I'm back from my first Disney trip with my Tamron 10-24 UWA! It was woefully miserably hot and humid, so I wasn't quite inspired to take as many photos as I might have in a cooler season, but the parks were not crowded at all, so that helped. I didn't use tripod at all the whole trip - that was the heat's fault, as walking around with a full bag and tripod just didn't seem very desirable...so I usually just traveled with my camera and mounted lens and one extra lens. The 10-24 was with me each day, as it was fun to play with a new perspective...and I tried it out for a variety of shots from normal landscapes or scenics to perspective-skewed wide look shots. Having the 10mm end was very convenient for those whole building shots or big scene shots that you can't back up enough to capture without a UWA.
The rectilinear type UWAs are great for getting architectural shots from very close, and as long as you hold them level, you can get basically no distortion at all on the horizontal and vertical lines. Here's a smattering of various shots of various types:
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Is that guy on the left getting ready to sneeze?? Love the colors in this shot!!
Is that guy on the left getting ready to sneeze?? Love the colors in this shot!!
Love the blue in that sky!
Scott
From my January 20th week trip, once again had some opportunities to put the Tamron 10-24mm through some workout. Starting off with some night shooting, ultrawide style, through Epcot's World Showcase. The skies were really wild - very low cloud/fog from daytime storms as a cold front passed through - it went from 80s the day before to 40s that night - and the lights were bouncing off those low banks of cloud and fog for some real wild colors:QUOTE]
Beautiful shots, looks like it may have been a little windy!
zackiedawg: From my January 20th week trip, once again had some opportunities to put the Tamron 10-24mm through some workout. Starting off with some night shooting, ultrawide style, through Epcot's World Showcase. The skies were really wild - very low cloud/fog from daytime storms as a cold front passed through - it went from 80s the day before to 40s that night - and the lights were bouncing off those low banks of cloud and fog for some real wild colors:
Awesome Zack!!! If you don't mind me asking how were they processed?
Thank you Daisy. Much appreciated. I am a big subscriber to the idea of shot and camera setup, to avoid post processing. Not that either approach is right or wrong - just personal preference. I much more enjoy taking photos than processing them...so I don't really do any post processing. In this case, these photos were resized and slightly sharpened using USM (unsharp mask) to recover some of the lost sharpness from the resizing.
I shoot in JPEG mode rather than RAW, set the camera's internal settings for sharpness, contrast, and saturation to my liking, set the white balance when I shoot, and adjust the exposure with shutter/ISO/aperture/EV. On some occasions when I do any post processing, it would be minor noise reduction when shooting high ISO shots, or minor cloning work to clone out a dust spot. Some folks here are truly amazing post processors - their skill with the computer in manipulating photos goes way beyond mine...it's just something I don't enjoy - 10 minutes in front of my computer working on photos, and I'm already wanting to do something else!