I took some good ones on my way home yesterday but I didn't load them yet.
I think you will like this one marcus. Although you seem to be a little more drawn to landscape w/architecture.
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It was taken indoors at night, house plant
Koh Tao Thailand
Yes i do like landscapes, they are more relaxing and make you look around the picture. I also love architectureanything what interests me i shoot.
Nice shot by the way
great photos each one is very relaxing. cool talent u have there.
You guys really take good photo's, they really make you feel the shot
These are a few more, again just with a point and shoot, this one is the Congo river
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Morning mist on a road in Laos
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A frozen river i saw in Sweden
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Up in the Alps in France
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I only have a point and shoot but if you guys have any tips on better angles or layout i would be happy to hear them
A palace in Thailand
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Bro you have a great natural eye. You establish the rule of thirds in almost every shot, your framing is great, and you always seem to give a focal point. The only thing I could recommend is a UV and polarized filter(eliminates the haze), but you can't use those with a point and shoot. If photography is something you love, research a DSLR and make the investment. It took me three years to finally buy one and I couldn't be happier. Keep up the good work. I don't know what camera marcus uses be he takes fantastic pictures as well.
Thanks mate, I have been looking at a better camera, maybe i should upgrade, i just don't seem to catch the feeling you guys do in your shots
Turned the camera to B&W just to see how it looked..
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Good pics, i like the cliff face and road the best from that bunch
Norway. Not great pics, but it`s what I got on the computer.
Here is a good read for a few composition rules that will help you look at how photographers look at a sceve before they take a picture.
http://www.colorpilot.com/comp_rules.html
I like the instructions on that site for beginners because it starts putting your mind in the right place while you look at your shot, without overloading you information you don't need yet. Once you start getting a feel for it, you will start noticing all kinds of great shots you never thought of before.
The hummingbird was in my back yard (California). That was taken with my old point and shoot camera last year.
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