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SecondFocus
Well I love it, just thought it was funny. I guess that was the point!

QUOTE (Frank Doorhof @ Aug 2 2008, 12:06 PM)
That was totally planned.
F*ck the world idea/attitude

Has nothing to do with Leaf, at least not as far as I know.
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Khun_K
H3D39, HC 100/2.2 at f/14, 1/250s, ISO 50.
foto-z
QUOTE (Khun_K @ Aug 3 2008, 10:08 AM)
H3D39, HC 100/2.2 at f/14, 1/250s, ISO 50.
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Very nice
Dustbak
Indeed! Nice colors (amongst others).
rweissman
This must be for a forthcoming Leaf ad.

QUOTE (Khun_K @ Aug 3 2008, 03:08 AM)
H3D39, HC 100/2.2 at f/14, 1/250s, ISO 50.
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thsinar
Very nice, K.

Cheers,
Thierry

QUOTE (Khun_K @ Aug 3 2008, 05:08 PM)
H3D39, HC 100/2.2 at f/14, 1/250s, ISO 50.
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eronald
My models come cheap. Donated by the local grocer, who gets paid in prints smile.gif

Edmund

Tomas
Contax645 - Zeiss 2,8/140+26mm - Sinar eMotion75lv

Tomas
simplify
Apparently he gives you the month old veggies.. eeew.
QUOTE (eronald @ Aug 3 2008, 02:47 PM)
My models come cheap. Donated by the local grocer, who gets paid in prints smile.gif

Edmund


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eronald
QUOTE (simplify @ Aug 4 2008, 01:48 AM)
Apparently he gives you the month old veggies.. eeew.
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hehe, I agree I have overdone the sharpening here; but the originals were pretty grungy smile.gif

Edmund
Khun_K
Another two, all captured by using Sinar Hy6 + eMotion 75LV, sitting one with Schneider 180/2.8 AF setting at f/11, ISO 11, 1/250s. Standing one with 80/2.8 AFD, also at f/11, ISO 100.
dkeyes
QUOTE (woof75 @ Jul 31 2008, 05:59 AM)
Are you aware of this photographers work?
http://bp3.blogger.com/_MjmpP3OokpM/Rz8-gu..._idris-khan.jpg
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Yes, I had quite a few collectors, dealers and friends mention his work to me when he first exhibited it a year or so ago at Fraenkel Gallery in San Francisco. Incidentally, the director at Fraenkel knows my work as well and I was a bit shocked that they showed his work since the similarities were quite close on a few images. I've been doing this work for 12yrs, this guy is just out of school.
Streetwise
Aptus 65 on Cambo WideDS (after a HD failure)

Click to view attachment
Click to view attachment
Click to view attachment
GBPhoto
QUOTE (Streetwise @ Aug 5 2008, 12:59 PM)

laugh.gif Very nice! Can you repeat that effect?
eleanorbrown
Something a little bit different....I recently had the opportunity to take a charter flight out of McCarthy, Alaska to photograph the Wrangell St. Elias Mountains. I was able to open the window in the Cessna 172 for most of the shots which made a big difference in the general quality and color. Camera was an H2 with a Phase One P45+ back using the Hasselblad 80mm lens.

Eleanor
(ps- hope the attachment file shows up as I've never uploaded images before on this forum)

Click to view attachment
wolfnowl
Cool shot, Eleanor!

Sorry, couldn't resist... but I've invested enough time in big snow country...

Mike.
Studio12NYC
These could be in a museum somewhere!!!
blink.gif


QUOTE (Streetwise @ Aug 5 2008, 03:59 PM)
James R Russell







Both P30+

JR
SeanBK
QUOTE (James R Russell @ Aug 6 2008, 02:05 AM)
Both P30+

JR
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I always thought Communication Arts was a real nice publication, now I am convinced. Congrats they both are terrific, thnx for sharing.
Sean
CaptainHook
Congrats James.
James R Russell
QUOTE (CaptainHook @ Aug 6 2008, 09:00 AM)
Congrats James.
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Thank you.
haefnerphoto
Here's the next view of the Puegeot. Khun K, I love the fashion-portraits. Jim
haefnerphoto
Here's the next view of the Puegeot. Khun K, I love the fashion-portraits. Jim
haefnerphoto
Here's the next view of the Puegeot. Khun K, I love the fashion-portraits. Jim
haefnerphoto
Here's the next view of the Puegeot. Khun K, I love the fashion-portraits. JimClick to view attachment
Frank Doorhof
Congrats James.

Wow on the car and the shot of course biggrin.gif
eleanorbrown
Thanks Mike! It was "cool" (especially for the hand that held my window open!) outside our small plane--- minus 60 (temp plus wind chill) to be exact.
Eleanor


QUOTE (wolfnowl @ Aug 6 2008, 05:12 AM)
Cool shot, Eleanor!

Sorry, couldn't resist... but I've invested enough time in big snow country...

Mike.
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HarperPhotos
Gidday,

Latest Image

Stats:

Mamiya RZProII
Mamiya 65mm Lens
Leaf Aptus 75
F16.0, 125th Sec, 50ISO
Bowens flash
Processed in CS3
Photo retouching by Geoff Francis

Cheers

Simon
Frank Doorhof
Oh black on black love that.
Would love to see a bit more separation between the tires and the background/bottom.

But wow overall.
HarperPhotos
Hi Frank,

I totally agree with you about the tyres.
I passed on my concerns to the Art Director, but at the end of the day its up to him to decide.

Simon
etrump
QUOTE (HarperPhotos @ Aug 6 2008, 07:20 PM)
Gidday,

Latest Image

Stats:

Mamiya RZProII
Mamiya 65mm Lens
Leaf Aptus 75
F16.0, 125th Sec, 50ISO
Bowens flash
Processed in CS3
Photo retouching by Geoff Francis

Cheers

Simon
*


Awesome image. At first glance I thought it was a new lexus or infiniti!
Ray
Indeed! Awesome images! Awesomely destructive for the environment.

I can't believe that you guys have so little concern for the environment. Well, perhaps I can believe it. You have to earn a living, just as a tobacco executive has to earn a living. Your business is helping to sell a product.

I just wish you could earn a living promoting green and low-carbon products.
Khun_K
QUOTE (haefnerphoto @ Aug 6 2008, 10:44 PM)
Here's the next view of the Puegeot.  Khun K, I love the fashion-portraits.  JimClick to view attachment
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Very nice in deed.

Regard, K
etrump
QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 12:00 PM)
Indeed! Awesome images! Awesomely destructive for the environment.

I can't believe that you guys have so little concern for the environment. Well, perhaps I can believe it. You have to earn a living, just as a tobacco executive has to earn a living. Your business is helping to sell a product.

I just wish you could earn a living promoting green and low-carbon products.
*


Go peddle your bad attitude someplace else. Your ignorance is obvious and beyond discusson.
Ray
I now realise why I have a certain antagonism towards MFDB users. Such systems are used mainly to promote obsolete technologies that are harmful to the environment, and ourselves.

We over-eat, partly because MFDB photographers produce seductive images of succulent dishes that are no good for us; that are tasty but harmful to our health; that look ravishing but lack basic nutritional ingredients necessary for complete health.

MFDB users work mainly for the advertising industry which promotes consumption without regard to the real needs of the consumer and without regard to the environment.

When I look through the images presented in this thread, I see the promotion of blatant consumerism. I see desirable chics with a nice color balance, but a general lack of intellectual integrety in the motives and narrative.

I'm telling it as I see it. Sorry for any offense.
Ray
QUOTE (etrump @ Aug 8 2008, 02:31 PM)
Go peddle your bad attitude someplace else.  Your ignorance is obvious and beyond discusson.
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Your incapacity to describe and explain the obvious is pathetic. I'm always willing to explain something to anyone whom I think is just plain ignorant, and I expect they would do the same for me.
Colorwave
QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 10:50 AM)
I now realise why I have a certain antagonism towards MFDB users. Such systems are used mainly to promote obsolete technologies that are harmful to the environment, and ourselves.
*

I think I'm picking up a whiff of a format battle again. Do you find 35mm format shots less offensive? We may be on to something.

I love seeing the variety of shots in this thread, and would love to see more.

-Ron H.
Mort54
QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 12:00 PM)
I can't believe that you guys have so little concern for the environment. Well, perhaps I can believe it. You have to earn a living, just as a tobacco executive has to earn a living. Your business is helping to sell a product.

Wow. A new low.

Ray, this winter, try foregoing heat, if you feel so strongly about this. Or never fly anywhere again. Or just ride you bicycle instead of your car. You are clearly as guilty as the rest of us in trashing the planet.

I favor anything that can be done to lessen the impact we all have on the environment, but blaming MF photography for the planet's environmental ills is bizarre.
Dustbak
QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 07:50 PM)
I now realise why I have a certain antagonism towards MFDB users.
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So your remarks are tainted with prejudice? Ulterior motives instead of a crusade for the truth?

I don't get this attitude you are displaying. Totally uncalled for IMO.
Ray
QUOTE (Mort54 @ Aug 8 2008, 03:06 PM)
Wow. A new low.

Ray, this winter, try foregoing heat, if you feel so strongly about this.
*


I do, beleive me. My Chinese partner not only seems to like cold, but is very concerned about the pennies.

We're in a situation where we have to change our habits for the sake of the environment. We can't continue to be blatant consumers. We've got to cut waste and live more efficiently. When I see advertisements for gas-guzzling high performance cars, I get a feeling that something's wrong.
klane
Ray, I agree about the environment, but guess what? Everyone else here does to! The fact that we all need to change our habits and lessen energy consumption is rather common knowledge now. I live a medium sized city in the midwest that is dominated by large polluting pick up trucks, however just down the street there is a guy that runs most of his energy needs off solar and wind power.

My point is people are waking up to these factors and making a change, not everyone....but most of us. So get off of your soap box and stop acting like captain planet.



(note: captain planet was kid's cartoon in the earlier 90's about saving the environment)
Ray
QUOTE (klane @ Aug 8 2008, 03:30 PM)
My point is people are waking up to these factors and making a change, not everyone....but most of us. So get off of  your soap box and stop acting like captain planet.
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I would if I thought we had the time. I'm reminded of David Suzuki's analogy of the frog in warm water that's slowly heated. The frog's response to the rising temperature is slower than the rise in temperature.

By the time the temperature is too hot, the frog's in delay mode and doesn't feel it.

When it eventually feels it, it's too late to escape. It's fried.
Mort54
QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 01:20 PM)
We're in a situation where we have to change our habits for the sake of the environment.

Amen. Absolutely true. No one's arguing with you. But blaming rampant consumerism and other issues on MFDB shooters - that's just silly.

By the way, lecturing others on their environmental responsibilities implies that somehow you are fighting the good fight and others aren't, or that you are being responsible and others aren't. That's pretty condescending, I think. You reall don't know anything about anyone else on this forum, and how they live their lives, or how they deal with this issue. You're aren't the only one who worries about these issues, or even the first to worry about them.
Bruce Wilson
QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 01:49 PM)
I would if I thought we had the time. I'm reminded of David Suzuki's analogy of the frog in warm water that's slowly heated. The frog's response to the rising temperature is slower than the rise in temperature.

By the time the temperature is too hot, the frog's in delay mode and doesn't feel it.

When it eventually feels it, it's too late to escape. It's fried.
*


Man, I wish I had the ability to turn you into a frog!
simplify
A snapshot of my new home. P45+ Mamiya 120mm
Click to view attachment
Frank Doorhof
Today I got a Leaf AFi 7 to play with and getting used to the system.
I will be doing a review like piece on my blog but here a few of the first pictures from today (first session with the AFi)

Camera : Leaf AFi 7
Lens : 180mm AF f2.8

1.


2.


3.


4.




Greetings,
Frank
rweissman
One of the core beliefs underlying progressive politics is that life is inherently political -- "the personal is political" as the saying goes. Even the most seemingly mundane choices --what clothes to wear and how to dress, where to live, what to eat, what/how/where/if to consume, what language to use, what constitutes proper aesthetic taste, what to photograph or document, what to read, whether to have pets, whom to befriend, what leisure activities to enjoy (or even if leisure is acceptable in a world where things are so dire that any activity other than sustained political action is morally wrong)--are filled with political significance and ramifications.

Some political movements see a very large space for autonomous human behavior; other forms of politics are genuinely hostile to the notion that there is a personal sphere beyond the reach of political considerations and the need to enforce 'correct' standards of how to live one's life. Indeed, the term 'correct' was used from the thirties onward by Progressives and progressive states (the USSR first and eventually, Cuba, China, Cambodia) to judge personal behavior and attitude.

Certain fundamentalist religions take a similar, prescriptive view of human choice-making. The Mutaawa (Saudi religious police) have recently outlawed the sale of certain pets, for example, as leading to immoral behavior. (Flirting while dog-walking). The adherents of religious and political totalism are often genuinely distressed that others have ability to make choices with which they disagree.

So, for this reason, any forum whose members do not exhibit a similarly passionate attachment to correct behavior (as exhibited here by a photo of an automobile or a model) is fair game for unasked for condemnation, re-education and hectoring about what is moral, responsible and appropriate.

For some, the world is always in such dire straights that any activity selfishly not focused on the amelioration of horrific near-term catastrophe or sacrifice for the Common Good is morally unacceptable. Helen Caldecott's impending nuclear catastrophe--for her, it was always "eight minutes to midnight," the imminence of global famine, the SARS epidemic and other pandemics, other Malthusian crises too numerous to mention, the existence of global inequality... the list goes on. Yet, somehow, we manage to muddle through by being pragmatic, inventive and experimental. It is our very ability to 'think different', outside of regimented and prescriptive norms, that enables us to weather these storms, just as we will weather global warming without the need to condemn those who photograph automobiles or banish those who use medium format cameras to make the world appear a beautiful (nor not) place.

I will remain an interested member of this forum so long as postings are judged by relevance to the purposes for which LL forums were created rather than by adherence to some Higher Cause or someone else's political principles (of whatever stripe).

QUOTE (Ray @ Aug 7 2008, 11:49 AM)
I would if I thought we had the time. I'm reminded of David Suzuki's analogy of the frog in warm water that's slowly heated. The frog's response to the rising temperature is slower than the rise in temperature.

By the time the temperature is too hot, the frog's in delay mode and doesn't feel it.

When it eventually feels it, it's too late to escape. It's fried.
*
SecondFocus
I bring this up every now and then because this has been the best "photography" thread on the internet in any forum I have ever seen.

So could we remember what this thread is about; and that is the posting and discussion of MFDB images.

We have managed to keep most of the other arguments out and have kept the discussion respectful. If there are discussions about politics and the curse of MFDB causing the devastation of the planet, maybe it can start another thread outside of this one.

Here in this thread we have seen some extraordinary work and have kept the attention of some top professionals. Personally I have learned a great deal from it.

So I am not going to participate in this current odd conversation that has popped up and if the rest of you avoid doing the same we can keep this thread as valuable as it has been.

Thanks
rsmphoto
Way back in the early days of the Macintosh there was this amusing free application called the Talking Moose. There I'd be, merrily working way on some project, and every once in a while this Bullwinkle-like moose head would pop up on the screen, and with a high pitched semi-robotic voice it would spout some inanity. I'd stop and chuckle and then resume my work. This is how I suggest we treat Rays offerings. Worth a chuckle, but hardly a response.

R



QUOTE (SecondFocus @ Aug 7 2008, 04:10 PM)
I bring this up every now and then because this has been the best "photography" thread on the internet in any forum I have ever seen.

So could we remember what this thread is about; and that is the posting and discussion of MFDB images.

We have managed to keep most of the other arguments out and have kept the discussion respectful. If there are discussions about politics and the curse of MFDB causing the devastation of the planet, maybe it can start another thread outside of this one.

Here in this thread we have seen some extraordinary work and have kept the attention of some top professionals. Personally I have learned a great deal from it.

So I am for one I am not going to participate in this current odd conversation that has popped up and if the rest of you avoid doing the same we can keep this thread as valuable as it has been.

Thanks
*
DFAllyn
I had granola for breakfast! Does that count?
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