- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
Tanner Creek, OR, 2011.
All the pixels, none of the nature, at https://www.flickr.com/photos/mattblaze/5892599507/
#photography
Captured on a short hike with a small mirrorless camera, 35mm lens, lightweight tripod, and enough neutral density for a roughly 30 second exposure.
Flowing water is a subject that lends itself to motion studies that reveal what our unaided eye can’t see, controlled by exposure time. At 1/3000 sec, every drop of water freezes in place. At 30 seconds, we see smooth, cloud-like structures that obscure individual perturbations. Only at around 1/30 sec does the camera see what we do.
@[email protected] My best execution of this technique… this was early AM in extremely low light and before I learned about neutral density filters…
@[email protected] Nice!
@[email protected] Thanks… I need to try more water with an ND filter during daytime, like your excellent example. (but of course, need to be hiking alone or with someone who doesn’t mind me futzing around with putting the ND filter on and taking photos for an hour, LOL…)
@[email protected] Oh, totally. I’m a terrible hiking partner when I have a camera with me!
@[email protected] @[email protected]
(Birders can distract themselves indefinitely. )
@[email protected] One of my favorite non-infrastructure pictures of yours.