We got three inches of rain last night hence, no Harvest Moon shot. Tonight it is crystal clear. Some members in a photo club, www.focusphotoclub.com, I belong to have some super long lenses or lenses with teleconverters where they can get great details of the moon. I don't have but one lens, an 18mm-270mm Tamron, so I figure if you can't join them in detail then go in the opposite direction. At 18mm this is what I got. Also picked up the drapery reflection as well has my hand over the tower in the distance.
Showing posts with label Tamron lens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tamron lens. Show all posts
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Decembers Halfway Scenic Update
I realize that I didn't get the picture taken yesterday but I was laid up in the hospital for a procedure that had me there at 6 AM. I'm retired and had forgotten that there is such a thing as 6 AM. Seven in the winter is tough. That's why my pictures are taken at 8 or very close to it. I figure, no rush to get up when I'm not going out.
Big difference in the days of choice. Yesterday was sunny and today we had ourselves a small snow storm. It made the morning rush hour quite miserable for those that had to get out in it.
The whole intent of these pictures is setting the camera up on the same spot and shooting for the exact same, or as close as I can get with my knowledge of the day, picture for one year. It is to show how the scene out the east end of my house changes over time. Looking back in the archives will let the viewer see the change in color, weather and light. If I was ambitious enough I would probably get up earlier but then it would just be darker in most cases in the winter months.
Currently, if you look back at the 12/1 image you will see the sun coming up in the left hand side of the frame and as we go into the warmer months it will move to the left.
Today I took two shots. One in color but of course the color of snow is white and being such a heavy snow fall the sky is really dark. The snow turns orange with the sodium vapor street lights. The second picture is monochrome. I did this just to see if it looked any colder than the 17 degrees the weather people were reporting.

Canon EOS Rebel XTi, Tamron 18-270mm VC DiII lens.
Shutter 5 sec., Aperture 4.0, ISO 100, Exposure compensation -2, Focal length 35mm, White Balance is Daylight, Manual Focus and Picture Style is Landscape.
Same camera and lens.
Shutter speed 8 sec., Aperture 4.0, ISO 100, Focal length 35mm, shot in manual mode and Picture Style is of course Monochrome.
Big difference in the days of choice. Yesterday was sunny and today we had ourselves a small snow storm. It made the morning rush hour quite miserable for those that had to get out in it.
The whole intent of these pictures is setting the camera up on the same spot and shooting for the exact same, or as close as I can get with my knowledge of the day, picture for one year. It is to show how the scene out the east end of my house changes over time. Looking back in the archives will let the viewer see the change in color, weather and light. If I was ambitious enough I would probably get up earlier but then it would just be darker in most cases in the winter months.
Currently, if you look back at the 12/1 image you will see the sun coming up in the left hand side of the frame and as we go into the warmer months it will move to the left.
Today I took two shots. One in color but of course the color of snow is white and being such a heavy snow fall the sky is really dark. The snow turns orange with the sodium vapor street lights. The second picture is monochrome. I did this just to see if it looked any colder than the 17 degrees the weather people were reporting.

Shutter 5 sec., Aperture 4.0, ISO 100, Exposure compensation -2, Focal length 35mm, White Balance is Daylight, Manual Focus and Picture Style is Landscape.
Same camera and lens.
Shutter speed 8 sec., Aperture 4.0, ISO 100, Focal length 35mm, shot in manual mode and Picture Style is of course Monochrome.
Monday, June 28, 2010
Just About Lost the Camera
Last night we had a storm come through. Wasn't much here but was interesting to see in the distance. With this I got the bright idea to go out on the deck and to try my hand at night/lightning photography. We weren't getting the visible bolts that everyone makes over, no we were getting the ones in the clouds that light the cloud from within. Almost like heat lightning but with the thunder and brighter.
I had my tripod all set up and was just trying to get the camera set for the shots with the correct shutter speed and f stop. I was just experimenting with everything as well as the focal zoom or how much if the sky I wanted to try to capture.
It started to get a little windy so I thought I would take advantage of a lull in the action and pull the umbrella from the stand and lay it on the deck. Just as I got to the table with the umbrella a huge gust of wind came and all I had time to do was turn and see my camera go from an upright postition eight feet from me to fifteen feet from me on another deck level three steps down. Even with the wind and thunder I could hear the camera hit the lower level hard. Maybe it was the camera and not thunder that I heard, or my voice screaming, NOOOOOOOOO!
I went ahead and got the umbrella save and then picked up the camera. The back light screen was still on and I didn't hear any rattling. I tried to manually zoom it in and out and I realized I had problems. I could see hundreds of dollars going down the drain. I took it in where I could see better. I took the lens off the camera and still had problems moving the lens in and out. The camera at this point seemed okay, only the lens was affected.
While giving it a real good slow look over I noticed the focus ring was gapped more on one side than the other. I could only turn it part way in either direction. Figuring I had nothing to loose at this point so I applied some real pressure to the ring on the side with most of the gap and voila, it snapped back into place. I put it back on the camera and took some inside shots. Seemed okay, thought I would try it tonight at sundown.
When I first got the lens it had a "tough" spot when moving it that I was told would go away and it did. Well it's back. I can live with it since I don't do moving focusing like one would do for a video and I hope it too will go away with usage. It does keep the lens from drifting in or out when the camera is pointing up or down.
Killing two birds with one stone here, the following pictures are the same picture. First is the original taken with my Canon Rebel XTi. The lens is a Tamron 18 - 270mm / 3.5-6.3 / 72mm DiII VCD. The second picture is the original doctored with nothing more than the program that came with the camera "Zoom Browser Module". For more intricute detailing I us Gimp 2.6. Works just like Adobe Photoshop without the manuals in your hand. It is a free download on the net. If you need help, it's online.
This set of picture is just to show the zoom of the lens. Kind of an after thought of tonight. Secong picture is zoomed in on the right hand side of the cloud.
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