The ghost of th efireworks that can be seen in the 2nd one kinda bugged me.... any idea where could this be from?
Tamron 24-70/2.8 - Pentax KX
If you can't fix it with a hammer... you got an electrical problem
even duct tape can't fix stupid.... but it can muffle it (SilentObserver) My Flickr -ipernity
Thanks CE Nelson
If you can't fix it with a hammer... you got an electrical problem
even duct tape can't fix stupid.... but it can muffle it (SilentObserver) My Flickr -ipernity
Thanks CE Nelson
Thanks! That particular one was 5 and a half seconds. I used a cable release and mostly timed the shutter open time to capture the parts I wanted of the burst. As a result, the shutter open times varied from less than a second all the way to 5-6 seconds. That one was longer because I was trying to capture a multi-burst pattern over a few seconds. Most were in the 2-3 second range.
I left in the EXIF data, so the shutter times appear on the Flickr pages for any you're curious about.
I wasn't close enough to get any detailed pictures on the night of Canada's national day, July 1st. Instead, I was perched about two miles west of the fireworks. This was taken with the Fuji X100 on the top rail of a chain-link fence, with its shutter held open for ten seconds.
(I like how the street light mimicked the fireworks.)
Ha -- looks like a very peculiar streetlight itself. The panoramic format works well here, with all the leading lines taking you to the "streetlights".
i just read about a Redneck ,who ,slightly intoxicated ,decided it to balance a fire works mortar tube on his head fill it with gun powder and launch a fireworks shell.at this point Physics decides to make an apperance as the mortar apparently had a weak or non-existent plug.
blew his mind.and vaporised his head.
Sharpness is a bourgeois concept ~ Cartier-Bresson