Have you looked at Ken's bumper! I don't take the time to photoshop it clean every time!but if you look at the front bumper of Ken's car, it looks like a bad paper scan.

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Have you looked at Ken's bumper! I don't take the time to photoshop it clean every time!but if you look at the front bumper of Ken's car, it looks like a bad paper scan.
I agree ... Really long lenses and low angles do make things Epic !I don't mean to slight our other photographers, but these pics have a pretty epic quality to them and are instantly my favorites.
Don't get me wrong Mako, your shots are really good too (I know I've paid for them at least a couple times!), and I think you do an especially good job of capturing the atmosphere of the moment in people's expressions. I also enjoyed Palero's captioned series of photos from the Tour.Mako Koiwai wrote:I agree ... Really long lenses and low angles do make things Epic !I don't mean to slight our other photographers, but these pics have a pretty epic quality to them and are instantly my favorites.
I started to shoot wider because I had people telling me they wanted a sense of Place.
That was EXACTLY what I like to do ... until I started to get other types of request. Like using slower shutter speeds that showed more blur = speed.But for me, what I'm always hoping to find in pics, is information and feedback that tells me how well the car is working with the setup I've given it. Jeff's pics caught the car in highly loaded moments
I used to do a fair amount of astrophotography which really tends to bring out the technical optical details. Stars are perfect lens testers because they are point sources of light that have a virtually zero angular size against a perfectly black background.Jeff Shyu wrote:very interesting read on the diffraction photography though.. makes a lotta sense, just not something i had come up against until now..
those rigs are really expensive.. >_<Will Kalman wrote:I used to do a fair amount of astrophotography which really tends to bring out the technical optical details. Stars are perfect lens testers because they are point sources of light that have a virtually zero angular size against a perfectly black background.Jeff Shyu wrote:very interesting read on the diffraction photography though.. makes a lotta sense, just not something i had come up against until now..