A man boarded the train at W-wa Centralna and travelled to W-wa Wschodnia. He was engrossed in his paperback. I thought I'd caught the title, but evidently I didn't.
Nikon D40, 18-55mm lens (no VR); hand-held at a quarter of a second wide open at f3.5, zoomed out to 18mm (equivalent to 27mm on standard 35mm camera).
This time last year:
Fertile ground for conspiracy theorists
This time two years ago:
That's what I like about the North
Looks like you're trying to oust Paddy from his stranglehold on Warsaw's public transport photography . . .
ReplyDeleteWhat Pozdrowienia z Ursynowa has brought forth let no man snap asunder. Great pic though. I really do wish I could get a better camera.
ReplyDeleteGoing by the jacket he's got on, his severe myopia and the big hole in your blog yesterday, - the interconnectedness of things don't you know - my guess would be 'They Flew into Oblivion'.
ReplyDeleteThis looks like a photo processing technique I've been hearing a lot about lately, HDR. Am I right?
ReplyDelete@ Anon: The photo was processed in LightRoom as it was a bit overexposed and lacking in contrast and saturation. It was then rotated slightly in Photoshop as the verticals weren't upright. What's HDR?
ReplyDelete@ AdtheLad: LOL:-)
@ Paddy & Kolin - real Warsaw types like this character are harder to find!
I'm quite pleased with these two:
ReplyDeletehttp://1.bp.blogspot.com/-0C3A1A3Fe0Y/TaNefQiHcaI/AAAAAAAAAYc/XgC04AIIKgE/s1600/IMG_1444.JPG
Paddy
Michael,
ReplyDeleteHDR is used for 'High Dynamic Range', which is becoming quite a fad in photographic equipment and software.
You can read more here - http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/high-dynamic-range.htm
As far as I can tell it is little more than automating the process of merging a few bracketed snaps to create one that has the best bits of all of them.