Squeezing the last of the light out of the shorter autumn days. Chasing Ed down this ridgeline to the sea as the sun sets in front of us and the storm comes in from the south.
Selected by Matt Wragg - Another atypical fisheye shot today. Again, it keeps the distortion to a minimum, although if you look at the line of the sea you can tell immediately what type of lens was used here. And those clouds... Sunset comes every day, but those kind of golden clouds are something altogether more special.
The food in San Sebastian was amazing, and the hostel I stayed in had ridiculously high water pressure in the shower - great for blasting off the mud. Amazing place. Would love to mtb there.
Not sure, could be. Never been tested. Anyway, I just thought seeing as it was taken with a fish eye lens then if you put the horizon though the middle of the shot it will stay straight instead of curving up at the sides like a big smile. Then crop to get the framing you want. Unless the photographer wanted the horizon to look like a big smile.
It´s a fair comment oodboo. I could have done that and looking at it maybe should have done. The reason was that I was limited in how far back I could go as the ground dropped off sharply behind me. The sky was amazing so I wanted to try and get more of the sky in whilst still showing the rock face below us. It was more about framing for that. I could also have corrected the curvature in post but didn´t.
@mattwragg >These 11 pointers should hopefully give you something to think about if you want to see your work featured as a POD. > POINT # 2. Process, but not too much ( this pic is OVER process >> delete the point # 2 in your article.
Hey @mattwragg I thought you'd find the message @stillmrg sent to my inbox totally out of the blue in regards to my above comment. It reads "Matt's KISS ASS that why you have PODs" ... I had a great laugh and then tried to respond but the coward sent me that message then blocked me so I couldn't respond . So I thought only appropriate to share here :-)