Meeting House Refraction Photography

I went to the Meeting House in our Community to see how that worked with my new Glass Globe. It is an interesting building with a large expanse of lawn in front of the building. In some ways the Globe reminds me of using a “fisheye” lens, but more interesting. If you shoot wider you get a smaller globe but see the surrounding area you are photographing which can add some interest. Also depends on your f/stop. On my first blog post I was using a 50mm macro lens. For this series I was using a 24-105mm zoom. On the wider range I really had to stretch my arm out far to be able to focus on the globe. On the 105mm range I could focus easier, but pretty much filled the frame with the globe. I was shooting at f/14 most of the time & tried a variety of focal lengths. I did not want my “background” image to be too distinct to take away from the globe image, but still have some detail. The feature image was shot at 88mm.

Globe 2_9_1_1

Globe @ 55mm f/14

Globe 2_43G4486

Globe @ 55mm f/14

Globe 2_43G4506 sm

Globe @ 50mm f/14 – trying to get a little detail in actual building

Globe 2_43G4522

24mm @ f/14

Globe 2_43G4530

90mm f/14

 

Globe v2_43G4574

90mm @ f/14

Globe v2 sm

50mm @ f/14

Globe 2_43G4588

105mm f/14

Globe 2_43G4574

24mm @ f/14

Globe 2_43G4570

105mm f/14