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Send this photo as a postcard
Year's End (Almost Heaven Collection)
 
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Image Title:  Year's End (Almost Heaven Collection)
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Favorites: 1 
 By: Joe Shupienis  
  Copyright ©2002

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Photographer  Joe Shupienis {Karma:19}
Project #7 Maximum Depth of Field Camera Model Kiev 88CM
Categories Film Format
Portfolio Almost Heaven
Lens Mir 45/3.5
Uploaded 1/5/2002 Film / Memory Type Fuji NPH
    ISO / Film Speed 0
Views 965 Shutter 1/30
Favorites Aperture f:22
Critiques 15 Rating Critique Only Image
Location City - 
State - 
Country -   
About Brrrr... It was 12F with a 17 knot wind. A return visit -- I'm trying to take this shot in all four seasons. Although I'm not too thrilled about driving 180 miles to stand in an open field during a thunderstorm this coming July.
Random Pictures By:
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Year's End (Almost Heaven Collection)

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There are 15 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Vajdas Plunge   {K:12} 2/12/2004
Very nice

  0


Domenico Pescosolido   {K:10022} 8/16/2003
Remarkable work, excellent shot.

  0


Joksa Juoperi   {K:13473} 4/23/2003
Nicely composed landscape wiit good colours.

  0


Lisa Patterson   {K:90} 3/31/2003
Love the idea of this photo AND the series. I like your title too--the color seems to be slowly draining out of the sky as though to mark the year's end. Gorgeous!

  0


Connie Sunderland   {K:376} 3/30/2003
Well I was going to make a nice comment about this photo... and it really is nice... but being one of the West Virginia hillbillies you refer too... well.. the still is a lil low on fuel.... so I'm goin out to find a nice tree.... later :)

  0


David N. VanMeter   {K:552} 4/28/2002
Awesome! I got a chill when I looked at it. I am also glad to hear your comments on the Kiev equipment.

  0


kennard    {K:106} 3/19/2002
I was immediately attracted to this shot because I have an oak tree that I have also claimed for the same type of four-seasons shots. Interesting to see you're using a GPS to mark the location, because that's what I'm doing too. I'll upload a shot of it tomorrow. I like how you positioned the tree at the gap in the clouds, as if it's reaching up through them, or maybe the branches are creating the gap. Nice job.

  0


Joe Shupienis   {K:19} 1/5/2002
For even more fun with your GPS:

www.geocaching.com

I try to take pictures of each one I find...

  0


Lisa Brainard   {K:743} 1/5/2002
Cool idea, Joe, with the GPS. I've seen people try to do this before, but yes, you are gonna NAIL the exact location! (Forgive me, I got a GPS for Christmas and now see yet another use for it. :-)

  0


Joe Shupienis   {K:19} 1/5/2002
Thank you for the nice comments! The frostbite on my cheeks is feeling much better from your warm remarks !

The location is near Bruceton Mills, West Virginia, about 30 miles from Morgantown and 90 miles from my home in Pittsburgh. I use a GPS to locate the tripod in the exact same spot for each visit -- I have a goal of shooting this tree in all four seasons (if some hillbilly doesn't take a chainsaw to it to fuel his still).

I use 120 size NPH and NPS for both portraits and landscapes, deciding on that film after much research. I find the the extra dynamic range allows me to get more subtle colors and much more shadow detail. Had I used a contrastier film, the foreground would have been black in this shot. Notice that the light source (sun) is in the frame, and I still have shadow detail. I also use Kodak Portra NC (and on bright sunny days, VC for even more contrast) and usually keep a different type of film in each of my film backs.

A word about the camera: Many people are skeptical about the quality of the Kiev 88CM cameras made in the Arsenal Factory in Kiev, Ukriane. I am using a 2001 model and the "Russian" lenses and camera have given me many wonderful medium-format images such as these. For 10% of the price of similar Hasselblad equipment, the results can be almost as good, if proper care is taken when using the camera.

Yes, I still shoot Nikons, and have lots of expensive lenses for that system. I try to use the proper tool for the job and for "landscapes", the medium format choice is what I now prefer, since the cost of Kiev equipment is not prohibitive to me on a schoolteacher's salary.

Here's the same scene on October 21:

  0



Steve Kompier   {K:4629} 1/5/2002
Wow...a classic. Those russian hassies, do alright.

  0


Lisa Brainard   {K:743} 1/5/2002
Great shot! Great subject matter! Great color! I enjoy this because it's a shot with the type of landscape I have now here in Iowa.... it shows the beauty in the "plain" landscape.

OH! One thing I just caught on it. Are you shooting from the road and there is the walled edge of snow from the snow plow? Guess it would be nice to get rid of the bit of brownish road then

  0


Dave Holland Dave Holland   {K:13074} 1/5/2002
Man, I really like this one. Where do you live?

  0


Jason Neymeyer   {K:137} 1/5/2002
I really like this one. Your choice of film is very interesting, I don't see many people choose NPH as a landscape film. Was this film choice intentional, or did it just happen to be in the camera after shooting another subject?

  0


james mickelson   {K:7344} 1/5/2002
So stark, cold, and lonely. Forbidding almost. Great color.

  0


  1

 

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