With your photo of Jordan, I see what a busy background the Andy's Treehouse had. You must've been able to move around since I see you have the band from different viewpoints.
Somehow, I missed the Great Valley State photos when you first posted them. Looks like that was bright venue. That's so cool, you got Adam and Eric in mid-choreography for Indie! And look how straight up and down they both are.
Heh, the audience looks kinda bored in that shot with Eric. That one guy with his arms crossed over his chest looks like he's sending "ok, make me like you!" vibes to Eric.
Beautiful photo of Eric tuning his guitar in Kenney's Basement. Somehow, Eric looks younger in the photo.
Adam's "toy Xylaphone instrument thingy" is a glockenspiel. Glocks have metal bars, xylophones have wooden ones. Yes, listening to CR has been a learning experience for me.
Again, wonderful photos. What kind of equipment are you using? And what's the new lens you were trying out?
*What kind of equipment are you using? And what's the new lens you were trying out?*
The camera body I used is a Nikon D70.
The new lense is the 70-200mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S VR Zoom-Nikkor.
Settings used during the concert:
Zoom Range: 70-200mm
F-stop: 2.8
Shutter Speed: between 8-20
ISO: 1600
VR: Set to full
ChristyRaymond (no login)
Re: Andyman's Treehouse Photos
May 26 2006, 8:55 AM
Hi Darrell, h
You have taken brilliant pictures there; they capture the atmosphere (if you know what I mean. Thank you so much for sharing them with us, you are a star: )
Shelly (no login)
Re: Andyman's Treehouse Photos
May 26 2006, 2:28 PM
Those pictures are wonderful. Thank you so much for posting them!
watcher652 (no login)
Re: Andyman's Treehouse Photos
May 26 2006, 2:38 PM
Darrell, what's VR? To me, that means Virtual Reality.
VR = Vibration Reduction. It's the Nikon terminology for Image Stabilization. It allows the photographer to take handheld photographs using slower shutter speeds. Normally, a photographer has difficulty shooting with a shutter speed less than 25. This allows for handheld photos with shutter speeds as slow as 8. It might not sound like much, but it makes a hugh difference during concerts. However, for moving objects you do not want to shoot with speeds lower than 13.