Saturday, May 30, 2009
Vol. 1 No. 24
Spent last Monday enjoying the sights along the Brooklyn waterfront. The Inspiration came from a friend's recent post on this site. An avid photographer, Conrad Tinney shared his review of the Nikon School. His photograph showing the Manhattan Bridge framed by the Civil War era coffee warehouse archway, motivated me to check out the view firsthand.
Here's my take on Connie's theme:
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The Empire State Fulton Ferry Park and the adjacent Brooklyn Bridge Park offer fantastic vantage points to make some incredible photographs. Bordered by the Manhattan Bridge to the north, the Brooklyn Bridge to the south, and the Manhattan skyline to the west, photographic opportunities are everywhere.
The view even moved me to take a quick jaunt over to the Manhattan side so I could capture the images I needed for this panorama.
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I created this image by taking a series of 12 portrait-aspect images and stitching them together in Photoshop's photomerge using perspective mode. I was careful to shoot this using a tripod (only way to make a quality multi-image pano), in manual mode, manual focus and a preset white balance. Using auto modes will definitely screw-up a panorama. Each of the images used in this pano was shot with a Nikon D300 at 18mm focal length, f/11 at 1/800 sec ISO 200.
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Labels: bridge, brooklyn, manhattan, new york city, park, waterfront
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