On 1/12/04, Juey Chong Ong, discombobulated, unleashed:
Would it work if you cover the windows with sheets of warming filters?
Yes that is done in movie-making but carrying those size gels is
expensive and I'm only shooting news ;-)
Cheers,
Cotty
___/\__
|| (O) | People, Places,
It would work. To me, it wouldn't be worth the effort or the expense.
Plus, you would lose the contrast of warm and cold.
Paul
On Dec 1, 2004, at 11:52 PM, Juey Chong Ong wrote:
Cotty,
Would it work if you cover the windows with sheets of warming filters?
--jc
On Nov 27, 2004, at 4:26 AM, Cotty
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 23:02:08 -0500, Paul Stenquist
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
from the basement and working furiously to decorate the Christmas tree.
That's somewhat of a tradition around here. My part of the job was to
go
yes, too early, first it is Sinterklaas on 5 Dec, from 6 Dec the Christmas
decoration can come out.
On Wednesday 01 December 2004 05:39, Boris Liberman wrote:
FJW Hi!
FJW
FJW PS And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
FJW PS from the basement and working
lovely shot, I agree, the remotes and the gass-gril outside should have been
removed.
On Wednesday 01 December 2004 11:35, Frits Wüthrich wrote:
FJW yes, too early, first it is Sinterklaas on 5 Dec, from 6 Dec the Christmas
decoration can come out.
FJW
FJW On Wednesday 01 December 2004 05:39,
The unfortunate piece of machinery outside the window is a barbecue
grill. The remotes just sort of live there on the coffee table :-).
You're right, of course. I should have arranged things. But this was
just a playing around grab shot. When I saw that it worked out nicely,
I decided to share
We decorate early because my children come home for Thanksgiving
weekend (which was this past weekend), but they won't be back again
until Christmas. As far as the tree lasting, I've found that if we make
sure to keep it watered, it will survive until New Years in fairly good
shape. Remember,
Cotty,
Would it work if you cover the windows with sheets of warming filters?
--jc
On Nov 27, 2004, at 4:26 AM, Cotty wrote:
Interesting. You have come across a classic mixed lighting situation
and
balanced the picture entirely for tungsten. I daily shoot pics for the
news in such scenarios
Hi!
PS And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
PS from the basement and working furiously to decorate the Christmas tree.
PS That's somewhat of a tradition around here. My part of the job was to
PS go out and buy a tree this morning. I opted for a long needle
what do you think?
Shel
[Original Message]
From: Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 11/27/2004 10:42:49 AM
Subject: Bill's Layer Fix (Was Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after
Thanksgiving)
I tried Bill Robb's suggested layer fix. It's here:
http://www.photo.net
PS that I did following Bill's suggestion. I think the ultimate fix is
PS going to be to shoot it when it's dark outside :-)
Hi Paul, the ultimate fix would be probably doing it movie-style:
either buy few rolls of LEE colour-correction foil to put behind the
windows, or just wrap each small
Too much fix :-).
On Nov 27, 2004, at 6:59 AM, Frantisek wrote:
PS that I did following Bill's suggestion. I think the ultimate fix is
PS going to be to shoot it when it's dark outside :-)
Hi Paul, the ultimate fix would be probably doing it movie-style:
either buy few rolls of LEE
On 26/11/04, Paul Stenquist, discombobulated, unleashed:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
from the basement and working furiously to decorate the Christmas tree.
That's somewhat of a tradition around here. My part of the job was to
go out and buy a tree
Thanks to al who commented. I figured a bit of holiday cheer was just
the thing for a slow list day.
Paul
On Nov 27, 2004, at 1:54 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Quoting Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up
boxes
from the basement and
Nice touch Paul, even if a bit early.
Being Jewish, we never had a tree. But the kids had a great time at
my folks house putting up their tree. My folks didn't mind either.
They are good memories!
Regards, Bob S.
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 23:27:37 -0500, Paul Stenquist
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Peter J. Alling
Subject: Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after Thanksgiving
Looks like something painted by a Norman Rockwell imitator. (Not a
criticism, too warm for a usual Rockwell, and no people).
It would make a nice card.
Rockwell would have ditched
- Original Message -
From: Cotty
Subject: Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after Thanksgiving
For stills, I would have balanced for daylight and used flash,
keeping
the domestic lighting from being obliterated as much as possible -
I
appreciate you probably shot RAW
Take the Raw file
this for stock without the chairs and small table.
But rather than layer it, I'll probably wait until it's a bit darker.
That way I won't have to move the grill g.
Paul
On Nov 27, 2004, at 12:32 PM, William Robb wrote:
- Original Message - From: Cotty
Subject: Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after
until it's a bit darker. That way I won't have to move
the grill g.
Paul
On Nov 27, 2004, at 12:32 PM, William Robb wrote:
- Original Message - From: Cotty
Subject: Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after Thanksgiving
For stills, I would have balanced for daylight and used flash,
keeping
On Sat, Nov 27, 2004 at 11:32:51AM -0600, William Robb wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Cotty
Subject: Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after Thanksgiving
For stills, I would have balanced for daylight and used flash,
keeping
the domestic lighting from being obliterated
: 11/27/2004 10:42:49 AM
Subject: Bill's Layer Fix (Was Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after
Thanksgiving)
I tried Bill Robb's suggested layer fix. It's here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2914383size=lg
The original is here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2912959size
On 27 Nov 2004 at 11:32, Shel Belinkoff wrote:
Hi Paul I couldn't help myself. Just had to jump in here:
http://home.earthlink.net/~my-pics/pauls-tree.jpg
The problem with this method is that you still have to deal with the original
tungsten colour temperature conversion so
(Was Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after
Thanksgiving)
I tried Bill Robb's suggested layer fix. It's here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2914383size=lg
The original is here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2912959size=lg
I prefer it with Bill's fix. It's still sufficiently
On 27/11/04, William Robb, discombobulated, unleashed:
Take the Raw file, adjust the white balance for tungsten (for the
interior).
Open it again, and adjust the white balance for daylight (for the
exterior).
Overlay them as seperate layers, erase the offending parts (I'd put
the ouside layer
Sure, when working in RAW there are other options, but, alas, all I had was
the already modified JPEG :-(((
Shel (pouting and feeling woefully inadequate LOL)
[Original Message]
From: Rob Studdert [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 27 Nov 2004 at 11:32, Shel Belinkoff wrote:
Hi Paul I couldn't
PROTECTED]
Date: 11/27/2004 10:42:49 AM
Subject: Bill's Layer Fix (Was Re: PESO: 'Twas the day after
Thanksgiving)
I tried Bill Robb's suggested layer fix. It's here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2914383size=lg
The original is here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo
'tis the season for jolly and merry Christmas pictures. Nice tree, Paul
... y'know, I never had a Christmas tree, never decorated anything for the
holidays. I think you gentiles have the right idea. Sometimes the Jews are
just to friggin' serious. But tell me, isn't putting a tree up the day
Very nice, warm and comfy looking!
Happy holidays!
keith whaley
Paul Stenquist wrote:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
from the basement and working furiously to decorate the Christmas tree.
That's somewhat of a tradition around here. My part of the job was
We used to wait with the tree until mid December or so. But now that
the children are grown, they're only here on Thanksgiving and won't be
back until 'Christmas. So Thanksgiving has become tree time. A tree is
best when it's a family thing. I have some Jewish friends who do
Chanukah trees
Paul Stenquist wrote:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
from the basement and working furiously to decorate the Christmas tree.
That's somewhat of a tradition around here. My part of the job was to
go out and buy a tree this morning. I opted for a long
Scrooge, it's never too early for Christmas. But seriously, it is
pushing it just a bit. (Then again the Seasonal
section of the local chain drugstore was set up with Christmass
decorations on Oct 21st or thereabouts).
Shel Belinkoff wrote:
'tis the season for jolly and merry Christmas
Looks like something painted by a Norman Rockwell imitator. (Not a
criticism, too warm for a usual Rockwell, and no people).
It would make a nice card.
Paul Stenquist wrote:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up
boxes from the basement and working furiously to
Quoting Paul Stenquist [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
And all through the house, my wife and daughters were dragging up boxes
from the basement and working furiously to decorate the Christmas tree.
That's somewhat of a tradition around here. My part of the job was to
go out and buy a tree this
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