The Limbo Connection's photos
Sea Fishing
6695
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Photographed at Swanage Railway with a Nikon D50 and a Nikkor AF-S DX 35mm f/1.8G lens.
Leo
Beech Clump, Avebury
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55mm Micro-Nikkor f/3.5 AI lens. Originally a bigger colour photograph. Unfortunately the light was flat.
Bide Brook
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Close up of the bridge over Bide Brook, Lacock, Wiltshire. Nikon D2Xs and 135mm f/2.8 Nikkor. 100 ISO, f/5.6, 1/20th sec.
Brush and Rake
Post War Hand Tools
Stirring, For The Purposes Of
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I used a Nikkor 70-210mm f/4 AF lens on a Nikon D50. Here it faced a stern test: 1600 ISO; 210mm; 1/100th (far too slow - you can see the camera shake) and wide open at f/4. I broke practically all the rules.
The Nikkor 70-210mm f/4 AF lens, introduced in 1986, was made for only 18 months, and was replaced by the smaller, slower and cheaper AF 70-210mm f/4-5.6. The AF 70-210mm f/4 is largely distortion-free, whereas the successor AF 70-210mm f/4-5.6 is handicapped by high levels of distortion.
This lens is useful on several counts. If your digital SLR has the AF screw drive, you can use all the features of this lens without hindrance. It is a good deal lighter to carry than an f/2.8 alternative, and only one stop different throughout the focal range, being a lens of constant aperture.
Reybridge, Wilts
The Infelicitous Invertebrate
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Coffee
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Buckfastleigh
St Mary Street
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Langham House
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Langham House was formerly Road Hill House and was the scene of one of the most infamous murders of the 19th century. A sixteen-year old girl called Constance Kent was arrested for the murder of her three-year-old half-brother. The case was investigated by Detective Inspector Jack Whicher. Although released at her committal hearing, Kent later confessed and received the mandatory death sentence. This was commuted to life imprisonment, of which she served twenty years.
Nikon D2Xs and Nikkor 35-70mm f/2.8 AF lens.
Dino Selezione No.6
Fuschia
Wadworth
Morris Minor 1000 Convertible
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