On Mon, May 12, 2008 at 8:27 AM, David Savage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> G'day All,
>
>  Took this a few months ago but have just this weekend got around
>  retouching it (~160kb)
>
>  <http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2119/2481946623_1e672bebcc_o.jpg>
>  <http://flickr.com/photos/disavage/2481946623/>
>
>  K10D, DA* 16-50mm f2.8 @ 16mm, 969 seconds @ f4, ISO 100, slight
>  amount of reflected red gelled flash, lots of spotting in PS.
>
>  Taken at "The Pinnacles", Nambung National Park, Western Australia,
>  looking just east of the celestial south pole.
>
>  Now to explain the title (if it's already apparent to you, carry one
>  with whatever else you have to do today :-).
>
>  For those familiar with the Australian, and various other southern
>  hemisphere nations, flags the Southern Cross constellation (officially
>  known as Crux) is the crucifix pattern of stars featured on the right
>  hand side of the .au flag (5 stars make up the constellation). It's
>  the brightest constellation in the southern sky & is easily seen even
>  in the city..
>
>  If you aren't familiar with the pattern, or just can't see it, look
>  about halfway between the horizon & top of frame. Just left of centre
>  you should see 4 trails that look a bit like a crucifix on its side
>  (with the long edge pointing to the right). That's the Southern Cross.
>
>  Anyway enough of the astronomy lesson. I thought it looked kinda' cool :-)
>
>  As always any & all comments welcome.
>
>

I don't see no constellation, but it's a hell of a cool shot!

cheers,
frank

-- 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept." -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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