So, this is my second photo dump here. This time architecture-centerd...hope you enjoy.
Some stairs, nothing special
To be honest, it looked better and more interesting from far away, but I had no choice. This was the farthest I could go back without having to deal with trees.
I really love the lens - no matter how hard I push it with strong backlight etc, I barely get it to flare and ghost
An observation platform - I noticed the plane later, but it adds something to the photo, I think.
This is my favourite photograph. No post processing except of colors, a little bit of cropping and turning it 90° counter clockwise. I had to take several photos until the center of the image lined up with the edge of the uppermost level.
Somehow, I just love photographing architecture...
...and shapes and patterns.
A homage to Gianni Galassi: http://giannigalassi.typepad.com/ (I only edited it in Adobe Camera Raw, no alteration of the image content).
Another perspective of the building in the second photo.
ISO 800 actually looked better (cleaner), but I destroyed it in post processing to get the tonalities right :/
I mostly see shapes in architecture and my surrounding which I translate into photographs...

Some stairs, nothing special

To be honest, it looked better and more interesting from far away, but I had no choice. This was the farthest I could go back without having to deal with trees.

I really love the lens - no matter how hard I push it with strong backlight etc, I barely get it to flare and ghost

An observation platform - I noticed the plane later, but it adds something to the photo, I think.

This is my favourite photograph. No post processing except of colors, a little bit of cropping and turning it 90° counter clockwise. I had to take several photos until the center of the image lined up with the edge of the uppermost level.

Somehow, I just love photographing architecture...

...and shapes and patterns.

A homage to Gianni Galassi: http://giannigalassi.typepad.com/ (I only edited it in Adobe Camera Raw, no alteration of the image content).

Another perspective of the building in the second photo.

ISO 800 actually looked better (cleaner), but I destroyed it in post processing to get the tonalities right :/

I mostly see shapes in architecture and my surrounding which I translate into photographs...