From Prudential Center, Skywalk. Sunset time.
Boston Pre-Sunrise
Hot Owen -- Boston Sunrise
bostonsunrise
Boston skyline reflected in the Charles river on a beautiful morning.
Pre Sunrise of Boston Skyline from our Apt window -- Westgate, MIT. 540 Mem Drive.
MIT Green Building
Boston Night Sky after a Storm.
Boston Night Skyline. Available up to 15000x4000 pixels (prints = 10ft by 3ft)
BostonNightSkyafteraStorm.
Crowd on the Charles. July 4, 2011.
Calmness in Charles river after a big storm -- Boston skyline in the background.
Big moon.
Sunrise!
Evening sunlight reflected on the facets of the building (on the right).
From MIT
Fiery MIT
New year in Boston: 12:01AM, 1/1/11.
From Boston, Cambridge
The STATA Center. CSAIL and EECS of MIT.
MIT, Winter 2010.
MIT Killian Court in snow.
MITKillianCourtinsnow.
First snow of 2010 in Boston, MA. Charles river is frozen and covered in fresh snow.
First snow of 2010.
First snow day, Dec 2010. 77 Mass. Ave. MIT.
A cold winter day in Cambridge, MA with MIT skyline.
Steam out.
Boston Skyline! This image is 11300x2100 in size. Image also available in 18500x3470, enough to print up to 20 feet by 4 feet.
Moonrise, Cambridge.
Westgate to the right and TangHall to the left. Westgate is where I liveon the 12th floor.
Slit of the hancock..
Reflection on the wedge of Hancock building.
Manohar Srikanth
on May 22, 2011thank you for the comments! I played a bit with the exposure, and intentionally kept this to get a golden foggy appearance. I also took quite few pictures playing around exposure, finally uploading this particular one since it had two boats in it.
All my pictures are HDR. What you mean by HDR, which is a general misconception: is that HDR = tone mapped HDR. The artificial appearance you see after "HDR Processing" is because of a technique called tone mapping, which essentially substitutes colors to suit the displays (computer monitors). HDR in a true sense just means larger dynamic range, meaning more levels of intensities. Most DSLR now capture images in 12-14 bits, which is what I do, RAW mode. This permits finer level of adjustments in intensities, and other adjustments. I personally do not like tone mapped HDR.
Again, thanks for the comment. I appreciate it.
Cheers!
Manohar
Ravi
on May 21, 2011Do you not like HDR? I used to find them a little "colored" initially. But many adequate professionals said a photo just doesn't come out of your camera. It needs a bit of digital processing from a "photography artist". That sounds like feigning with artificiality. But It works, when you blow HDR big, man... can you see those corners.