Ben Rubinstein
pro member
Back to an old favorite that I don't think I've used for two years or more.
Yesterday arguably the leading Rabbi of the Jewish people, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, passed away. The burial ceremony was to take place some 100 yards away from my studio and with an estimated million people coming to the ceremony (yes I said a million, police reported over 10% of the entire country there!) I skedaddled about 3 hours before the start otherwise I would have been stuck there till after midnight. I biked over to David's Tomb in the Old City of Jerusalem, the site where King David is said to be buried. There have been extensive renovations at the site over the past couple of years and the architect was a genius of lighting. The tonality and lighting they have created there is to die for. I need to spend far more time there but until then...
David's Tomb, Lensbaby Composer, single lens element, f22, handheld at a 1/100, iso 6400 on the 5D3 which is remarkably film like. I could not believe just how much I could pummel and abuse that iso 6400 file and still hold the tones. We are blessed to live in this age of photography IMO.
Yesterday arguably the leading Rabbi of the Jewish people, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, passed away. The burial ceremony was to take place some 100 yards away from my studio and with an estimated million people coming to the ceremony (yes I said a million, police reported over 10% of the entire country there!) I skedaddled about 3 hours before the start otherwise I would have been stuck there till after midnight. I biked over to David's Tomb in the Old City of Jerusalem, the site where King David is said to be buried. There have been extensive renovations at the site over the past couple of years and the architect was a genius of lighting. The tonality and lighting they have created there is to die for. I need to spend far more time there but until then...

David's Tomb, Lensbaby Composer, single lens element, f22, handheld at a 1/100, iso 6400 on the 5D3 which is remarkably film like. I could not believe just how much I could pummel and abuse that iso 6400 file and still hold the tones. We are blessed to live in this age of photography IMO.