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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Tue Feb 08, 2011 1:10 pm Post subject: 12 pics Saigon Mir 47K, S.T. 3.5/24, S-M-C 1.4/50 [C&C] |
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kuuan wrote:
back in Saigon where 'Tet', Vietnamese New Year was celebrated:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T%E1%BA%BFt#The_New_Year
Some few pics from these last 10 days I want to share, all taken on Pentax K-x
Mir 47K f2.5/20mm
1 on heavily decorated Nguyen Hue Street, where people come to see the flowers and many take photos
Super Takumar f3.5/24mm:
2 inside Quan Am Pagoda in China Town
3 on Nguyen Hue street on the New Year Day
and S-M-C f1.4/50mm:
4 in a street side coffee shop
5 again on Nyugen Hue
6 midnight New Year at the Vinh Nghiem Pagoda
wide open:
7 curious boy
8 sitting in the coffee shop
9 at Nyugen Hue
10 selling flowers for New Year
11 in an ice cream / coffee shop
12 decoration on Nyugen Hue
cheers,
Andreas _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections
Last edited by kuuan on Tue Feb 08, 2011 5:27 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Attila
Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Posts: 57865 Location: Hungary
Expire: 2025-11-18
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Posted: Tue Feb 08, 2011 1:39 pm Post subject: |
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Attila wrote:
Very nice series, especially where we see young ladies. _________________ -------------------------------
Items on sale on Ebay
Sony NEX-7 Carl Zeiss Planar 85mm f1.4, Minolta MD 35mm f1.8, Konica 135mm f2.5, Minolta MD 50mm f1.2, Minolta MD 250mm f5.6, Carl Zeiss Sonnar 180mm f2.8
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Riku
Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1059 Location: Finland
Expire: 2017-04-30
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Posted: Tue Feb 08, 2011 6:39 pm Post subject: |
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Riku wrote:
Excellent, numbers 9 & 10 are the best! |
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shauttra
Joined: 17 Nov 2009 Posts: 778 Location: Latvia
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Posted: Tue Feb 08, 2011 7:12 pm Post subject: |
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shauttra wrote:
Exellent!!!
Very nice and enjoyable! _________________ Mto-1000, Tair-3, Auto Exaktar 135mm 2,8, Samyang 14mm 2.8,
Jupiter 37A, Carl Zeiss Sonnar 135/3.5,
Helios-44, Mir-1, Revuenon 50/1.4,
Carl Zeiss Pancolar 50/1.8, Samyang 24/1.4, Auto Vivitar 35/2.8
www.radosi.lv
http://shauttra.blogspot.com |
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DiegoV
Joined: 06 Feb 2010 Posts: 91 Location: Mira, Portugal
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Posted: Tue Feb 08, 2011 10:17 pm Post subject: |
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DiegoV wrote:
Great series
#2, #7 and #10 are my favorites. |
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IAZA
Joined: 16 Apr 2010 Posts: 2587 Location: Indonesia
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Posted: Wed Feb 09, 2011 1:56 am Post subject: |
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IAZA wrote:
nice series Andreas! _________________ nex5, Olympus EPM1, yashica half 14, Canon eos 650 want to see samples of mine? please click My lenses
and My gallery
~Suat~ |
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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Fri Feb 11, 2011 10:50 am Post subject: |
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kuuan wrote:
thank you very much my forum friends for looking and commenting.
quite a few in B&W, maybe just alright for street photography, but one reason for that also is that I still do not like the colors of the K-x all that much for daylight photography. Once the light become dim I like the pastel quality colors, and the are alright with little light and high ISO too.
one more to show (..a + forum member had liked and commented on it in my flickr stream ) taken with the Super Tak 3.5/24:
and a crop of a photo shown
best greetings,
Andreas
edited, ealier it said they were 100% crops _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections
Last edited by kuuan on Wed Feb 23, 2011 2:16 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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ducdao
Joined: 19 Jun 2010 Posts: 288 Location: Montreal, Canada
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Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 4:11 am Post subject: |
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ducdao wrote:
Are you still in Saigon, Andreas? Call me if you're still here and if time allows we can meet up. _________________ Duc
Pentax K100D/K10D/K20D/K-x/K-7 | DA15/ 35/40/70 Limited | DA10-17 | DA14 | DA* 50-135
Takumar: 24/3.5 | 28/3.5 | 35/2 | 35/2.3 | 35/3.5 | 50/1.4 | 55/1.8 | 85/1.8 | 85/1.9 | 105f2.8 | 135/2.5 | 135/3.5 | 150/4 | 200/4 | 300/4
Pentax: K20/4 | M20/4 | M28/3.5 | K30/2.8 | K35/3.5 | M50/1.4 | M50/1.7 | K50/1.2 | K50/1.4 | K55/1.8 | A50/1.4 | M85/2 | M100/2.8 | K105/2.8 | M100/f4 | M135/3.5 | K135/2.5 | M150/4 | M200/4 | M300/4
M42: Too many to list
Stock Images
My Flickr: Sunny Skye |
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cmontoya
Joined: 07 Dec 2009 Posts: 216 Location: Cebu City, Philippines
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Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 4:58 am Post subject: |
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cmontoya wrote:
#2 for me simply because you captured the sun rays beautifully.
#10 for framing the woman with the horizontals of the flowers.
#11 for capturing subtlety, that is, is she waiting for someone eagerly or did she hear the shutter of your camera open and is about to look at you _________________ Digital: Canon 450D
AF: Tamron 28-75 2.8
Film: Canonet 28, Canonet QL-17, Nikon FM2
MF: Nikkor 50mm 1.4 |
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karabud
Joined: 11 Apr 2009 Posts: 843 Location: Lodz
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Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 8:11 am Post subject: |
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karabud wrote:
Excellent pics; my favourite is nr #2 _________________ http://www.flickr.com/photos/atheist_lenses/
old
http://www.flickr.com/photos/piotr_p/ |
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Yebisu
Joined: 13 Feb 2011 Posts: 1299
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Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 2:22 pm Post subject: |
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Yebisu wrote:
First and Fourth are fantastic. Nice clean B&W on 1. and an interesting perspective on 4. Others are good too, of course. |
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mmelvis
Joined: 24 May 2010 Posts: 1326 Location: Florida,USA
Expire: 2015-05-09
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Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 12:49 am Post subject: |
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mmelvis wrote:
#6 Reminds me of a national geographic shot. Are there more night shots? |
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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:19 am Post subject: |
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kuuan wrote:
ducdao wrote: |
Are you still in Saigon, Andreas? Call me if you're still here and if time allows we can meet up. |
would be great to meet you again!
had written an SMS but no answer so far. Will leave for Bangkok on friday, but most likely be back in a few weeks, hope to see you then.
cmontoya wrote: |
#2 for me simply because you captured the sun rays beautifully.
#10 for framing the woman with the horizontals of the flowers.
#11 for capturing subtlety, that is, is she waiting for someone eagerly or did she hear the shutter of your camera open and is about to look at you |
#2 was easy, the rays were there, just had to wait a bit until something else interesting was in the frame
#10 was not that easy specially to get some framing as there were many people next to me pushing in this public park where flowers were at display and for sale for Vietnamese New Year, besides it was night and quite dark
#11 I think she was eagerly waiting, me sitting in the table next to her I was not sure if I could get enough of her face to make the pic work, but the background I liked made me try
karabud wrote: |
Excellent pics; my favourite is nr #2 |
thank you, the rays and the incense smoke make a good combination
Yebisu wrote: |
First and Fourth are fantastic. Nice clean B&W on 1. and an interesting perspective on 4. Others are good too, of course. |
thank you!
first one is just a bit back focused, but it doesn't do harm and I was lucky to get it
4th is the kind of photo one could take very day in the streets of Saigon, numerous street side coffee shops here and I waited for a public bus to fill the background
mmelvis wrote: |
#6 Reminds me of a national geographic shot. Are there more night shots? |
thank's a lot
I had taken more that night, but here a very different night shot, 'neighborhood - street - evening' life / party in a typical back street in Saigon:
though I should have saved this pic for another thread
and it was taken with a Vivitar ( Kiron ) f2/28mm lens _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections |
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tobbsman
Joined: 25 Jul 2008 Posts: 2578 Location: Austria
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Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2011 12:57 pm Post subject: |
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tobbsman wrote:
what a show ! Thanks for taking us there ...
My absolute favourite: the flower girl in b&w
Cheers
Tobias _________________ Camera Pentax K10D, K20D, Super A
SMC K28 3.5, SMC K24 2.8, SMC K28/2, SMC K50/1.4,SMC A50/1.7, SMC M28/3.5, SMC A 50/1.7, SMC K135 2.5, SMC A50 1.2
SMC A35-105 3.5, SMC A70-210 4, SMC A20 2.8, SMC M28 2.8,K28/3.5 SMC A28 2.8, SMC A100 2.8 Macro, CZJ Flektogon 20 2.8 (MC), 35 2.4 (MC),S.M.C Takumar 85mm 1.8, Helios 44M-4, A.Schacht Travenar 90/2.8, C.Zeiss J. Sonnar 180/2.8
Check out my: 2012 New "Advanced Guide to Panorama Stiching" !
Check out my "Beginner's Guide to Panorama Stiching !
Visit my Asahi and Zeiss MF lens samples database ! |
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Laurence
Joined: 26 Mar 2007 Posts: 4809 Location: Western Washington State
Expire: 2016-06-19
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Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2011 10:13 pm Post subject: |
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Laurence wrote:
These are outstanding! The last time I was in Saigon, it was 1968, and
it wasn't a "good time" to be there.
I do remember the beauty of the Vietnamese women; in fact, I think
there were a significant number of military men who married and
brought their wives back to the USA. Certainly are now "long ago"
memories for me.
I also remember that, when security was better, we would dine in
French restaurants with great food. I also remember a sort of very
popular soup that was served all over Vietnam, and especially
in the villages upstream on the Mekong Delta area - I wish I knew what
it is called, and how it was made. I do know it was delicious. _________________
Assent, and you are sane;
Demur,—you ’re straightway dangerous,
And handled with a chain.
Emily Dickinson
Cameras and Lenses in Use:
Yashica Mat 124 w/ Yashinon 80/3.5,
CV Apo-Lanthar 90/3.5SL, (Thank you Klaus),
Pentax 645,
Flek 50,
Pentax-A 150
Pentax-A 120 Macro
Voigtlander Vitomatic I w/Color Skopar 50/2.8
Konica TC and zoom lenses (thanks Carsten)
Contax AX
Yashica ML 50/2
Yashica ML 35/2.8
Carl Zeiss Contax 50/1.4
Tamron Adaptall SP 17/3.5
Tamron Adaptall 28/2.5
Tamron Adaptall SP 300/2.8 LD (IF)
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Hari
Joined: 29 Nov 2009 Posts: 1790
Expire: 2015-05-27
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Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2011 11:06 pm Post subject: |
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Hari wrote:
#2 is absolutely magical!
the blend of colors and light and shadows and smoke is top class!
thanks for sharing! _________________
Analogue Rangefinders: Leica M5, Leica M6 Titanium classic 0.72, Leica M7 0.58, Leica M7 0.85
Digital Rangefinder: Leica M9, Leica Monochrom, Leica M240
SLR: Leica R3 electronic, Canon AE1P
DSLR: Canon 5D MK2
M mount Lenses: Super-Wide Heliar 15/f4.5 ASPH. + Leica 24/f3.8 ASPH + Leica 28/f2 ASPH. + Leica 35/f1.4 ASPH. FLE + Leica Noctilux 50/f0.95 + Leica Noctilux 50/f1 + Canon 50/f1.2 LTM + Leica 50/f1.4 ASPH. + Leica 50/f1.5 + Zeiss ZM Sonnar 50/f1.5 + Leica APO Summicron 50/f2 + Leica Summitar 50/f2 + Leica Rigid Summicron 50/f2 + Zeiss ZM Planar 50/f2 + Leica 50/f2.8 E39 + Leica 75/f1.4 + Leica APO 75/f2 ASPH. + Voigtlander 75/f2.5 + Leica Summarex 85/f1.5 + Leica APO 90/f2 ASPH. + Leica 90/f2 E55 + Leica 90/f2.8 + Leica APO 135/f3.4
Leica R mount Lenses: Leica-R 60/2.8 E55 + Leica-R 80/1.4 E67 + Leica-R 180/4
EF mount Lenses: Canon 50/1.8 II
M42 mount Lenses: Too many
My pictures: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dementedjesus/ |
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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Sat Feb 26, 2011 3:35 pm Post subject: |
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kuuan wrote:
tobbsman wrote: |
what a show ! Thanks for taking us there ...
My absolute favourite: the flower girl in b&w
Cheers
Tobias |
thank you very much Tobias
very glad you liked them
Laurence wrote: |
These are outstanding! The last time I was in Saigon, it was 1968, and
it wasn't a "good time" to be there.
I do remember the beauty of the Vietnamese women; in fact, I think
there were a significant number of military men who married and
brought their wives back to the USA. Certainly are now "long ago"
memories for me.
I also remember that, when security was better, we would dine in
French restaurants with great food. I also remember a sort of very
popular soup that was served all over Vietnam, and especially
in the villages upstream on the Mekong Delta area - I wish I knew what
it is called, and how it was made. I do know it was delicious. |
oh Larry, you were there during 'that' not so good time...Vietnam now must be a very different place. I was surprised to learn that most southerners feel they lost the war and I am certain that many had to endure indescribable hardships, remember the boat people (!) and then I know little of what happened to those who did not risk and too often lost their lives by fleeing, but who stayed on.
Now however Vietnam is rather well developed, good infrastructure, and though many people may still be poor, specially at the country, one sees very little beggars or very poor, no slums, little people living on the streets but people enjoying dining out. Nothing like the slums and depressive poverty of e.g. the Philippines where a 'peaceful' transition of power from the US turned one of the richest Asian nations then into one of the poorest today.
Life here is very enjoyable!
I bought a few lenses here last year and by the bad state the were in I imagine that some may have lived through that time too..
a few days ago I visited a socalled 'War Remnants Museum' in Saigon ( people in the south hardly ever say Ho Chi Minh City but still use Saigon ) and there was this photo of a camera at display which, so the story goes, saved the life of a Japanese photographer:
also at display the Nikon F of another photographer who had published a book about the war, and if the lens is original too, a Nikkor f2/50 did the job!
( both 'camera' pics taken with a Vivitar ( Kiron ) f2/28mm )
many beautiful women here, but now, if I was to marry, I definitely would not bring 'her' to the west but stay right here
the soup you are referring to, is it the Phở? If I understand right Phở actually refers to the rice noodles and they could be served 'dry', not in a soup, as well, but the most typical are Phở Bo, beef noddle soup, and Phở Ga, chicken noodle soup. It still is the most typical food though it originally may come from the north.
food is fantastic here!
Hari wrote: |
#2 is absolutely magical!
the blend of colors and light and shadows and smoke is top class!
thanks for sharing! |
thank you very much Hari, a lot of incense burned in Pagodas so I believe it is not all that rare or difficult to get this kind of view
another low light shot with the S-M-C 1.4/50 wide open:
best greetings,
Andreas _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections |
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Katastrofo
Joined: 26 Feb 2007 Posts: 10405 Location: USA
Expire: 2013-11-19
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Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 5:29 pm Post subject: |
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Katastrofo wrote:
Fantastic series, Andreas! Too many faves to list, but the one with the lady
holding the umbrella for daughter(?) stands out for me. Thanks for sharing! |
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Hari
Joined: 29 Nov 2009 Posts: 1790
Expire: 2015-05-27
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Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 8:33 pm Post subject: |
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Hari wrote:
kuuan wrote: |
tobbsman wrote: |
what a show ! Thanks for taking us there ...
My absolute favourite: the flower girl in b&w
Cheers
Tobias |
thank you very much Tobias
very glad you liked them
Laurence wrote: |
These are outstanding! The last time I was in Saigon, it was 1968, and
it wasn't a "good time" to be there.
I do remember the beauty of the Vietnamese women; in fact, I think
there were a significant number of military men who married and
brought their wives back to the USA. Certainly are now "long ago"
memories for me.
I also remember that, when security was better, we would dine in
French restaurants with great food. I also remember a sort of very
popular soup that was served all over Vietnam, and especially
in the villages upstream on the Mekong Delta area - I wish I knew what
it is called, and how it was made. I do know it was delicious. |
oh Larry, you were there during 'that' not so good time...Vietnam now must be a very different place. I was surprised to learn that most southerners feel they lost the war and I am certain that many had to endure indescribable hardships, remember the boat people (!) and then I know little of what happened to those who did not risk and too often lost their lives by fleeing, but who stayed on.
Now however Vietnam is rather well developed, good infrastructure, and though many people may still be poor, specially at the country, one sees very little beggars or very poor, no slums, little people living on the streets but people enjoying dining out. Nothing like the slums and depressive poverty of e.g. the Philippines where a 'peaceful' transition of power from the US turned one of the richest Asian nations then into one of the poorest today.
Life here is very enjoyable!
I bought a few lenses here last year and by the bad state the were in I imagine that some may have lived through that time too..
a few days ago I visited a socalled 'War Remnants Museum' in Saigon ( people in the south hardly ever say Ho Chi Minh City but still use Saigon ) and there was this photo of a camera at display which, so the story goes, saved the life of a Japanese photographer:
also at display the Nikon F of another photographer who had published a book about the war, and if the lens is original too, a Nikkor f2/50 did the job!
( both 'camera' pics taken with a Vivitar ( Kiron ) f2/28mm )
many beautiful women here, but now, if I was to marry, I definitely would not bring 'her' to the west but stay right here
the soup you are referring to, is it the Phở? If I understand right Phở actually refers to the rice noodles and they could be served 'dry', not in a soup, as well, but the most typical are Phở Bo, beef noddle soup, and Phở Ga, chicken noodle soup. It still is the most typical food though it originally may come from the north.
food is fantastic here!
Hari wrote: |
#2 is absolutely magical!
the blend of colors and light and shadows and smoke is top class!
thanks for sharing! |
thank you very much Hari, a lot of incense burned in Pagodas so I believe it is not all that rare or difficult to get this kind of view
another low light shot with the S-M-C 1.4/50 wide open:
best greetings,
Andreas |
Hi Andreas,
While the technicality of the shot may not be difficult, sometimes its the supply and demand of the situation itself.
To me, the whole scene is very exotic as it takes place in a land far away and totally new to me and hence very impressive.
To someone local it may be just another day.
But I still love the shot!
Do keep em coming! _________________
Analogue Rangefinders: Leica M5, Leica M6 Titanium classic 0.72, Leica M7 0.58, Leica M7 0.85
Digital Rangefinder: Leica M9, Leica Monochrom, Leica M240
SLR: Leica R3 electronic, Canon AE1P
DSLR: Canon 5D MK2
M mount Lenses: Super-Wide Heliar 15/f4.5 ASPH. + Leica 24/f3.8 ASPH + Leica 28/f2 ASPH. + Leica 35/f1.4 ASPH. FLE + Leica Noctilux 50/f0.95 + Leica Noctilux 50/f1 + Canon 50/f1.2 LTM + Leica 50/f1.4 ASPH. + Leica 50/f1.5 + Zeiss ZM Sonnar 50/f1.5 + Leica APO Summicron 50/f2 + Leica Summitar 50/f2 + Leica Rigid Summicron 50/f2 + Zeiss ZM Planar 50/f2 + Leica 50/f2.8 E39 + Leica 75/f1.4 + Leica APO 75/f2 ASPH. + Voigtlander 75/f2.5 + Leica Summarex 85/f1.5 + Leica APO 90/f2 ASPH. + Leica 90/f2 E55 + Leica 90/f2.8 + Leica APO 135/f3.4
Leica R mount Lenses: Leica-R 60/2.8 E55 + Leica-R 80/1.4 E67 + Leica-R 180/4
EF mount Lenses: Canon 50/1.8 II
M42 mount Lenses: Too many
My pictures: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dementedjesus/ |
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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Mon Feb 28, 2011 1:57 pm Post subject: |
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kuuan wrote:
Hari wrote: |
Hi Andreas,
While the technicality of the shot may not be difficult, sometimes its the supply and demand of the situation itself.
To me, the whole scene is very exotic as it takes place in a land far away and totally new to me and hence very impressive.
To someone local it may be just another day.
But I still love the shot!
Do keep em coming! |
Hi Hari,
thank you very much for your detailed comment as to why you like this photo. I had been in this same Pagoda last year taking photos, and this time I must have taken some 20 to get this one, so I guess it was not all 'that' easy...but it does feel a bigger achievement when I succeed in focusing well a fleeting expression, which harldy ever happens, or at low light wide open, which I do quite a lot.
certainly many of my photos have an edge for being exotic
thank you very much for encouraging me to even show more, here you go:
another inside the Pagoda:
and some 'exotic' lens repair
in works on the streets of Saigon my Vivitar 2/28 and Auto Tak 2.8/105
hm..when he was smoking I got a bit nervous, but it turned out alright!
( all taken with S-M-C Takumar f1.4/50mm on Pentax K-x )
best regards,
Andreas _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections |
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Sven
Joined: 02 Aug 2008 Posts: 818 Location: Linköping Sweden
Expire: 2011-12-29
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Posted: Mon Feb 28, 2011 6:34 pm Post subject: |
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Sven wrote:
Great series. Thanks for sharing.
Events from distant part of the world captured like this are among the many things which make this forum interesting.
My favorite is #2 for the beautiful light. _________________ DSLR: Nikon D200, Pentax *istDL, Nikon D100 IR converted
SLR: Pentax Spotmatic, Pentax ME,
Nikkor:N 2.8/24 H 3.5/28, 2/35, 2/50, 1.4/50 1.8/85, 3.5/50-135, E 2.8/100, P C 2.5/105, 2.8/135, 2.8/180 ED, 4/200,
M42: Pentacon 4/200, S Takumar 1.8/55, Meyer Orestor 2.8/135, CZJ Flektogon 2.4/35, CZJ Pancolar 1.8/50, CZJ Sonnar 3.5/135
AF Lenses: Nikkor 1.8/50, Pentax 18-55
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/29261959@N08/
Website http://www.hundbilder.nu/ |
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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Tue Mar 01, 2011 6:51 am Post subject: |
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kuuan wrote:
Sven wrote: |
Great series. Thanks for sharing.
Events from distant part of the world captured like this are among the many things which make this forum interesting.
My favorite is #2 for the beautiful light. |
Sven, distant parts, relative to where?
Of course I know exactly what you mean and please don't misunderstand, I don't want to critizise your comment. I want to use your comment to remind that the internet is truly global and hopefully will help us to pass beyond a 'traditional euro / us centralistic' view. I love this about the internet.
Oviously for a Vietnamese Europe or/and the USA is very distant, practically even much more than Vietnam is for us.
Mflenses has Vietnamese members as well and not only because of that naturally I am shy to comment much on my 'exotic' photos, certainly I have very little authority for that. Actually I believe that very often my pics not only show views of countries I frequent but that they also show much about me and are quite personal
( S-M-C 1.4/50 on K-x )
thank you for looking and commenting,
best greetings,
Andreas _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections |
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Sven
Joined: 02 Aug 2008 Posts: 818 Location: Linköping Sweden
Expire: 2011-12-29
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Posted: Tue Mar 01, 2011 5:55 pm Post subject: |
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Sven wrote:
kuuan wrote: |
Sven wrote: |
Great series. Thanks for sharing.
Events from distant part of the world captured like this are among the many things which make this forum interesting.
My favorite is #2 for the beautiful light. |
Sven, distant parts, relative to where?
Of course I know exactly what you mean and please don't misunderstand, I don't want to critizise your comment. I want to use your comment to remind that the internet is truly global and hopefully will help us to pass beyond a 'traditional euro / us centralistic' view. I love this about the internet.
Oviously for a Vietnamese Europe or/and the USA is very distant, practically even much more than Vietnam is for us.
Mflenses has Vietnamese members as well and not only because of that naturally I am shy to comment much on my 'exotic' photos, certainly I have very little authority for that. Actually I believe that very often my pics not only show views of countries I frequent but that they also show much about me and are quite personal
( S-M-C 1.4/50 on K-x )
thank you for looking and commenting,
best greetings,
Andreas |
I'm sure many would consider Sweden a very distant corner of the world
I'm sorry if my comment expressed too much of a Euro-centeralistic view. Wasn't my intention at all.
I find it interesting that the perception of a good photo seem to differ so little over the world. In that sense we might be much closer than the geographical distance or the language might imply.
In a forum with many skilled photographers the views from other countries will be personal and not only liveless postcards. That's what make them interesting in my opinion.
Greetings!
Sven _________________ DSLR: Nikon D200, Pentax *istDL, Nikon D100 IR converted
SLR: Pentax Spotmatic, Pentax ME,
Nikkor:N 2.8/24 H 3.5/28, 2/35, 2/50, 1.4/50 1.8/85, 3.5/50-135, E 2.8/100, P C 2.5/105, 2.8/135, 2.8/180 ED, 4/200,
M42: Pentacon 4/200, S Takumar 1.8/55, Meyer Orestor 2.8/135, CZJ Flektogon 2.4/35, CZJ Pancolar 1.8/50, CZJ Sonnar 3.5/135
AF Lenses: Nikkor 1.8/50, Pentax 18-55
Flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/29261959@N08/
Website http://www.hundbilder.nu/ |
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kuuan
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 4569 Location: right now: Austria
Expire: 2014-12-26
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Posted: Wed Mar 02, 2011 7:00 am Post subject: |
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kuuan wrote:
Sven wrote: |
I'm sure many would consider Sweden a very distant corner of the world
I'm sorry if my comment expressed too much of a Euro-centeralistic view. Wasn't my intention at all.
I find it interesting that the perception of a good photo seem to differ so little over the world. In that sense we might be much closer than the geographical distance or the language might imply.
In a forum with many skilled photographers the views from other countries will be personal and not only liveless postcards. That's what make them interesting in my opinion.
Greetings!
Sven |
Dear Sven I am sure that you did not meant to nor actually expressed a Euro-centralistic view. I 'used' you, used your comment to make a general point, a reminder, that exotic is a valid term, but that today it no longer applies to places far from Europe and / or the US only but goes the other way around as well. My home country nowadays often appears very exotic even to me
Postcard photos of attractions are good, but there have been better ones than I would be able to do taken before so I don't feel at all to add another, very likely worse one.
Best I enjoy taking those which locals wouldn't consider worthy and foreigners have difficult access to, taking them often is a sensitive issue though.
( Vivitar f2/24mm on K-x )
best regards,
Andreas _________________ my photos on flickr: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kuuan/collections |
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Laurence
Joined: 26 Mar 2007 Posts: 4809 Location: Western Washington State
Expire: 2016-06-19
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Posted: Wed Mar 02, 2011 7:01 pm Post subject: |
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Laurence wrote:
Something interesting to me, Andreas, was that while I was in Vietnam,
I always felt like an interloper, an "invader" if you will. Of course, I was
basically there against my true will, but really had no choice once I was
under the orders of the military. I could never get over that feeling that I
was somehow altering an ancient and beautiful country simply by BEING
there in the venue of "war". This often kept me awake at night (along with
the heat and humidity).
When we traveled upriver on the Mekong, we would get to the point where
it seemed the "true" Vietnam came forward, with many villages and much
agriculture. But what struck me was the sheer friendliness of these
people in the villages who were very economically poor, yet poured forth
welcoming gestures at every turn in the river.
Regarding Saigon, it was of course different in many ways than the
more remote villages. I was never comfortable in Saigon because I did
not know how to pick out "enemy" versus "friend". I was always in a
paranoid state, so it was not so enjoyable. However, the city was
absolutely vibrant and beautiful - and yes, it was exotic to me.
So, it was always a shock to go from Saigon to a peaceful village up the
river, and then all of a sudden be involved in combat. I have no recurring
problems from the violence and horror of these times. It is placed in a
corner of my mind and I have dealt with it. But I will always carry a
lingering unease about being part of an "invasion" that was not needed.
Well, off that subject - I tend to carry on too far. What I really love in
this series is that you have captured the dignity and mutual support that
the people of Vietnam seem to have as a universal trait. Also, there is
a fantastic capture of the "essence" of the architecture and the wonderful
interior designs such as in image #2.
I can certainly understand why Vietnam has turned into a vibrant country
that is becoming a powerful contributor to world commerce. The people
have that internal pride and dedication that enables them to be
successful at just about anything that they undertake. In fact, it seems to
me that the whole of the southeastern Asian area has gone forward
successfully to become important centers of the world.
The last image in the first group is classic. You captured "the moment"
here for sure. An absolutely valuable image. I wonder if the woman was
jumping up a clicking her heels together (!) or just running to get the
next course of food! Also, I remember the back alleys with their miles
of electrical wires overhead. Probably would not meet the "electrical
code" these days! _________________
Assent, and you are sane;
Demur,—you ’re straightway dangerous,
And handled with a chain.
Emily Dickinson
Cameras and Lenses in Use:
Yashica Mat 124 w/ Yashinon 80/3.5,
CV Apo-Lanthar 90/3.5SL, (Thank you Klaus),
Pentax 645,
Flek 50,
Pentax-A 150
Pentax-A 120 Macro
Voigtlander Vitomatic I w/Color Skopar 50/2.8
Konica TC and zoom lenses (thanks Carsten)
Contax AX
Yashica ML 50/2
Yashica ML 35/2.8
Carl Zeiss Contax 50/1.4
Tamron Adaptall SP 17/3.5
Tamron Adaptall 28/2.5
Tamron Adaptall SP 300/2.8 LD (IF)
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