Hugo, these are truly stunning photos with the new F200. Love the graceful "Musical Note" here and the high ISO "Nightlife" in the previous set. Looks like the tiny Fuji is liberating you from well lit main streets for candid night shooting.
Do you have the firmware version for your F200? It gets overwritten by Picasa and Photoshop in the EXIF.
Thanks so much everyone for leaving such warm words!!!:-)
French friend: the first one is certainly my fav as well...
David: yes, I'm taking many more night photos lately... the version? 1.00
Steve: you've got a lovely blog... your pics are so full of life!
Vanilla: you're making me blush! Honestly, I'm just "doing what I feel" - won't even bother switching on the camera if I don't "feel" anything... oh, maybe there's one little experience I can share with you: be patient on one hand to wait for but decisive on the other to hold on to elements (usually momentary or chance-sent) that lend the scene atmosphere. This will often help set the image apart from a mere "snapshot".
So beautiful pictures !
ReplyDeleteLove the first one,
hope everything is fine,
French fan.
Hugo, these are truly stunning photos with the new F200. Love the graceful "Musical Note" here and the high ISO "Nightlife" in the previous set. Looks like the tiny Fuji is liberating you from well lit main streets for candid night shooting.
ReplyDeleteDo you have the firmware version for your F200? It gets overwritten by Picasa and Photoshop in the EXIF.
Best wishes
D.
I've enjoyed looking through your pictures of Hong Kong, both here and also your pbase collection. Great stuff!
ReplyDeleteI really wonder how u shot such great photos by normal camera. it's so cool. I think it's difficult to imitate your style. I like ur style~
ReplyDeleteVanilla
Thanks so much everyone for leaving such warm words!!!:-)
ReplyDeleteFrench friend: the first one is certainly my fav as well...
David: yes, I'm taking many more night photos lately... the version? 1.00
Steve: you've got a lovely blog... your pics are so full of life!
Vanilla: you're making me blush! Honestly, I'm just "doing what I feel" - won't even bother switching on the camera if I don't "feel" anything... oh, maybe there's one little experience I can share with you: be patient on one hand to wait for but decisive on the other to hold on to elements (usually momentary or chance-sent) that lend the scene atmosphere. This will often help set the image apart from a mere "snapshot".
Have a great weekend!:-)
Hugo