At 6:21 AM +0100 2005.07.22, Chris Barker wrote:
>There are some lovely photos there Andrew.
Thanks!
> The colour in the one
>with the paper "dragon" is glorious against the fog;
Early morning light and luminous colours -- IMHO the 28/3.5 and Provia 100
work very well here.
>the old house
>boat with the single person fishing is beautifully coloured and
>composed;
This is a very early morning photograph on the banks of the Yellow River
near Jinan, Shandong Province -- I persuaded a taxi driver to give me a
two hour tour at 545am. The morning light, filtered by an enormous layer of
fog (the sun couldn't be seen, and visibility was less than 1km), and influenced
by the river itself, was very soft and with a definite yellowish cast. I
like this one because it captures the light well. Taken with an old 55/1.2
(number 1 is an attempt to use this as a closeup lens, almost wide open).
>there is reportage in the one of the 2 ladies conversing in
>front of the children's frame (and what are the adults doing at the
>frame?);
These are the exercise rituals that one sees everywhere in China in the
early morning -- tai chi, dancing, and so on. In crowded cities, it's the
best time of the day.
> and I like the one of the couples dancing.
Shanghai, early morning on the Bund (as is number 7).
> By the way,
>number 4 has not stretched to fill its frame on the web page.
That's odd. These were done a while ago with a combination of Unix
shell scripts, ImageMagick programs, and igal -- must have been a hiccup
somewhere.
regards
Andrew
>
>
>On 21 Jul 2005, at 11:40, Andrew L Wendelborn wrote:
>
>
> >
>> An example of its use is the last in the series at
>>
> > http://www.cs.adelaide.edu.au/users/andrew/photos/chinatmp/
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