
Helpful Posts:
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2nd November 2011, 07:07 PM
#1
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2nd November 2011, 07:25 PM
#2
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
Nice action shots. I like the last one best - the water sweeper make it I think.
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2nd November 2011, 08:00 PM
#3
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
Yes, I think it looks as though he is desperately paddling to get out of the way.
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2nd November 2011, 08:21 PM
#4
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Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
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2nd November 2011, 11:05 PM
#5
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
#2 looks like it is sinking, got Jesus in #3, and I like #1 the best. All are good though.
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3rd November 2011, 04:19 PM
#6
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
Thanks for the comments.
Tonight, I have to present these, plus a few different scenes from around the Fish Quay, so our local fishing organisation can decide which one they want on their Christmas Cards this year.
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3rd November 2011, 04:44 PM
#7
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
The rocks in the background of #4 helps alot. Alot of times, you see a blah sky in the background and it pushes the whole thing towards blah.
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3rd November 2011, 06:27 PM
#8
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
Nice sharp photos. 2 and 3 could benefit from a levels and curves adjustment to give you a little more contrast.
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3rd November 2011, 08:45 PM
#9
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
SLR Gear.com reader reviews has very good things to say about this Sigma 150-500mm lens. Have you ever used this lens on a monopod or a shoulder stock set up? At 4.2 lbs it might be a bit heavy when coupled to eos 50D for handheld use. Shooting moving objects from a limited position usually makes for challenging composition & longer zoom ranges further compresses that vista. I like image 1 for it's "classic" post card appearance while image 4 has more unique appeal, especially with the nearby paddle board person adding to its interest.
Last edited by elfbob; 3rd November 2011 at 08:52 PM.
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3rd November 2011, 11:31 PM
#10
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
Robert. I have found the OS stabilisation on this lens to be surprisingly good and have taken quite acceptable hand held shots at 500 mm. But I wouldn't trust it below 1/500. Sometimes I do close up the legs of my tripod, when in confined spaces, so it virtually becomes a monopod.
Mark, The trouble with images 2 & 3 is that they were shot a little too close to the sun angle, which was all I could do, and were rather 'washed out'. They have had quite a bit of adjustment, first with Raw conversion then several adjustment layers (with edited masks).
At the current level of adjustment, they are just beginning to get a bit noisy so I have stopped at this point. Further editing seemed to be getting counter productive and was starting to appear harsh and unnatural.
In an ideal world, I would have been able to shoot at a different angle, like the other two shots.
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4th November 2011, 12:09 AM
#11
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
That is too bad about 2 and 3, I feel these do the best of showing the scale of the seas. The second with the boat riding up the back of a swell, and the third with the swell just in front of the boat. I like number 1 for classic appeal, the whitecaps in the background maintain the "rough" sea appearance without the drama from 2 and 3. 4 is a good shot, I like the pedestrian, and had to do a double take when I saw it
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Its good of you to take photos of these boats for the people who work on them, its kind of hard to get photo's of your boat actually working while you're working on it.
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4th November 2011, 07:49 PM
#12
Re: Fishing boats entering harbour in a rough sea
Thanks, Mike. I did notice the guy on the paddle board ahead of the boat and waited for everything to get in a suitable position before clicking my shutter. I took another shot of him just astern of the boat, but it didn't quite have the same impact.
Just out of interest, here is the original from #2

Possibly, an Adjustment Layer with Blend Mode set to Soft Light at around 30% opacity may give it a little bit of added zip as a final piece of editing; but I fear that too much 'enhancement' could easily spoil the scene.
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