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© ©J.A. (Tony) Hadley Photography 2016

Old Montreal - McGill Ave - Montreal


thadley

Exposure Date: 2016:04:30 22:14:31;
Copyright: Copyright J.A. (Tony) Hadley Photography;
Make: NIKON CORPORATION;
Model: NIKON D810;
Exposure Time: 0.04 s;
FNumber: f/5;
ISOSpeedRatings: ISO 1250;
ExposureProgram: Aperture priority;
ExposureBiasValue: -2
MeteringMode: Pattern;
Flash: Flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode;
FocalLength: 29 mm;
FocalLengthIn35mmFilm: 29 mm;
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows;

Copyright

© ©J.A. (Tony) Hadley Photography 2016

From the category:

Architecture

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A very good night image Tony, The lights on the building are great. I understand the vertical composition but would like it a bit wider anyway, it feels a little shunted on the right side. No matter a fine image regardless.

Best Always, Holger

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Very accurate depiction of a night-time scene. No weird colors, blinding hot-spots, or blur. Well done... 

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Tony,  Nice image.  this makes me think of our time together in Montreal last summer that we appreciated so much.  Capturing buildings without having them look tilted is tough.  Have any tricks in this regard?  The new perspective warp in PS CC is supposed to do wonders, but i haven't come close to mastering how to use it.   Larry

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Holger, Mike, Eyestein, Harry (have not heard from you in quite a while - welcome back),

Landrum (you sent me scurrying to the dictionary), Patsy (love your recent yellow images), Joscelyn (hoping to see some new images),

 

Larry(I enjoyed our driving around Montreal also. Taking buildings is not really my area of expertise so I offer what little I know: keep you camera level, if not desirable, then use the distortion to your artistic advantage. If tilting the camera leave good space around the the main building in your image because 'un-distorting' software  will crop some edges. Failing that, get a tilt lens which is quite pricey and you can avoid the distortion even if you tilt the camera. I watched a tutorial on Lightroom 5 and it shows that if you go to Lens Correction/basic, it will level and un-distort automatically for you but it has its limitations. I am sure someone else can offer more).  

 

I was at a birthday party at a restaurant immediately to the right and the service was very slow so I decided to step out and take some shots. I braced my camera against a flat surface and vertical post and boosted the ISO a bit.  

 

All the very best,

 

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