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Fireworks!
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<blockquote data-quote="STM" data-source="post: 121482" data-attributes="member: 12827"><p><em>"it was only -13C but felt like -20C" </em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em></em>Any time there is a <em>minus sign </em>in front of a number denoting an outside temperature, be it Celsius <em>or</em> Fahrenheit, it is way too cold for me! Now that I am retired from the Army, I can<em> choose NOT</em> to go out in frigid temperatures!</p><p></p><p>As for the photo, it is very well captured! The exposures are perfect. </p><p></p><p> Back in the <em>old days of film,</em> I used to lock the shutter open (on B) on my F2 using a locking cable release, place a piece of black card in front of the lens and catch several separate fireworks bursts in one frame. It was always a hit and miss proposition, but the end results could be very interesting. Nowdays with Photoshop, you can do it a lot more easily and with much greater precision!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="STM, post: 121482, member: 12827"] [I]"it was only -13C but felt like -20C" [/I]Any time there is a [I]minus sign [/I]in front of a number denoting an outside temperature, be it Celsius [I]or[/I] Fahrenheit, it is way too cold for me! Now that I am retired from the Army, I can[I] choose NOT[/I] to go out in frigid temperatures! As for the photo, it is very well captured! The exposures are perfect. Back in the [I]old days of film,[/I] I used to lock the shutter open (on B) on my F2 using a locking cable release, place a piece of black card in front of the lens and catch several separate fireworks bursts in one frame. It was always a hit and miss proposition, but the end results could be very interesting. Nowdays with Photoshop, you can do it a lot more easily and with much greater precision! [/QUOTE]
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