Post Your Best Landscapes

  • Thread starter Thread starter Marshal.F
  • Start date Start date
npdien said:
Thanks, Jack.
Here is another photo taken in Dong Nai Province, Vietnam.

27710674622_06c00539e3_c_d.jpg

Oh to be able to visit there, it looks so lush. Lots of wildlife??

Jack
 
Upvote 0
This is my first monument panoramic using the M3 and 22/2.8 pancake lens. It's a five frame stitch, so still slightly larger format and resolution than a 5Ds single frame.

I'm attaching a full size crop to give an idea of the detail in the full sized picture.

This is Binham Priory in Norfolk, England where I had taken an earlier sunrise shot from the other side using the 5DII.
 

Attachments

  • Binham Priory.png
    Binham Priory.png
    1.8 MB · Views: 196
  • Binham Crop 2.png
    Binham Crop 2.png
    4.7 MB · Views: 176
Upvote 0
Sporgon said:
This is my first monument panoramic using the M3 and 22/2.8 pancake lens. It's a five frame stitch, so still slightly larger format and resolution than a 5Ds single frame.

I'm attaching a full size crop to give an idea of the detail in the full sized picture.

This is Binham Priory in Norfolk, England where I had taken an earlier sunrise shot from the other side using the 5DII.
Beautiful! And another argument in the "how much is enough" discussion ;)
 
Upvote 0
Sporgon said:
This is my first monument panoramic using the M3 and 22/2.8 pancake lens. It's a five frame stitch, so still slightly larger format and resolution than a 5Ds single frame.

I'm attaching a full size crop to give an idea of the detail in the full sized picture.

This is Binham Priory in Norfolk, England where I had taken an earlier sunrise shot from the other side using the 5DII.

You liar! :). There is detail in the shadow areas this is clearly a trick.
 
Upvote 0
Eldar said:
Sporgon said:
This is my first monument panoramic using the M3 and 22/2.8 pancake lens. It's a five frame stitch, so still slightly larger format and resolution than a 5Ds single frame.

I'm attaching a full size crop to give an idea of the detail in the full sized picture.

This is Binham Priory in Norfolk, England where I had taken an earlier sunrise shot from the other side using the 5DII.
Beautiful! And another argument in the "how much is enough" discussion ;)

Thanks Eldar, and it makes an interesting discussion point. If my technical friends are correct then the chip in the M3 is the same as the 5Ds, but just the middle of it. If I shoot a three frame, portrait orientated stitch with the M it is going to be the same as the single frame from the 5Ds, but with the advantage / disadvantage of the rotational stitch. However as I shot this as a 2x1, if I'd used a single frame from 5Ds and cropped top and bottom it would be smaller mp than this . Stitching on a 5Ds would be complete overkill for me, but I have to say that if I was in to single frame photography, I am finding that the sheer pixel density is overcoming the bayer array effect, and this is seen in a landscape with predominately subtly different shades of green in it, so in a way it is using sheer numbers of pixels to produce the same effect as the Pentax "pixel-shift" thingy.


privatebydesign said:
Sporgon said:
This is my first monument panoramic using the M3 and 22/2.8 pancake lens. It's a five frame stitch, so still slightly larger format and resolution than a 5Ds single frame.

I'm attaching a full size crop to give an idea of the detail in the full sized picture.

This is Binham Priory in Norfolk, England where I had taken an earlier sunrise shot from the other side using the 5DII.

You liar! :). There is detail in the shadow areas this is clearly a trick.

;D he-he, and this isn't even the new on-chip ADC like the 80D, and there is still loads of clean info in the shadows; more than most people could possibly want. But also I'm really impressed with the robustness of the highlights on this chip, especially for a small sensor. Also the highlight headroom ( for those that may not know, I am referring to the white tones it can differentiate before blowing) is remarkably good, better than the 2011 era Exmor sensor that I used for a while.

Overall I'm very impressed with the M3 but it needs good lenses to keep the data "open".
 
Upvote 0
Sunrise at the Flamborough Dinosaur, an image that I thought had potential over the past couple of years, but I couldn't get it to work. However I think I may have done it now.

Taken on 5DII + 24-105L @ 24 mm.

P.S. I haven't dust spotted this copy !
 

Attachments

  • Dinosaur revised.png
    Dinosaur revised.png
    2.6 MB · Views: 165
Upvote 0