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Why Not A Blog 79
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<blockquote data-quote="stmv" data-source="post: 795145" data-attributes="member: 10038"><p>hard to believe its Thursday already,, nice long weekend, but mostly chores, helping people moves and set up their lake camps. I personally don't own a camp, but nice to visit those that do, so the least I can do,, I help with setting their docks. </p><p></p><p>access to water is always nice for photograhy whether on the lake or seeing the evening sunset. Something almost primal waiting for the sun to dip below the horizan, camera ready to capture the scenes. Course, the world is saturated with sunset pictures, so 99.99 % of them are not worth printing, </p><p></p><p>and yet,, there you are tripod and such snapping away, and looking at the view finder with that instant gratification of enjoying repeating the sight, but now shrunk down to a 3 inch square. </p><p></p><p>Sometimes, I get a real keeper, and toss those into the portfolio bucket, so I suspect that if I counted up all my sunset keepers, maybe 40-60 or so. </p><p></p><p>Of course, many of the keepers is also due to the terrain, or other features that made the shot a keeper, something to hold the interest beyond the beautiful sunset.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]383537[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="stmv, post: 795145, member: 10038"] hard to believe its Thursday already,, nice long weekend, but mostly chores, helping people moves and set up their lake camps. I personally don't own a camp, but nice to visit those that do, so the least I can do,, I help with setting their docks. access to water is always nice for photograhy whether on the lake or seeing the evening sunset. Something almost primal waiting for the sun to dip below the horizan, camera ready to capture the scenes. Course, the world is saturated with sunset pictures, so 99.99 % of them are not worth printing, and yet,, there you are tripod and such snapping away, and looking at the view finder with that instant gratification of enjoying repeating the sight, but now shrunk down to a 3 inch square. Sometimes, I get a real keeper, and toss those into the portfolio bucket, so I suspect that if I counted up all my sunset keepers, maybe 40-60 or so. Of course, many of the keepers is also due to the terrain, or other features that made the shot a keeper, something to hold the interest beyond the beautiful sunset. [ATTACH=CONFIG]383537._xfImport[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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