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Wolter Steenkamp posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Feisty little cub
1/1000 F/5.6 Iso 1000 388mm
I faced some challenges with the photos, as the sun was setting fast and the cub was inside a shrug that increased the shadows and darkness even more. Unfortunately, I had to drop my shutter speed to 1000, otherwise the grain would have killed the photos with a higher ISO.
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Colleen Francis posted in the group Photo Themes
Title: Retail Therapy – Where it all starts
All these brown paper patterns, hanging around, waiting to become something special!
Photo taken with my Nikon D3400. Focal length 27mm, Shutter speed 1/80sec, Aperture f5.6 and ISO 400
#BSides2024
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Colleen Francis posted in the group Photo Themes
Title: Retail Therapy – Hanging Around
Another peek through aretail shop window on 44 Stanley. Love the wooden manikins peering out at the passing trade!
Photo taken with my Nikon D3400. Focal length 29mm, Shutter speed 1/60sec, Aperture f5.6 and ISO 400
#BSides2024
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Colleen Francis posted in the group Photo Themes
Title: Urban Scripture
I spotted this graffiti on a family visit, alongside Hendrik Potgieter Road in Roodepoort. .
Photo taken with my Nikon D3400. Focal length 45mm, Shutter speed 1/3200sec, Aperture f5.6 and ISO 400.
#BSides2024
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Jessica Joubert posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Title: Beauty in the eye of the beholder.
CanonR7, 150 – 600mm zoom, Shot at F5.0 at 1/250 with ISO200.Couldn’t get enough of those eyelashes! Sabi Sabi Private Game Reserve
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John Griffin posted in the group Wildlife Photography
Recrop of White Rhino submitted earlier
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About Me
Photography is an art medium that speaks to me the most as an outlet for my creativity. I especially love landscape and architectural photography. Landscape photography gives one time to think, discover and create. It gives me great pleasure to find silence, solitude, simplicity and sometimes coincidence and surprises in nature.
Over the years I have discovered I am naturally draw to black and white (B&W) images, especially in B&W architecture. The biggest reason, other than the timeless appeal of B&W, lies in the fact that B&W architectural photography, by its nature, gives me more freedom to depart from the visual reality. Therefore, for me, the joy of being creative comes from identifying the underlying beauty and potential from a more visible and obvious colour reality, then transforming it to a black and white vision. This holds true for landscape photography as well.
My use of natural light, tonal contrast, colour, texture, and movement are the qualities I look for when I am out there and what makes my images unique. Through my images, I want to offer the world my perspectives and express my connections with the subjects that I capture.
Lovely images Wolter