Share Your Photographs

trepain, that dragonfly shot is sooo amazingā€¦ how did you get such a depth of field?? what lense? WOWOWOW.

hmm.

^_^

http://i165.photobucket.com/albums/u71/souā€¦/Image004-1.jpg
http://i165.photobucket.com/albums/u71/souā€¦/Image043-1.jpg
http://i165.photobucket.com/albums/u71/souā€¦ke/DSCF0079.jpg
http://i165.photobucket.com/albums/u71/souā€¦ke/DSCF0080.jpg
http://i165.photobucket.com/albums/u71/souā€¦ke/Image054.jpg
http://i165.photobucket.com/albums/u71/souā€¦/Image025-2.jpg

All taken with my phone except for the two piano pictures.

ā€œa touch of [?] will fit you, tooā€

http://koepi137.net/

ā€œwill you please take my handā€ (from an insuranceā€¦)

ā€œbeing deadlyā€

blows my mind mannnnnn

I want you to meet my family

ā€œpack your swimming trunksā€

bangā€¦ BANG! :D

bring out the deadā€¦

[quote=ā€œJohann, post:62, topic:23575ā€]
trepain, that dragonfly shot is sooo amazingā€¦ how did you get such a depth of field?? what lense? WOWOWOW.
hmm.

hehe thanks Johann ;0! - I used the tamron 90mm macro lense.

When close enough for 1:1 macro focusing it creates really insane depth of field.

Tamron 90mm macro lens

cheers! I really need to get my sensor cleaned before I can do anything macro again :confused:

ā€œnicki is drunkā€

ā€œyou will forget what you read hereā€

Muahaha! WINNARRRR!! :P

instead of posting them all, see for yourself: http://johann-lau.de/photos/rainbow whee!

Iā€™m adding a couple more:





Iā€™ve not been out and about for a while, so I set off yesterday for a bothy that I had visited as a kid. A bothy is a kind of cabin in the wilderness that people can use to stay in while hillwalking. Many of the more remote ones have been torn down in recent years, because although they can provide a nice refuge, people were braving life-threatening weather in order to get to them and, well, dying.

The path to it turns off on the other side of Loch an Eilean, which I photographed last year. There are many paths and I initially took the wrong one, though I did find this curious deer farm in the middle of nowhere.

Soon back on track, I was taken past the smaller Loch Gamhna, which is nestled in a very small valley only a few hundred metres wide. As you can see, it was a strange day; wet and kind of gloomy, but with a very bright sky. Clearly it was sunny somewhere, just not here. I have no idea what these little silver dudes were in the water, but they were moving around fast enough to cause motion blur on my camera.

Next up is a huge, gnarled juniper bush, whose berries are used in the making of gin. I couldnā€™t fit the whole thing into one pic because space around it was so cramped; itā€™s about three times the size of whatā€™s shown here.

This particular bothy is pretty small and bare, though since itā€™s not too remote itā€™s kept in good repair. Other bothies are made entirely of stone, have fireplaces, multiple rooms and some even have more than one floor. Many have been around for a very, very long time, which can be attributed to the attitude of the people who visit and leave helpful items for others. This one is quite sparse, but thereā€™s still extra food, water and most importantly toilet rolls! The more remote bothies will have extra firewood and plenty of tinned and packeted goods with a long shelf life, in case the weather turns bad and folks have to stay for longer than planned.

More gloomy yet bright landscapes with some of the close hills further along the path and what must be the flattest piece of ground for miles around.

ā€¦and some extras not from this trip. The first is what must be the best drunk-walking-home picture Iā€™ve ever taken and the second used to be one of the worst (it was almost completely black to the naked eye, but after messing around in photoshop, something arty was produced).

Wow. Landscape!! Deer & flowers! Ahh.

ā€œwe have more to offerā€ XP

dope? doop? WEā€™LL NEVER KNOW.

Vampire Killah.

haha! the first 2 pics I took with a DSLR, 4 years ago: