Brilliant work mate. And just goes to show that there's always something new somewhere. It just takes a bit of craft and a lot of hard work (which is why you get the shots you do)
The Z7 - bought it and the 24-200 as my dog walking kit. I live in a fairly nice area so its a handy "always with me" sort of set up. But I liked the sound of the 100-400 and a pal has one and loved it so I took the plunge. I still have the 850, Df and about 20 primes but I've been using the Z7...
Looked down on it from An Groban before but never seen it close up. I love the rocks in this area and we're doing the Tollie path in the morning by coincidence.
I wrote an article a couple of years back for Outdoor Photography on older lenses. I think I just called it "Just because its old doesn't mean to say its obsolete". I have a wee bag with the Nikon 28mm f2.8Ais, 50mm f1.2Ais and the 105mm f2.5Ais which I use with my Nikon Df. They just match up...
A picture doesn't need to make sense. You shouldn't need to know where its from or what its of. You don't need to show everyone everything all the time. Sometimes its nice to get the imagination involved. If we all liked exactly the same thing and thought that was the only thing anyone should...
I think the posts are perfectly lined up. They only cut into the fainter reflection whilst the other posts are perfectly placed giving the harder reflections a bit of space. If you'd moved one or the other there would always be a compromise. I think its amongst the best I've seen from there so...
If you don't have to sell then don't. If it won't take you long to save for it then save for it. The 70-200 is a very useful lens. Very.
You can never have too many lenses.
Rather nice. Like the darkness in the presentation and the longer crop which allows the nice light on the left and the lovely low lying mist on the right to get involved as well.
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