snerkler
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I still like Danbo, but then I'm a bit retroYou need to go back to 2010 ...
Nothing against the image btw, tis cool, but the Danbo trend is thankfully, long past.
I still like Danbo, but then I'm a bit retroYou need to go back to 2010 ...
Nothing against the image btw, tis cool, but the Danbo trend is thankfully, long past.
I might have just ordered oneMe too, sadly never had one
Not sure what you mean about not having amazon packaging? Do you mean the original was just a box figure with no logos?The original didn't have Amazon packaging, you can still get them on ebay I'm sure. Amazon were clever on that one
Not sure what you mean about not having amazon packaging? Do you mean the original was just a box figure with no logos?
That link I posted for rookies had a few without any logos so looks like you can still buy them. I actually prefer them with the amazon logos. Still not as good as Star Wars Lego thoughyeah, it was from some Manga cartoon or something

That link I posted for rookies had a few without any logos so looks like you can still buy them. I actually prefer them with the amazon logos. Still not as good as Star Wars Lego though![]()
That link I posted for rookies had a few without any logos so looks like you can still buy them. I actually prefer them with the amazon logos. Still not as good as Star Wars Lego though![]()
Or Sylvanian familiesI have done some shoots of those for the kids in my time
Can sell you one for £50Hope you bough me one pal![]()
Don't. He'd want to know if it's faster than a Lego man.Can sell you one for £50![]()
Don't. He'd want to know if it's faster than a Lego man.![]()

Or as the rest of us know it "a day"OMG what have I started now take the p*** out of rookies day![]()
Go on then centuryOr as the rest of us know it "a day"![]()
Might be worth trying Photoshop instead, as if I recall correctly, Photomerge has a setting to remove vignetting when merging. I'm guessing that very subtle vignetting on the original shots is the root cause.These were shot as individual frames and joined in LR.
Not with the xt2, but generally settings remain the same throughout. Wide open, iso 1600 or 3200, 20-30 secs if not tracking.Who has used there XT2 for star trails/Milky way shots?
Never done any but do fancy having a go I do have a Fuji 14mm so hopefully that will do.
What settings on long exposure noise reduction do people use?
Better than being ignored, Andrew.Go on then century![]()

Might be worth trying Photoshop instead, as if I recall correctly, Photomerge has a setting to remove vignetting when merging. I'm guessing that very subtle vignetting on the original shots is the root cause.
Not with the xt2, but generally settings remain the same throughout. Wide open, iso 1600 or 3200, 20-30 secs if not tracking.
Shoot in raw and keep all NR to minimum in camera. After shooting keep settings exactly the same, place lens cap on and take several "dark frames". These will be just noise, you can then use software to subtract the dark frames from your images while leaving the true signal intact.![]()
Wake up its a beautiful morning by Graham Norton, on Flickr
First Light by Graham Norton, on FlickrThese are great.Time for a couple of pictures i think
Wake up its a beautiful morning by Graham Norton, on Flickr
First Light by Graham Norton, on Flickr
Both with the XT-2 and the 10-24
Time for a couple of pictures i think
Wake up its a beautiful morning by Graham Norton, on Flickr
First Light by Graham Norton, on Flickr
Both with the XT-2 and the 10-24
Lovely shots, Graham! The contrast between the misty pastels and the strong, warm, sunlit tones in the first is particularly pleasingTime for a couple of pictures i think
Wake up its a beautiful morning by Graham Norton, on Flickr
First Light by Graham Norton, on Flickr
Both with the XT-2 and the 10-24

Here's the famous Fuji "painterly effect" in full swing. Although in this case it probably arises more from being shot at f/2 and ISO 3200 on an old Pentax K nifty fifty
Man with Red Bag, St Giles by David Hallett, on Flickr
Had a play with the 23f2 yet?
I'd really like that, and the 35 F2, but it'll be a while yet. Still pondering options. I could possibly sell my 55-200, as I really only use it for reach, and there's some nice cheap old 200mm primes out there that can be adapted.
Selling that and my 27mm would allow me get the 23 f2 and 35 F2 set almost, with a few quids on top. But then i don't know how much I'd miss the 55-200
This is from the RAW, although I shot a JPEG as well by mistake (accidentally left that setting on from when I was doing some tests earlier). The key is to be very careful about NR and sharpening. If you reduce noise too much, even colour noise, you lose detail. If you sharpen you must be very careful not to increase the noise (for high ISO shots, I favour a technique based on High Pass so that I can eliminate noise from that layer completely). I'm still learning what works though, and I have to say the JPEGs do a pretty good job. I find it's mainly the loss of highlight detail where they lose out over the RAW, in high-contrast night pictures.Do you have your NR set to -2 for Jpeg? Or do you shoot RAW? Looks fine to me either way, not many sensors do high ISO perfectly
Here's the famous Fuji "painterly effect" in full swing. Although in this case it probably arises more from being shot at f/2 and ISO 3200 on an old Pentax K nifty fifty
Man with Red Bag, St Giles by David Hallett, on Flickr
This is from the RAW, although I shot a JPEG as well by mistake (accidentally left that setting on from when I was doing some tests earlier). The key is to be very careful about NR and sharpening. If you reduce noise too much, even colour noise, you lose detail. If you sharpen you must be very careful not to increase the noise (for high ISO shots, I favour a technique based on High Pass so that I can eliminate noise from that layer completely). I'm still learning what works though, and I have to say the JPEGs do a pretty good job. I find it's mainly the loss of highlight detail where they lose out over the RAW, in high-contrast night pictures.
I do use my 55-200mm a fair bit, it's a brilliant lens! The 27/2.8 is also great for the money - I'm finding it incredibly difficult to part with any Fuji X lenses in fact! I will need to sell some gear now though, and suspect the 18/2 will be first out of the door. The 27/2.8 may follow, but it's just so pocketable! Arrgh!!!
Time for a couple of pictures i think
Wake up its a beautiful morning by Graham Norton, on Flickr
First Light by Graham Norton, on Flickr
Both with the XT-2 and the 10-24