Couple of local lads pictured in front of the Savoy, Patrick’s Street, Cork.
Aperture | ƒ/3.5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/1600s |
I was there too
Couple of local lads pictured in front of the Savoy, Patrick’s Street, Cork.
Aperture | ƒ/3.5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/1600s |
Shot on Patrick Street, Cork a few weeks back.
Aperture | ƒ/4 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 21mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/800s |
This is the Maxol Petrol Station in Blarney. This is a long exposure shot and I just managed to get the Cork-Blarney bus in the frame!
Carey’s Lane leads off Patrick Street in Cork to Paul Street and the large Tesco shopping center there. In by-gone days it was part of the Huguenot Quarter of the city.
Shot on Patrick Street, Cork about a week ago. I was crossing the street when I spotted two girls engrossed in a mobile phone.
This is a tightly cropped section of the image which was originally shot from the hip in portrait mode.
The Oasis clothes shop is in the background, and HMV can be seen in the reflection of the window.
See the bag in that guy’s hand? It’s from the “Digital Camera” shop 🙂
At one of the butchers in the English Market a week ago. This butcher sells great honey collected from bees in Co. Cork! I spotted the joint of meat on the counter as I was leaving.
Patrick Street last weekend. I think it’s an Argus Argos catalogue he’s reading.
The signs in Blarney always point towards a B&B!
This bunch of signs do anyway. Right at the end of Station Road there’s a pole with signs to about a dozen B&Bs! If you ever need somewhere to stay in Blarney you shouldn’t have trouble finding accomodation!
Link of the Day
If you haven’t read any of the The Digital Journalist yet then the January issue is a good place to start! I found dispatches for Iraq and Bolivia rivetting and scary and exciting.
In a compeltely different way, Bill Pierce’s memories of the late Michael Evans will stir your heart. He did a great job writing about his friend.
Bikes parked on Grand Parade a few weeks ago.
An experiment in high-key cross processing.
Pictured on Patrick Street, Cork.
Howto and what is cross processing?
Cross-processing has been around for as long as film has, and is a way of making your images more interesting and abstract by literally mixing colours. I followed the simple instructions here which I had blogged a long time ago but forgot! It came up in a search for “cross processing gimp”!
There’s no magic secret way of doing this. Simply open your image in your favourite image manipulation program, GIMP of course, or Photoshop if you must. Bring up the Curves tool, and play the Red, Green and Blue channels separately until you have something you like! Create S curves to increase the contrast of each colour, and make it pronounced to increase the effect!
Use the saturation tool to make the colours even more pronounced and remember, have fun!
Aperture | ƒ/3.5 |
Camera | Canon EOS 20D |
Focal length | 18mm |
ISO | 400 |
Shutter speed | 1/640s |
A child with a very bored expression in the middle of Christmas shopping!
On a foggy morning a web will sparkle in the ambient light because of the moisture in the air.
I spent an inordinate amount of time crouched down shooting this dead bush!