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This is one of my very first attempts at a focus stacked image. For years, when I didn't know any better, I would just set my camera to an F stop of 16 and shoot. I thought this was going to give me the sharpest images possible for some reason. I must've read or watched something and never looked into it further back then. I would always see these beautiful landscape images with everything in the frame tack sharp. The foreground, the middle and the background. What was this wizardry? How did they do it? That's when I discovered focus stacking and my love for it began. I use it in almost every one of my landscape images today, it gives them that nice crisp look throughout. This photo is a little soft in places, but for a first attempt I'd have to say it went pretty well. This piece represents progression to me. It's nowhere near perfect and my work still has a long way to go but, I've come so far from where I began. As long as my work is improving over time I'm happy with where it's heading. 10,000 hours take a long time to accumulate shooting photos.

This image was photographed by Vincent Schnabl.

Edition 1/1

Troposphere collection image

Troposphere is a culmination of some of my favorite work to date. I have spent 30 marvelous years on this planet. The troposphere is the lowest layer of the atmosphere. It provides us with life every single day and it's where all our weather phenomenon happen. As a landscape photographer this affects my work in a massive way. Low pressure systems bring in rain and clouds for those moody shots. High pressure systems bring clear skies, perfect for capturing the stars, northern lights and milky way. Clouds give us amazing contrasts, sunsets and sunrises. A big component of what separates good from great landscape photography is the weather and the conditions it brings. That is why I am forever grateful to be living here, during this era. Capturing the beauty the troposphere has to offer and sharing it with everyone is what inspires me every single day.

This collection is 16 pieces 1/1

All images are captured by Vincent Schnabl, photographer based out of Revelstoke, British Columbia

Category Photography
Contract Address0x495f...7b5e
Token ID
Token StandardERC-1155
ChainEthereum
MetadataCentralized
Creator Earnings
10%

Elevated Blossoms

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Elevated Blossoms

visibility
43 views
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This is one of my very first attempts at a focus stacked image. For years, when I didn't know any better, I would just set my camera to an F stop of 16 and shoot. I thought this was going to give me the sharpest images possible for some reason. I must've read or watched something and never looked into it further back then. I would always see these beautiful landscape images with everything in the frame tack sharp. The foreground, the middle and the background. What was this wizardry? How did they do it? That's when I discovered focus stacking and my love for it began. I use it in almost every one of my landscape images today, it gives them that nice crisp look throughout. This photo is a little soft in places, but for a first attempt I'd have to say it went pretty well. This piece represents progression to me. It's nowhere near perfect and my work still has a long way to go but, I've come so far from where I began. As long as my work is improving over time I'm happy with where it's heading. 10,000 hours take a long time to accumulate shooting photos.

This image was photographed by Vincent Schnabl.

Edition 1/1

Troposphere collection image

Troposphere is a culmination of some of my favorite work to date. I have spent 30 marvelous years on this planet. The troposphere is the lowest layer of the atmosphere. It provides us with life every single day and it's where all our weather phenomenon happen. As a landscape photographer this affects my work in a massive way. Low pressure systems bring in rain and clouds for those moody shots. High pressure systems bring clear skies, perfect for capturing the stars, northern lights and milky way. Clouds give us amazing contrasts, sunsets and sunrises. A big component of what separates good from great landscape photography is the weather and the conditions it brings. That is why I am forever grateful to be living here, during this era. Capturing the beauty the troposphere has to offer and sharing it with everyone is what inspires me every single day.

This collection is 16 pieces 1/1

All images are captured by Vincent Schnabl, photographer based out of Revelstoke, British Columbia

Category Photography
Contract Address0x495f...7b5e
Token ID
Token StandardERC-1155
ChainEthereum
MetadataCentralized
Creator Earnings
10%
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Price
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