I always liked the look from a fish-eye lens. The natural look, not corrected. The best thing about fish-eye lens is that it practically does not need auto focus. Because it is so wide, all you have to do is put it on aperture f8 set the focus to infinity, and just take pictures.
Fuji in Europe Part 15 - Sunset in Großgründlach
After the trip to Regensburg, the day was promising a good sunset. So I convinced my good friend from Hooked on Europe, that we should go out to a field somewhere, not too far. Well, Großgründlach or Grossgrundlach, is not that far away from Nuremberg,
Fuji in Europe Part 14 - The Walhalla Memorial
Fuji in Europe Part 13 - All kinds of photography in Regensburg
Fuji in Europe Part 12 - A special lens for special place
Taking the fish eye to the streets... Part 3
Well.... a part 3 to the fish eye post. I guess I liked so many of the photos from the little downtown trip, that I just can't help myself. I guess it's the thrill of a new thing, a new curved perspective on the world. Yes I like the fish eye lens. I like the way the world looks through it. It puts a smile on my face. So here are the last shots from my downtown Edmonton trip. Enjoy!
Taking the fish eye to the streets... Part 2
Continuing from yesterday, here are more images from Edmonton downtown fish eye trip. The more I use the lens, the more I'm liking it. The effects it creates are unique and interesting, at least to me. Enjoy!
Taking the fish eye to the streets... Part 1
One lens, one camera, one city.... sounds like a intro for a challenge, but it really isn't when you take a fish eye lens, to the streets of downtown. Fish eye and architecture, don't mix well, specially for purists. I'm not a purist, and I really like when a building is bending in a weird and interesting way in an image. That was the main goal that day. See how many interesting photos can I take just walking around downtown Edmonton with a little fish eye lens. Enjoy the results!