> My instructor actually asked me if I
had any interest in re-photgraphing
> some of these areas over time to document the changes, trying to
> duplicate the time of day and position each time. In some cases this is
> already impossible due to changes in the landscape once the earth-movers
> got to work.
Glenn.
This is what i plan to do on the pictures i shot in 2003/2004 on my rural
project. I have
a spot
marked out and plan to return at a later date for reshoots and to try and
possibly over
lay them in
PS some how to see the change.Maybe thats something to concider for yours.??
>
> Sorry about the grey pictures, they were taken on a very overcast day,
> and this series of photos was the first time I've used Photoshop
> Elements (or any flavor of PS for that matter), and I don't yet know how
> to use most of it. Even though I'm very comfortable with computers in
> general (most of my computers have been running Linux, FreeBSD or NetBSD
> for years) PS does not come naturally to me, so I'm still at a stage
> that I'd rather be in a darkroom dodging and burning with scraps of
> cardboard and construction paper.
LOL. I seem to do a bit better that way to. I seem to have trouble scanning
from B&W negs
on my
Epson 2450 and seem to get a flat greish look to them using Vuescan or
Silverfast. The
epson twain
seems to give me the better of the bunch.
Nice shots though,and it looks as if your county and my region share the same
destructions.
Dave Brooks
>