I rode through Silverton, CO with Cody on his XJ. Beautiful. The million dollar highway really is paved with gold. XSiting in that with no guard rail, no shgoulder, and a long steep drop, No amount of protective gear would save you if you ran off the road. The following report was from the long distance riders list. It also includes Silverton CO And some very pretty canyons and arches.
Not my ride, from long distance riders list. but nice pics, advice on photography: a good report .
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2008 10:02:53 -0800
From: H Marc Lewis
Subject: [LDRider] Digital photo triage...
To: LDRiders
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Steve Hobart wrote:
> You need to take lots of picture to get a few good ones. My computer
> is filled with a lot of crappy shots in order to get a few good ones.
35 years ago a close friend who was a semi-pro photographer told me
that
even though I had a good eye for composition, and a reasonable mastery
of the camera (a 35mm SLR) that I should be discarding about 19 out of
every 20 shots I took.
That's considerably easier (and cheaper!) to do with digital cameras,
and I still find it to be good advice. Spending an hour or two learning
about composition, and reading your camera's owner's manual at least
once a year, will increase the proportion of good shots.
But you still need to throw most of them away.
A couple years ago between the mid checkpoint and finish of the IBR I
rode southwest and took these photos, which are the best of perhaps 500
shots:
http://www.hmarc.com/trips/CanyonCountry/
--hmarc
I hope this link works. It is worth a look, if only for the photography.
Brent in Ga
Not my ride, from long distance riders list. but nice pics, advice on photography: a good report .
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2008 10:02:53 -0800
From: H Marc Lewis
Subject: [LDRider] Digital photo triage...
To: LDRiders
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Steve Hobart wrote:
> You need to take lots of picture to get a few good ones. My computer
> is filled with a lot of crappy shots in order to get a few good ones.
35 years ago a close friend who was a semi-pro photographer told me
that
even though I had a good eye for composition, and a reasonable mastery
of the camera (a 35mm SLR) that I should be discarding about 19 out of
every 20 shots I took.
That's considerably easier (and cheaper!) to do with digital cameras,
and I still find it to be good advice. Spending an hour or two learning
about composition, and reading your camera's owner's manual at least
once a year, will increase the proportion of good shots.
But you still need to throw most of them away.
A couple years ago between the mid checkpoint and finish of the IBR I
rode southwest and took these photos, which are the best of perhaps 500
shots:
http://www.hmarc.com/trips/CanyonCountry/
--hmarc
I hope this link works. It is worth a look, if only for the photography.
Brent in Ga
Comment