1. Field 1; 10.8.2010; 2:06 p.m.; Rexburg, ID; f/8.0; 1/500;
Sony H50; Tripod used
2. Field 2; 10.8.2010; 2:06 p.m.; Rexburg, ID; f/8.0; 1/500;
Sony H50; Tripod used
3. Field 3; 10.8.2010; 2:06 p.m.; Rexburg, ID; f/8.0; 1/500;
Sony H50; Tripod used
4. Field 4; 10.8.2010; 2:06 p.m.; Rexburg, ID; f/8.0; 1/500;
Sony H50; Tripod used
These pictures were hard to take because I took them in the rain, and rain drops kept hitting the camera lens. Luckily, I had a friend with me, and I had him block the rain from the camera. In addition to this, I couldn't get really close to the pivot because I didn't want to go walking in a farmer's field. So, I had to use a lot of zoom. After taking these shots, I merged them together in Photoshop by going to file-automate-photomerge. After merging the photos, I cropped the image in Photoshop and then opened it in Camera Raw. In Camera Raw, I increased the recovery, contrast, clarity, and vibrance.
Again with the clouds! They are so great! All of your photos are so amazing. I also love the color of the fields.
ReplyDeleteWhat an awesome panoramic!! :) Great job! I love the edits you did once it was merged. The sky looks amazing. Awesome job!
ReplyDeleteI love your panoramic! I love being able to see so much of the field and the edit looks good. Good job! :)
ReplyDeleteIt reminds me of "Fields of Gold"...that song. I love the song, and I love your pano. The field really looks gold and beautiful.
ReplyDeleteNice pano, you made a normal brown field look more artistic.
ReplyDelete