Usefilm Home Sign Up Now! | Log In | Help  

Film and Digital Photography


Abbey and River
Image Title:  Abbey and River
 
 By: ade mcfade  
  Copyright ©2004



 Browse Images
  Recent Pictures
  Todays Pictures
  Yesterdays Pictures
  1 Year Ago Today
  Summary Mode
  All Usefilm Pictures
 
 Image Options
  Staff Choice
  Editors Choice
  Featured Donors
  Featured Photographers
  Featured Photos
  Community Favorites
  Unrated Images
  Featured Critiques
  Critique Only Images
  Critiquer's Corner
  Images With No Critiques
  Random Images
  Panoramic Images
  Images By Country
  Images By Camera
  Images By Lens
  Images By Film/Media
   
 Categories
   
 Projects
   
 Find Member
Name
User ID
 
   

 

Photographer ade mcfade {K:12388}
Project #42 Moody Landscape Camera Model Canon 300D
Categories Landscape
Nature
Photoart
Film Format
Portfolio West Yorkshire
Lens Canon  100 mm f/2 USM
Uploaded 7/6/2004 Film / Memory Type Lexar  1GB
    ISO / Film Speed 16
Views 175 Shutter 1/30
Favorites Aperture f/22
Critiques 5 Rating
5.75
/ 3 Ratings
Location City -  Ripon
State -  NORTH YORKSHIRE
Country - United Kingdom   United Kingdom
About This is the view of Fountain's Abbey looking bacak from the Water Gardens near by.

The monk's built their living quarters and their Infirmary over this river, so they in effect had medieval flushing toilets and running water.

The river meanders over 3 wiers till you get to the huge curve you see in the foreground of this photo, then turns into a spectacular series of lakes with statues positioned on plinths.

Cropped this and made it sepia, not a lot else.
Random Pictures By:
ade
mcfade


Poser

Purple Wavze

Masti Shisha 4

Flow Detail

Scenes From Hardknott Fort - 3

None Shall Pass

Red Old Shed

Rural Sunset

Barden Bridge

Mono Waterfall - 4

There are 5 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Ohad Mazor   {K:618} 7/6/2004
Interesting point of view. Good choice for sepia, it makes the picture more interesting.


Stephen Bowden   {K:64540} 7/6/2004
Excellent work Ade


Ameed El-Ghoul   {K:42207} 7/6/2004
Very nice capture, i liked using the sepia in it, i think using this color is showing the best out of this picture. Very well done.
Btw thanks for your comment, i liked your moon better :) i will try to shoot it agian with a a diffrent lense, thanks and my kind regards,


ade mcfade   {K:12388} 7/6/2004
Thanks for the feedback.

Not sure what package you've used for resizing your moon Ameed, but I use either Photoshop or a free tool called IrfanView. I use IrfanView for just about everything except adjusting levels, curves etc in Photoshop.

But what you can do when you resize is specify how many PPI, points per square inch, you want when it's resized, and also how much JPG compression.

If you set the PPI fairly high, between 180 and 300, you get a really smooth little image. Then you play with the JPG Options when you save the small image to try to get it down to the allowed site. To be honest, I usually leave them fairly big.

I think your shot of the moon has a lot going for it as there's a lot more on show, maybe try resizing it to 500pixels wide and putting it below here - see if it makes any difference?

Hope that helps...

Anyway, here's another view of the Abbey in the photo above. This is from the other side o it, looking through the main entrance. This entrance has a Romanesque/Norman style from about 1189. The monks expanded it later when Gothic came into fasion, hence the pointed arch at the far end.



Dr. Rafael Springmann   {K:87615} 7/7/2004
A new photo of your face, Ade, unless I'm mistaken.
Have I shown you mine? It's to be found on www.drspringmann.com together with information about a book I recently published, that might or might not be of interest to you.
Chosing sepia for your "Abbay and River" gave excelent results, making it look ancient, but still intact.
Thanks for your generous comment on my "Hungarian glass ladies 2"
Regards,
Rafi


  1

 

|  FAQ  |  Terms of Service  |  Donate  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise  |

Copyright ©2005 Photo Publishing Group, LLC - All Rights Reserved

Elapsed Time:: 0.28125