Post your 'ALMOST' Photos..

Roy1961

Senior Member
Contributor
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Texas

Senior Member
I'm afraid to post mine after examining it closely at some magnification to make it readable.

And yes I deleted it immediately.

The N S A (no such agency) has a large installation in my town with a couple miles of tall fence with a WARNING sign every 10 ft.

I took a picture as I drove by and upon looking at the sign photo, it said many things that were prohibited including photography or making drawings or sketches of the anything beyond the fence. Probably illegal to even remember what you can see through the fence.

The facility used to be a circuit chip factory and still has roads on site named Sony and Micron.

The rules don't apply to Google Maps of course: https://www.google.com/maps/uv?hl=e...d=0ahUKEwjquOSMsonbAhVts1kKHUjLCEYQoioIpgEwCg
 
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Sandpatch

Senior Member
EVERYTHING went wrong here. I was exploring for a new railroad photo spot by the river. I found myself in slick, gooey mud and slipped down a steep slope in the process. I was fine, but my shoes, clothes, hands and camera bag (with camera safely inside) were covered in mud. Then a train showed up .... in the wrong direction AND my settings were all wrong, hence the blurriness and bad exposure. And of course the mud on my hands got on the camera. Lastly, I got a thorn in my hand grasping to anything I could to climb back up the slippery slope. Oh, and I somehow broke my sunglasses. :eek:

Not a good outing, but that's what makes life interesting. By the way, I use a Nikon gadget bag that I got free when I bought my D5100. It holds everything well and is actually quite nice. When I got home, I removed my camera and gear from it, then washed it with dishwashing liquid and sponge, then blasted it with a hose. It was then clean, but soaking wet. After drying outside in the sun for a day, it's now as good as new.

I wiped the mud off the D5100 with damp rags, then finished with paper towels spritzed with Windex. No mud got in the camera or on my glass and it appears that it's good to go. I'm glad that it was in my bag and not around my neck when I fell.

2018-06-06 Columbia SC.jpg
 
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Marilynne

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
Contributor
EVERYTHING went wrong here. I was exploring for a new railroad photo spot by the river. I found myself in slick, gooey mud and slipped down a steep slope in the process. I was fine, but my shoes, clothes, hands and camera bag (with camera safely inside) were covered in mud. Then a train showed up .... in the wrong direction AND my settings were all wrong, hence the blurriness and bad exposure. And of course the mud on my hands got on the camera. Lastly, I got a thorn in my hand grasping to anything I could to climb back up the slippery slope. Oh, and I somehow broke my sunglasses. :eek:

Not a good outing, but that's what makes life interesting. By the way, I use a Nikon gadget bag that I got free when I bought my D5100. It holds everything well and is actually quite nice. When I got home, I removed my camera and gear from it, then washed it with dishwashing liquid and sponge, then blasted it with a hose. It was then clean, but soaking wet. After drying outside in the sun for a day, it's now as good as new.

I wiped the mud off the D5100 with damp rags, then finished with paper towels spritzed with Windex. No mud got in the camera or on my glass and it appears that it's good to go. I'm glad that it was in my bag and not around my neck when I fell.

View attachment 288653

Glad to hear the camera survived. Oh, glad you're okay too!:rolleyes:
 

Slipperman

Senior Member
i still like this photo but even though i knew i wanted to bokeh the fence, i still accidentally kept f9 as the f-stop instead of lowering it to f5 or 4.5..

 

Marilynne

Administrator
Staff member
Super Mod
Contributor
Not sure if this is a juvie Black Crowned Night Heron, but it was following one. Bad spot for both.
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