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Autumn in Smoky Mountains National Park

Autumn in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park from Jeff Ball on Vimeo.

This is a first video experiment with the Canon 5DMKII while on a landscape photography visit to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in October 2009. Capturing and constructing this video has served as a wonderful educational endeavor. I mistakenly recorded the first two video clips in SD and are not quite the quality they should be, but the other clips look wonderful on the large screen. I am also learning video editing through Adobe Premiere Elements 8.0. It crashes frequently on my PC so I am either in need of equipment upgrades or I need to get the Adobe Creative Suite with Premiere or both. I hope you enjoy the video and please contact me with any comments or questions.

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Heading to NEAF (North East Astronomy Forum)

Leaving for Suffern, NY and NEAF today.  Look for blogs, photos, videos, and other commentary about things that catch my eye.  NEAF is the largest astronomical trade show in the U.S. if not the world.  Check out the link for more information and stay tuned to the blog.  

NEAF

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Surprises from printing marathon...

Preparing for the Norton Commons show next month and fine tuning all of the astronomical fine art prints.  I have said it too many times, but an image that looks fine on the monitor is often times not nearly ready for fine art printing.  Over the past few days I have been optimizing my astrophotography prints and today I had an opportunity to compare two different papers.  

Now earlier in the week I had an opportunity to compare my two favorite papers, Hahnemuhle Photo Rag (matte paper) to Harman Fiber Gloss (semi-glossy.)  To my surprise I preferred the matte paper to the glossy.  Today I just received a new semi-glossy paper, Canson Baryta.  Just finished the new comparison and again, I prefer the matte paper for my current asto prints.  The Canson looks like a gorgeous paper and will probably become my preferred paper for landscape prints.  But for astrophotography prints right now, the matte paper provides a more comfortable look into the scene and presents the image in the best possible way.  

My first thought at the beginning of the week was that the semi-glossy paper would be the preferred for the astronomical subjects.  But the darks in the matte paper and the subdued contrast and highlights really deepen the visual experience of each astronomical print.  

So after numerous hours of printing and comparing I am very confident in printing my next round of astronomical prints with the Hahnemuhle Photo Rag matte paper.  It really looks wonderful!

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