• #1869
    Kurt Kamka

    Gorgeous, Pete. What do you think of the 30mm?

    Kurt

  • #1871
    Pete Walentin

    Kurt Kamka;1720 wrote: Gorgeous, Pete. What do you think of the 30mm?

    Thanks Kurt.

    Re the 30mm: I love it!

    Think about the 35mm, add some minor weight, size and distortion and you have it. But you could ignore the last point as you have your lens profile in LR.

    For me it is the Wide-angle focal length to go. I do need nothing with a greater FOV. In other words: I am pretty happy. :rolleyes:

  • #1875
    David Farkas

    Nice. Seeing as how I only got to use the 30mm off a small balcony in NYC, your image really makes me want to go out for a “real” test. Hopefully, Leica will ramp up production soon.

  • #1882
    arminw

    Well done your picture looks absolutely gorgeous … fantastic ! I can’t wait for my wide angle lens to arrive … I am going for the 35 mm .

  • #1883
    Pete Walentin

    Thanks for the feedback.

  • #1884
    David K

    It’s a beautiful shot Pete…well done, and the colors are fabulous. Also like the way the clouds over the mountains add some balance to the image. If it were mine I’d probably clone out the black wire… but I realize that’s a matter of individual taste and philosophy.

  • #1885
    rgk

    wonderful photo, please tell where the church is located

  • #1886
    Pete Walentin

    David K;1735 wrote: It’s a beautiful shot Pete…well done, and the colors are fabulous. Also like the way the clouds over the mountains add some balance to the image. If it were mine I’d probably clone out the black wire… but I realize that’s a matter of individual taste and philosophy.

    Thanks. Re the wire: I thought about it but CS5s Content Aware wasn’t able to do it quickly so I decided to leave it as is but in general I agree. 😉

    rgk;1736 wrote: wonderful photo, please tell where the church is located

    Thanks. The church is in New Zealand, South Island at Lake Tekapo. It is THE tourist spot in this area and it was pure luck, after finding the right spot during the day, to come back later that day and after another one to two hours of waiting I got the church without any human being. 😉

  • #51257
    Jared1

    The Good Shepherd imagery hits differently when you’ve actually felt lost and found your way back. I remember going through a really directionless stretch a few years ago – drifting between communities, nothing quite sticking. A coworker mentioned Psalm 23 almost offhand, and something about “”He restores my soul”” just sat with me for weeks. Started looking for a place where that kind of message was actually lived out, not just recited. Eventually landed on find a church in Prescott AZ and what struck me was how unpretentious it felt. No fluff, just people genuinely engaged with scripture and each other. Exactly the kind of shepherd-and-flock energy that phrase carries. If the Church of the Good Shepherd tradition resonates with you, I think you find echoes of it wherever people are seriously committed to the Word and the community around it.
    What draws you to that particular name or tradition? Curious if it’s theological or more personal.

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