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Marcio Janousek
{K:32538} 6/7/2005
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Great work , nice old colors and texture ...
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David McClenaghan
{K:9481} 5/24/2005
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Definitely worth getting terminal cancer for such an unusual effect. Maybe your Slarti needs adjusting?, particularly if its one of the early ones!
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Oto Hejmala
{K:-626} 5/23/2005
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interesting thing. Usefilm :-).
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Hanggan Situmorang
{K:37833} 5/21/2005
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It creates a unique atmosphere and mood. Thanks for sharing this, Ian.
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John Loreaux
{K:86210} 5/20/2005
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Great work lan! Looks like its printed on canvas! Super perspective My friend! Take care!........................................John
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Roger Skinner
{K:81846} 5/20/2005
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all that and Stefan wants you to go back!!! OMG
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- -
{K:6282} 5/19/2005
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Super! This should be megasized, I mean a height of 2 metres or so, pixels and moire and all.
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Stefan Engström
{K:24473} 5/19/2005
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Two things to try if you can return to the scene of the crime and feel like digging deeper: (1) Take a shot with the lenscap on. (2) Try taking a shot of a neutral background (if the lenscap image does not show anything) at different distances from the tower.
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 5/19/2005
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My friend who mentioned cancer was taling about a technician who used to stand in front of the large white disks you see here. Pobably a different kettle of fish this more focussed big thing compared to the mobile telephones relay but I share your concern.
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ARMANDO ALCÁZAR
{K:42404} 5/19/2005
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??Al these white points are because de radio waves?? you scare me because here the movil telephon company put his towers in the midle of the city each 4 blocks and for this they rent the yard or garden of the houses :(
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 5/19/2005
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I think it IS there at 800. Funny grun gy thing to find. Bit like feed back on an amplified guitar. If only I found a way to control it.
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 5/19/2005
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I agree, the scanning process. I guess of course there are two sans. The original and then the noise reduction scan of ther blank sensor noise generated at the same duration of the exposure, which is then "subtracted" from the original. So what about a neart resolution pattern in the original noise and the secondary noise reduction reading of the noise. Maybe it is there at the iso 800 but less obviously so. Or... If that process of subtracting the noise is tripped up by one pixel so that so that 002noise is subtracted from 001 and 003 from 002 could that produec the wierd stuff. The sample I gave you is at the orignal orientation by the way. Rotated.
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Stefan Engström
{K:24473} 5/19/2005
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I agree with Zoltan re. the book cover. Could be another biography on Nikola Tesla too :-) I still don't think it is moire - I think you need a near-resolution pattern in the image to cause that. The horizontal pattern (referring to the image the way you presented it) is caused by the radio tower I would have guessed that the read-out process which is scanning the image, but one would have expected that to affect the lower ISO settings as well. If there was an interaction directly with the photosensors I would not have expected a highly structured pattern such as this.
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Ian McIntosh
{K:42997} 5/19/2005
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Thanks for your time Stefan
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Zoltan Bereczki
{K:180} 5/19/2005
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I'd put this image on the front cover of a science fiction book! I like this image:) Congrats, Zoltan
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Stefan Engström
{K:24473} 5/19/2005
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It doesn't neccessarily look like moire to me but it is curious. Would you show a small piece in full resolution?
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