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General Photography
What is your technically hardest photo you have created?
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<blockquote data-quote="Dawg Pics" data-source="post: 639179" data-attributes="member: 26505"><p>I am on my iPad. I had to enlarge the screen until the candle was out of the image, then move the image around. Your eye will pick up the subltle movement of the ghost image. Once you see part of it, reduce the image size and just stare at it, you will see it or lock on to the part you think you see, reduce it and move it around. That is how you find dim objects in a telescope eyepiece. Vibrate the image, and the eye picks up the movement. Worked for me anyway.</p><p></p><p>It also worked if I enlarged it some and looked right above then candle. I moved the image left and right until I could see movement in the black area right above the candle.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dawg Pics, post: 639179, member: 26505"] I am on my iPad. I had to enlarge the screen until the candle was out of the image, then move the image around. Your eye will pick up the subltle movement of the ghost image. Once you see part of it, reduce the image size and just stare at it, you will see it or lock on to the part you think you see, reduce it and move it around. That is how you find dim objects in a telescope eyepiece. Vibrate the image, and the eye picks up the movement. Worked for me anyway. It also worked if I enlarged it some and looked right above then candle. I moved the image left and right until I could see movement in the black area right above the candle. [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
What is your technically hardest photo you have created?
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