Your R System Images - July 2025

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Nice B&W Ansel :)
Who’s Ansel??..🤣 Heres one I converted fully into b&w but I didn’t like the specks in the bottom left and along the bottom of the shot. I might remove them when I get access to a bigger screen rather than an iPad.

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Fun in the backyard.

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I noticed these mushrooms in the yard when I was getting ready to mow. A photo was in order.

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This effect was interesting, and I would love to share a story about how I achieved it. However, it all happened because when I brought the camera out of the lovely, cool house and into the humid Illinois afternoon, the lens fogged over. I took the photo because I was curious how it would look.

These are common in this area, but not edible. Scientific name: Chlorophyllum molybdites, commonly known as the false parasol, green-spored parasol, or vomiter mushroom. Causes severe gastrointestinal distress (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea). It's the most commonly reported cause of mushroom poisoning in North America.
 
Fun in the backyard.

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I noticed these mushrooms in the yard when I was getting ready to mow. A photo was in order.

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This effect was interesting, and I would love to share a story about how I achieved it. However, it all happened because when I brought the camera out of the lovely, cool house and into the humid Illinois afternoon, the lens fogged over. I took the photo because I was curious how it would look.

These are common in this area, but not edible. Scientific name: Chlorophyllum molybdites, commonly known as the false parasol, green-spored parasol, or vomiter mushroom. Causes severe gastrointestinal distress (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea). It's the most commonly reported cause of mushroom poisoning in North America.
I live in Houston and our typical mornings start with temps i the high 70's to low 80's and 98% humidity! If I am going out to shoot birds or something early I leave my gear locked in my truck to acclimate!
 
Some photos from a walk we took on the Harvard Bridge, which crosses the Charles River between Boston and Cambridge.

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What the heck is a Smoot?
The Harvard Bridge has measurement lines expressed in Smoots, a quite non-standard unit of length. A Smoot is defined as 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m), which is the height of Oliver Smoot, an MIT fraternity pledge whose task in 1958 was to measure the bridge with his body by repeatedly lying down on the bridge, which is 364.4 Smoots long. Legend has it that he got tired (possibly alcohol was involved) and eventually his fellow fraternity pledges carried him, placing him up and down on the bridge like a yardstick (again, alcohol may have been involved). Oliver Smoot received his engineering degree and went on to get a law degree. But fittingly, he eventually became the chairman of the American National Standards Institute in 2001 and the president of the International Organization for Standardization in 2003, which are organizations that deal with standardization of measurements.
Although not an official measurement, the Massachusetts State Police, who patrol the 660-meter bridge, use the Smoot markings to describe the location of accidents and broken-down cars to emergency personnel.

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Sailboats in front of the Longfellow Bridge, known as the "Salt and Pepper Shaker Bridge" due to its distinctive towers.

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A sightseeing boat named for the Longfellow Bridge's namesake, Henry Longfellow.

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Three Bridges: This photo shows three major bridges connecting Boston and points north. The green Tobin Bridge crosses the Mystic River, the Longfellow Bridge connects Cambridge and Boston, and the cable-stayed Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge, which carries Interstate 93 from the north of Boston over the Charles River.

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The Charles River and the Back Bay area of Boston, with the glass-clad 200 Clarendon Street, usually called by its previous name, the John Hancock Tower.

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Sailboats adorning the river in front of the downtown Boston Skyline and the Beacon Hill neighborhood, which is topped by the golden dome of the Massachusetts State House.
 
Images from our vaguely recent(ish) visit to Nunnington Hall, Nunnington, Ryedale, North Yorkshire, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PL Elite/ ViewPoint, Adobe LrC/ PS with Tony Kuyper Panels and Topaz Labs Photo AI. Compilations are a mix of R7 - Karen and R5 - Phil).

You can find out more about Nunnington Hall by clicking Here.

Phil and Karen


1. In the medieval period, the land belonged to the wealthy St Mary's Abbey in York. Nunnington takes its name from a nunnery, likely in the present location of Nunnington Hall. There is record of a medieval house being sited at Nunnington in 1249.

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2. The Hall was home to many families through the ages, each imparting their own styles, tastes and fashions, infusing the house with a mixed character.

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3. The Grenes (1362-1553) were a notable Tudor family. Maud Grene’s marriage to Sir Thomas Parr produced a daughter - Catherine Parr, who became King Henry VIII’s sixth and last wife.

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4. The Grahams (1655-1839) made a fortune as cloth merchants and obtained a peerage from King James II. Now ‘Viscounts Preston’ they remodelled Nunnington into a house fit for their new status.

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5. The Rutsons * (1839-1920). William Rutson bought Nunnington as a sporting lodge for his family. His four children were talented artists and musicians and were inspired by its tranquillity.

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6. The Fifes (1920-1952). Margaret Fife inherited Nunnington and settled here with her family. Since 1952 Nunnington Hall has been owned and managed by The National Trust. Housed at Nunnington since 1981, the Carlisle Collection of miniature rooms is now an intrinsic part of the collection.

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(Sources: National Trust, Wikipedia).

(* New research by The National Trust has disclosed some of the wealth accumulated by the Rutson family was derived from the utterly abhorrent slave trade and associated industries. William Rutson’s father, William Calton Rutson, and grandfather, also William Rutson, had involvement in the trade and exploitation of African slaves in the East and West Indies. It is our view that such instances should be recognised, learned from - and we must be better).
 
Images from our vaguely recent(ish) visit to Nunnington Hall, Nunnington, Ryedale, North Yorkshire, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PL Elite/ ViewPoint, Adobe LrC/ PS with Tony Kuyper Panels and Topaz Labs Photo AI. Compilations are a mix of R7 - Karen and R5 - Phil).

You can find out more about Nunnington Hall by clicking Here.

Phil and Karen


1. In the medieval period, the land belonged to the wealthy St Mary's Abbey in York. Nunnington takes its name from a nunnery, likely in the present location of Nunnington Hall. There is record of a medieval house being sited at Nunnington in 1249.

View attachment 38590

2. The Hall was home to many families through the ages, each imparting their own styles, tastes and fashions, infusing the house with a mixed character.

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3. The Grenes (1362-1553) were a notable Tudor family. Maud Grene’s marriage to Sir Thomas Parr produced a daughter - Catherine Parr, who became King Henry VIII’s sixth and last wife.

View attachment 38592

4. The Grahams (1655-1839) made a fortune as cloth merchants and obtained a peerage from King James II. Now ‘Viscounts Preston’ they remodelled Nunnington into a house fit for their new status.

View attachment 38593

5. The Rutsons * (1839-1920). William Rutson bought Nunnington as a sporting lodge for his family. His four children were talented artists and musicians and were inspired by its tranquillity.

View attachment 38594

6. The Fifes (1920-1952). Margaret Fife inherited Nunnington and settled here with her family. Since 1952 Nunnington Hall has been owned and managed by The National Trust. Housed at Nunnington since 1981, the Carlisle Collection of miniature rooms is now an intrinsic part of the collection.

View attachment 38595

(Sources: National Trust, Wikipedia).

(* New research by The National Trust has disclosed some of the wealth accumulated by the Rutson family was derived from the utterly abhorrent slave trade and associated industries. William Rutson’s father, William Calton Rutson, and grandfather, also William Rutson, had involvement in the trade and exploitation of African slaves in the East and West Indies. It is our view that such instances should be recognised, learned from - and we must be better).
My wife and I visited here a few years ago on the way home from Scotland. Fascinating place and those miniatures are exceptional. You've captured it well (as always). Thanks for another interesting and informative post.
 
My wife and I visited here a few years ago on the way home from Scotland. Fascinating place and those miniatures are exceptional. You've captured it well (as always). Thanks for another interesting and informative post.
Hi Ian,

Cheers - much appreciated! :)

Nunnington Hall was certainly a treasure trove of surprises and delights, with some fun photographic challenges (and a very pleasant tea room!).

P&K
 
Still life that rocks.

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Frost making a frost-shattered rock a bit more shattered, in a bit of our riverbank that doesn't see much winter sun.
 
An Indigo Bunting gives a rousing speech atop a Sunflower at McKee-Beshers Wildlife Management Area Sunflower Fields in Poolesville MD
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This sure reminds me of driving to our cottage in the Canadian boreal forest in central Canada.
Sorry for the bump. My best friend lost his cottage in the fires this summer. I helped him build it 50 years ago. We likely went through more beer than nails. It was pretty level. :) Our cottage which we sold about 6 years ago is still standing. It's about a mile away. This Friday they are finally letting cottagers in again. As soon they open it to the public I heading there. I need to see Nopoming park which I called my back yard.
 
Some Infrared (including a rare, pseudo false color one from me) from Newfoundland.
The last one reminds me of a day a couple of years ago. I had the day off (MLK day) so I grabbed the dog and camera and headed for a county park.

I never got there, because part way up there, everything was covered in hoarfrost. I drove around gleefully shooting pictures for about two hours. As I was driving around, any time I dropped down more than 100’ or so of elevation, there was nothing.
 
I don't often do the abstract thing, but this afternoon the birds weren't cooperating and the light on the standing waves in the river was rather noice...

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The truffle hound wasn't cooperating either. This is her "bugger you, I'm crossing the river" face.

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The bees in the first wattle flowers of spring were a little less recalcitrant.
 
Hi all, new member here and owner of a new Canon R6MKII as well. What a camera and a radical upgrade from my old T3i for sure! Just thought I would post some preliminary pics taken with an adapted EF 70-300L.

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Hi all, new member here and owner of a new Canon R6MKII as well. What a camera and a radical upgrade from my old T3i for sure! Just thought I would post some preliminary pics taken with an adapted EF 70-300L.
...one of these things is not like the others...😝

(Unless the tractor flies...)
 
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Images from our vaguely recent(ish) visit to Nunnington Hall, Nunnington, Ryedale, North Yorkshire, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PL Elite/ ViewPoint, Adobe LrC/ PS with Tony Kuyper Panels and Topaz Labs Photo AI. Compilations are a mix of R7 - Karen and R5 - Phil).

You can find out more about Nunnington Hall by clicking Here.

Phil and Karen


1. In the medieval period, the land belonged to the wealthy St Mary's Abbey in York. Nunnington takes its name from a nunnery, likely in the present location of Nunnington Hall. There is record of a medieval house being sited at Nunnington in 1249.

View attachment 38590

2. The Hall was home to many families through the ages, each imparting their own styles, tastes and fashions, infusing the house with a mixed character.

View attachment 38591

3. The Grenes (1362-1553) were a notable Tudor family. Maud Grene’s marriage to Sir Thomas Parr produced a daughter - Catherine Parr, who became King Henry VIII’s sixth and last wife.

View attachment 38592

4. The Grahams (1655-1839) made a fortune as cloth merchants and obtained a peerage from King James II. Now ‘Viscounts Preston’ they remodelled Nunnington into a house fit for their new status.

View attachment 38593

5. The Rutsons * (1839-1920). William Rutson bought Nunnington as a sporting lodge for his family. His four children were talented artists and musicians and were inspired by its tranquillity.

View attachment 38594

6. The Fifes (1920-1952). Margaret Fife inherited Nunnington and settled here with her family. Since 1952 Nunnington Hall has been owned and managed by The National Trust. Housed at Nunnington since 1981, the Carlisle Collection of miniature rooms is now an intrinsic part of the collection.

View attachment 38595

(Sources: National Trust, Wikipedia).

(* New research by The National Trust has disclosed some of the wealth accumulated by the Rutson family was derived from the utterly abhorrent slave trade and associated industries. William Rutson’s father, William Calton Rutson, and grandfather, also William Rutson, had involvement in the trade and exploitation of African slaves in the East and West Indies. It is our view that such instances should be recognised, learned from - and we must be better).
Excellent images as always, and I especially enjoy the history lesson. I am very much thankful to the two of you for taking the time to share the images as well as the descriptions with us. I have been inspired by the two of you many times, but the inspiration hasn't yet overcome my laziness. I will keep trying though.
 
Our city has a big festival each year at the end of July called Rutenfest. The main part of the festival runs from Friday till Monday (today). Monday (today) is the day of a big parade which typically lasts between 90 minutes and 2 hours. It is a parade which tells the history of Ravensburg in floats and costumes.

This guy has always been one of my favorite ones. I don't think his camera is an RF mount, but I am pretty sure it is mirrorless.....

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Our city has a big festival each year at the end of July called Rutenfest. The main part of the festival runs from Friday till Monday (today). Monday (today) is the day of a big parade which typically lasts between 90 minutes and 2 hours. It is a parade which tells the history of Ravensburg in floats and costumes.

This guy has always been one of my favorite ones. I don't think his camera is an RF mount, but I am pretty sure it is mirrorless.....

View attachment 38716
Reminds me of my old field camera kit and Ansel Adams days.
 
Our city has a big festival each year at the end of July called Rutenfest. The main part of the festival runs from Friday till Monday (today). Monday (today) is the day of a big parade which typically lasts between 90 minutes and 2 hours. It is a parade which tells the history of Ravensburg in floats and costumes.

This guy has always been one of my favorite ones. I don't think his camera is an RF mount, but I am pretty sure it is mirrorless.....

View attachment 38716
What a great street shot of this gentleman. I am guessing he doesn't shoot 12fps either!
 
I don't often do the abstract thing, but this afternoon the birds weren't cooperating and the light on the standing waves in the river was rather noice...

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The truffle hound wasn't cooperating either. This is her "bugger you, I'm crossing the river" face.

View attachment 38633

The bees in the first wattle flowers of spring were a little less recalcitrant.
I love abstracts and those are such fun. What a cute pup you've got, and of course he's doing what dogs do best-ignoring you!! Lovely photo of the bee on the flowers as well.
 
Kyoto's Gion Festival . Yamaboko Parade .
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