victor_wang 0 Posted May 18, 2001 I took this on January 22, 2001 with Nikon F801S and AF24/2.8 lense. It is really cold, but the camera is still working properly except its LCD pannel becomes gray. I used NiMH battery, otherwise the camera can't perform so well. Link to comment
hlaszlo 0 Posted May 19, 2001 Thats quite interesting. Did you used a special filter or this is a Photoshop technique? Link to comment
nature man 0 Posted May 19, 2001 that's a cool lens flare, framing the tree, if you brighten up that blue a tad behind the tree, the tree will stand out better I'm giving it 6's Link to comment
brad_martin 0 Posted May 20, 2001 Well it looks like a poster at the poster sale on campus. Should have the caption "imagine" or something like that. Link to comment
Stock-Photos 1 Posted May 21, 2001 The effect is nice but I would not hang a picture like that on my wall because people would ask to many questions. Link to comment
think27 0 Posted May 22, 2001 It is a beautiful shot. Wish there were more info on how that effect was created or captured.... Would you comment or better yet.. e-mail with info? Link to comment
steve_hendry 0 Posted May 24, 2001 Lovely photo! But how do you use Velvia film in a digital camera?? Link to comment
victor_wang 0 Posted May 24, 2001 It is not done by any digital trick.This is called Sundog, a common phenomenon in cold weather. Similar to rainbow,light reflected by small snow flakes in the air.It is taken in a very cold winter morning, about 28 degree centigrade below zero. I was almost frozen to death.I used Nikon F801S and AF24 and Velvia.I just registered in this forum. since my SLR is not with me at that time, and I only had my IXUS with me, I can only put its serial number in to finish the form. I will add my slr's sn soon.Believe me, the original slide is the same. Link to comment
hlaszlo 0 Posted May 24, 2001 Shocking. Your explanation makes sense. I never seen, but never even heard of such a fenomena. However this doesn't mean that there is no such one. Link to comment
Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now