I was about to compliment you on your great timing, getting the pedestrian and train at just the right moment. Then I read your post.
Good thing it's not a pj shot. ;-) Still a very good photo. Almost wish I didn't know, though. :-) Cheers, frank Mark Roberts <postmas...@robertstech.com> wrote: >I'm just starting to get my photos from my trip to London sorted out. >I did a lot of experimenting with long exposures and/or multiple >exposures (some in-camera and some in Photoshop), both with and >without HDR processes. I'm trying to work time into my photographs >rather than capture a "decisive moment" like HCB. > >This first shot was one that I planned for and which turned out even >better than I'd hoped. I set up in a tube station with the intention >of combining multiple show-shutter-speed shots of the people on the >platform with a train coming into the station. Lacking a tripod, I >braced the camera on something solid (I forget exactly what), zone >focused and waited for people to walk in front of the camera and for a >train to arrive. Unusually and unfortunately there were few people >coming through the station at that time but I did get two shots that I >thought would work well together. I combined both images in Photoshop, >converted to B&W (which took a lot of fiddling with the color sliders >to get looking "just right") and added some noise. Here's the result: > >http://www.robertstech.com/temp/7de01316+19a.jpg > “Analysis kills spontaneity.” -- Henri-Frederic Amiel -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.