
First upload from the hiking/camping trip my dad and I took to Little Lakes Valley, CA. This is Box lake.
Some editing and/or chromatic aberration issues here I might try to isolate out later.
Some editing and/or chromatic aberration issues here I might try to isolate out later.
Category Photography / Scenery
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 721px
File Size 680.1 kB
I did do that actually. This image is cropped. The tips are cut off by some reeds or whatever grows in the water and looks like grass. I thought to include the reeds into the photo, but the composition was positively simplified by their omission, that resulted in the omission of the tips of the reflections.
Instead you pitch a tent on FA eh? XD
Honestly, basic hiking/camping isn't hard. If you are worried about the risks, then go on more popular/major trails. This trail, for example, was REALLY busy. This is one of the few trails in the Sierras that allowed dogs, so everyone was there with their dogs. I'd say we crossed or were passed by at least 8-10 different groups of people and a few soloists as well.
Go for it, start with simple day hikes if you're concerned =)
Honestly, basic hiking/camping isn't hard. If you are worried about the risks, then go on more popular/major trails. This trail, for example, was REALLY busy. This is one of the few trails in the Sierras that allowed dogs, so everyone was there with their dogs. I'd say we crossed or were passed by at least 8-10 different groups of people and a few soloists as well.
Go for it, start with simple day hikes if you're concerned =)
Nah, chromatic aberration is a product of the physics of the optics itself. Light, while it only occupies a tiny span of the electromagnetic spectrum, occupies a very wide band of wavelengths which all refract at slightly different angles when travelling through the layers of glass. Granted infrared is at one of the extreme ends of that spectrum, but the IR filters in most cameras are REALLY strong (too strong in some cases depending on what you are trying to do sometimes) so IR is oftentimes only visible in a photograph when using a high density neutral-density filter. An IR filter wouldn't help with CA at these shutter speeds.
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