Land of the Long White Cloud, which disappears so quickly, and surprisingly as it happens. Days after are full of rain and very long waiting on the decisive and non-repeatable moment, for which I proceed step by step (I really do not now how many times I did it) through the night jungle over thousand meters elevation with 25 kilos of my equipment on my back.
He started photographing in December 2000 in East Africa, beginning the body of work that is his signature subject matter and style. He no longer directs, devoting himself full time to his fine art photography now.
- Probably more important to get right than aperture is shutter speed. Fireworks move and as a result the best photographs of them capture this movement meaning you need a nice long exposure. The technique that I developed when I first photographed fireworks was to shoot in ‘bulb’ mode. This is a mode that allows you to keep the shutter open for as long as you hold down the shutter (preferably using a remote shutter release of some type). Using this technique you hit the shutter as the firework is about to explode and hold it down until it’s finished exploding (generally a few seconds).
Every two months, we'll award a Denali 8x42 or 10x42 PC binocular to the person who submits the Photo of the Week we like the most. We'll announce the winners in the magazine. Then, at the end of the year, we'll give a Denali 60mm spotting scope and Radian tripod to the bimonthly winner that our judges deem the best.
Never seen these before----must be somebody 's private pictures they saved all this time.
These pic's are so clear....very sad....but, good that we can see them......
THE FELLOW WHO SENT THESE RECEIVED THEM FROM AN OLD SHIPMATE ON THE USS QUAPAW
ATF-11O. INTERESTING AS HE'S NEVER SEEN THEM ANYWHERE ELSE.
I THINK THEY'RE SPECTACULAR.
PEARL HARBOR December 7th, 1941