Photo Contest

You guys are so deep.

Just take a picture of your girlfriend naked and every guy there will vote for it.

OP, no need to thank me, I’m a problem solver.

[quote]pittbulll wrote:
js385787 wrote:
pittbulll wrote:
This is road that runs right into the heart of Superstition Mountains

Nice photo, are you posting it as an example of the kind of pic I should be taking?

I am posting it because I like it and I took it , [/quote]

Not meaning to hi-jack, but nice pic…got anymore like that?

[quote]Cheeky_Kea wrote:
pittbulll wrote:
js385787 wrote:
pittbulll wrote:
This is road that runs right into the heart of Superstition Mountains

Nice photo, are you posting it as an example of the kind of pic I should be taking?

I am posting it because I like it and I took it ,

Not meaning to hi-jack, but nice pic…got anymore like that?

[/quote]

Thanks , I have more ,but that one just turned out right

[quote]Cheeky_Kea wrote:
HG Thrower wrote:
You seem to enjoy shooting landscapes. One basic rule of landscape photography is that you should always shoot within 1 hour of sunrise/sunset.

Should always? no, just mostly is all.

[/quote]

Yeah, but he needs to learn to follow the rules before he should start breaking them. Also, no professional photo editor will even look at a landscape taken mid-day. (or so I’ve heard)

i like 5

[quote]HG Thrower wrote:
Cheeky_Kea wrote:
HG Thrower wrote:
You seem to enjoy shooting landscapes. One basic rule of landscape photography is that you should always shoot within 1 hour of sunrise/sunset.

Should always? no, just mostly is all.

Also, no professional photo editor will even look at a landscape taken mid-day. (or so I’ve heard)[/quote]

Yes this is true, and is what nearly all these shots suffer from (harsh, contrasty mid-day light.)
But my only point was the use of the word always.
You indeed should take advantage of the “golden hour” but to pedantically only shoot then is severely limiting your options.
Some things can look better with an overcast or stormy sky and then it doesn’t matter what time it is because the light will mostly be diffuse in the first case and dramatic in the second.
I include a photo for no other purpose than to prove the point, as it was taken at 12.15pm on an overcast day and has allowed for a nice long shutter speed to blur the water.
It is not supposed to be an amazing landscape, it just shows you can shoot outside the golden hour and still have creative and interesting results.