Wow! I'm speechless.
Just wanted to let you know that your site is something I look at daily... it has been an inspiration as much as a motivation to continue my own photography... thank you and keep up the great work!
Posted by Monica at February 2, 2009 01:40 AMThat looks great. Black and white adds too.
Posted by Andrew at February 2, 2009 02:06 AMI LOVE the focus on this one!
Making it Black and White was a good choice too!
Nice frozen action captured! Is that lovely DOF due to a tilt/shift lens or u opened the lens wide? I am not able to guess.
Posted by Abhijit Dharmadhikari at February 2, 2009 06:32 AMAbsolutely stunning.
Posted by katherine at February 2, 2009 07:07 AMThis is by far the best tilt/Shift lens shot I have ever seen.
Posted by Mark Baluk at February 2, 2009 07:34 AMI like the effect of the Tilt/Shift lens. And kudos to you for baring the cold weather to get these awesome pics of the lake.
Posted by zoid at February 2, 2009 09:23 AMMasterful use of the tilt shift and the timing...wow!
Posted by Laurie at February 2, 2009 09:41 AMLove the tones and the dark moody feel to this.
Posted by Craig Wilson at February 2, 2009 10:34 AMVery interesting. It just seems like a still shot from a movie. It almost feels like it's how the Earth would've look like before all life forms were there.
Definitely COOL!
Posted by Patrick at February 2, 2009 12:04 PMI was there yesterday - not just on the Islands but actually on the pier, looking at the same ice :) I'm planning on spending this afternoon (and the next day or two!) reviewing my photos and posting them on Flickr [http://flickr.com/photos/pah57/]
Posted by Paul Henman at February 2, 2009 12:40 PMI love this shot.
Posted by JB at February 2, 2009 01:45 PMI would have used the tilt shift lens to increase the depth of field. Funny world of opposites.
Posted by Hugh Petrie at February 2, 2009 02:57 PMI should have also said that I likely wouldn't have gone for increased dof but would likely not have felt the need of a tilt lens to limit it more than a wide aperture would do. I'm now curious about just how much less dof the tilt achieved.
Posted by Hugh Petrie at February 2, 2009 03:02 PMunbelievable.
Posted by Matt at February 2, 2009 11:19 PMmasterpiece,x,
Posted by amun at February 3, 2009 12:17 PMDid you see my ice caves there under the pier? I wish I could send you a video of them. In this video we stood in the ice cave and picked off 6 foot long icicles. It was many years ago.
Posted by Natasha at February 11, 2009 11:01 PMI really enjoy your use of the TS-E 24mm...inspires me to use mine more often. Thanks for the push.
Cheers,
alec
lovely!! :)
Posted by shamimul at October 22, 2009 07:31 AM