I recall her from the last Zombie Walk, when the weather was much nicer. She was in a different outfit as well, but I never forget a face.Names, on the other hand, are another story.
As has been my luck lately, I was running with a half-charged battery and the wrong lens. At least this time I made sure to get the settings right in the camera.
Offical Zombie Walk in town. As usual, it was drizzling, freezing and of course overcast. And despite all this, there was a huge turnout of zombies and the pics came out great. Many thanks for all those who put up with me getting in their way with a camera. Of course the brains I had in my pocket for a scooby-snack didnt' seem to hurt either.
A tough shot here, it was night, I wasn't using flash, and the ISO curve on my D1x leaves a lot to be desired, after all, it's a 10 year old camera. But in order to have any chance at all to shoot at a zombie clown (?) event, I needed to max out the ISO (at a whopping 800, modern cameras go much higher and show very little noise) and shoot wide open (1.8) with my 50mm.
Went to CrabTree falls over the weekend to catch the fall colours and to perhaps climb to the top. I've been before (see winter pics elsewhere) but the area is so frozen over in the winter that one can barely climb to the first section. This time around the weather was perfect and I got lots of good shots.
The following (or next, depending on how you read this journal) series of pictures are all taken with color film. Normally I don't shoot film in colour, only in Black and White. The reason for this change is I got a chance to go photograph Green Bank RadioTelescope in earnest.
As I had done some years ago when I visited Baltimore's Inner Harbour, I got this shot with no other people around, except for the carriagemen, and their riders, giving the illusion they are only waiting for the Lady of the Manor so they may start their journey.