- 20,815
- 28,435
Just noticing: sealion is a strange word for a dog.
You look in good shape!jrmichler said:Stopped to talk to a neighbor while on my morning run last July, and the Google Street View camera car went by. The strange thing is that the Street View car went by two years ago while I was actually running. They posted that imagery for about three months. Then they replaced it with older imagery, but only for about three miles of road. I didn't think I was THAT ugly.
View attachment 367643
When I was in high school here in NorCal I learned to free dive for abalone off the north coast. Unfortunately, that was the same time that the first "Jaws" movie came out in theaters, so I was always a bit spooked and on edge diving in the murky kelp forests.BillTre said:If it came up under me, I would have shot several feet out of the water.
It happened to me back in 2012.jrmichler said:Stopped to talk to a neighbor while on my morning run last July, and the Google Street View camera car went by. The strange thing is that the Street View car went by two years ago while I was actually running. They posted that imagery for about three months. Then they replaced it with older imagery, but only for about three miles of road. I didn't think I was THAT ugly.
View attachment 367643
collinsmark said:... Continued from previous post (this post is part 2 of 2).
Looks like something out of Jurassic World, minus the dinosaurs!collinsmark said:![]()
Figure 1. "Target is Closed." 35mm Summilux-M ASPH @f/1.4.
Thanks!Andy Resnick said:Really excellent photos- both compositionally and technically (exposure, etc)- thanks for posting!
Did I mention that Balboa Park also has a Natural History Museum?jtbell said:Looks like something out of Jurassic World, minus the dinosaurs!
Also because sometimes the people in early photos were... dead. Post-mortem photography.DennisN said:You’ve likely heard the reason people never smile in very old photographs. Early photography could be an excruciatingly slow process. With exposure times of up to 15 minutes, portrait subjects found it impossible to hold a grin, which could easily slip into a pained grimace and ruin the picture.
Yes, this was a thing back in the day. You can tell by the people who look exceptionally sharp in the photos. Those who were alive were a bit blurry (due to inevitable motion blur) and were subsequently often touched up by the artist/photographer with a brush/pencil post-print. But the one person in the photo that didn't have any noticeable touch-ups but inexplicably remained tack sharp may very well have been deceased.Algr said:Also because sometimes the people in early photos were... dead. Post-mortem photography.