better mood...
The next time, I brought along a subtle (but very
Lovely scene, composition, and exposure!
I don't understand why you had to do this as a 30-shot
stitched pano, though; judging from the trees and
grasses, it's not that high a falls.
Also, why is your Photobucket name Sherman?
Rick
P.S. I've read you're having a drought. Did you
remember to
Not at all, Boris!
--- Boris Liberman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hope you don't mind my honest brutality.
Boris
Rick Womer wrote:
Posted a few days ago with no feedback at all.
Since
I sulk when I don't get attention, I'm posting it
again:
http://www.photo.net/photodb
Maybe I should try going in there with my fisheye...
Thanks, Bruce!
Rick
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For me, this one screams out to be shot much wider -
get real close
and shoot wide to emphasize how crowded it looks.
As presented, it
doesn't seem to portray what you
That's a beautiful, peaceful photo. Someday, you'll
have to come to GFM and bring along a whole stack of
large prints!
Rick
--- Tom C [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5804105
Tom C.
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
Godders, that is great! I played with it similarly
before posting it, but could not get the excellent
results that you did.
I'll have another go at some point...
Thanks!
Rick
--- Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Apr 2, 2007, at 4:55 PM, Rick Womer wrote:
Another from our
Oh, to have that much energy!
Rather soft around the face, Paul.
Rick
--- Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's been a while since I posted a Gracie pic.
Here's one from
yesterday.
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=5805477
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
1) The smallest is on this here 12 in MacBook; there's
also a 17 in iMac and a 15 in HP laptop screen (all
calibrated).
2) Native resolution, in this case 1280 x 800 (others
are about the same).
3) 600 pixels high, 1000 pixels wide. If no title or
border, add 100 pixels.
4) 300 high min, 600
First Scott (shoot more film!) Loveless with his new
K10D, now you with an istD. What's the world coming
to??
Rick
--- frank theriault [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've just acquired a *istD, along with an f3.5-5.6
18-55mm AL.
I'll give you all an hour or two to scrape
yourselves up off the
Those are beautiful, Boris! I wish the vertical ones
were smaller, though, because only 2/3 of the photo
fits on my screen at one time.
Rick
--- Boris Liberman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
To my total amazement (once more, thanks Godfrey ;-)
) working with
LightRoom is really like a
The pic is beautiful, but I really hate all the
scrolling to see the thing!
Rick
--- Boris Liberman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi!
People are starting to post flower pictures. I
thought I might as well.
After all one may claim that Israel is a sun of
eternal summer.
Dave's is good. Another possibility is to crop the
left 60% and the right 20% and make it a vertical.
Rick
--- David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Here's my take:
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/bkd_4666_std_BD_DSv.jpg
Cheers,
Dave
On 4/8/07, Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Typo: crop the left 40 percent. Leave the bird!
Rick
--- David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Here's my take:
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/bkd_4666_std_BD_DSv.jpg
Cheers,
Dave
On 4/8/07, Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
I'm sure I'm going to get some heckling for
Godfrey,
That one crooked tie lifts the shot above cliche. I
like it.
Rick
--- Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Needed to get out of the apartment for a bit and
actually take some
pictures. I was looking for a change, didn't quite
know what to look
for, so I grabbed the two
I like the originals better; they are very nice.
Rick
--- Bob W [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I don't usually muck about much with photos, just
presenting them more
or less as they come straight from the camera.
However, here are a
couple of photos from a reedbed close to my house:
I like it. Is it just a touch soft?
Rick
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This is more of a 'Daytonesque' shot (I think Frank
would say that).
Pentax K10D, Tokina AT-X SD 400/5.6, Handheld
ISO 400, 1/350 sec @ f/8
http://www.daytonphoto.com/PAW/bkd_4690a.htm
Comments
I like this. The tattered web and foreground flowers
separate this from the classical backlit-spider-web
shot.
Rick
--- Bruce Dayton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For Dave - this is a web, the spider is there, but
very small. Taken
in my yard.
Pentax K10D, Tamron 90/2.8 Macro, Tripod
ISO
Okay, Bill, now that you've absorbed the well-deserved
compliments, what the heck =is= it?
Rick
--- William Robb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks Jack, Dave, Fernando, Bruce, Cotty, Boris,Ann
and Mike for looking
and commenting.
William Robb
Great shot. I hope those curtains are flame
retardant...
Rick
--- Brendan MacRae [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Dramatic shot, Toine.
-Brendan
--- Toine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Fire spitter:
http://leende.net/peso/20070409
Toine
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
It sonata good thing...
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Click on the 'In Pictures' link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/6541457.stm
h boy.
--
Cheers,
Cotty
___/\__
|| (O) | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|http://www.cottysnaps.com
...
Rick Womer wrote:
It sonata good thing...
--- Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Click on the 'In Pictures' link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/6541457.stm
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PDML@pdml.net
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo
--- Russell Kerstetter [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
http://www.avocadohead.com/piclinks/IMGP2959.html
There are several types of comments I am looking
for:
1) The typical 'good, bad and ugly' comments as well
as constructive criticism.
Nice in its moody way.
2) Is big enough, or just
Does anybody else have a PowerPC-based G5 iMac that
they have calibrated with a Huey?
What results do you get?
I get peculiar discolored posterized shadows; Pantone
has no idea why. The Huey works wonderfully on our
MacBook.
Rick
http://www.photo.net/photos/RickW
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