I actually like the shot better with the tourists (in that example)

The technique for getting rid of people in the frame goes back to the 19th century... with long exposures and, of course, camera on tripod..

I liked a shot I got with ghosts in it back in 2004 in New ORleans with
my lx on a tripod at Jackson square... and several here have done similar stuff, I believe - certainly one shot of Mark R's from his
travels across the big pond.

What I hate is when I want certain intersting people in the foreground and they bust me taking the photo and get out of my way to be nice... or stop from entering the space I appear to be photographing put of misguided helpfulness.

ann


On 4/20/2015 12:17, Stanley Halpin wrote:
I think you can do this in-camera: shot in Interval Composite mode, [Average] 
setting. I haven’t tried it but it should work.
However, after many years of spending many seemingly very long times waiting 
for other tourists to clear out from a scene, I have found that many sites and 
sights are improved by the addition of a few people. Adds scale, maybe a bit of 
action. YMMV.

stan

On Apr 20, 2015, at 10:51 AM, Daniel J. Matyola <[email protected]> wrote:

Someone sent me this PhotoShop "tip."
Has anyone done this?
Would it work?

https://mlkshk-ada.kxcdn.com/r/13TJ0

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

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