My gallery reflects the raw, unpolished beginnings to where I am now. That is why quality varies so much from start to now... this gallery is a personal reminder of growth and motivation. When I first arrived at this website, I thought manipulation and graphics work was the rule. I tried Poser and other programs but kept returning to photography. That is where I am most of the time. Being here is growth in itself and being surrounded by so many talented artists of various genres is a blessing. God has blessed me in being here to share my offerings and to reap from the wonders brought to the net by others. I am joyed when an image is appreciated and can bear result of an unwise upload, something I do more often than desired in haste to post the render. I like Renderosity very much, learn here and appreciate the work of others. Constructive criticism is welcomed...as are occasional smiles. I choose not to accept ratings, finding comments more useful overall and perhaps allowing room for more honest opinion. I do the same in galleries visited on this site, providing my honest thoughts more than ratings. I was a professional jeweler by trade; in that was my real expertise. Now I freelance and seek secure work. I am a Vietnam era veteran of one branch of service in the USA; fortunately I did not go to conflict during that infamous time. I feel for those who did. Many were my personal friends. Equipment: Until early 2005, the camera was a Minolta DImage F100, which is now lost somewhere in this house. For the most I use a Nikon D7000 and D200 with a small assortment of Nikon and Sigma lenses (the better ones). I also love the spot metering ability of the small spot on the D70, my first DSLR and “quick carry” camera even today. I will add a lens or other accessory when I can afford it in the economic swirl of today. I have found the camera to be very important but the camera does not compose the image. Creative artistry and pleasing imagery is in the image taker, working with the creation around us and what insight our mind provides. I strive to improve the eye behind the lens, while always finding experiences and imagination play a large part in what any particular image means to me, whether or not I am able to convey that to others. Each will see the image in their personal view and heart.
Website--- http://thomashaynes.zenfolio.com/
Thomas Haynes Blog— http://landingheroncatsphotoschrist.blogspot.com/
Commercial Website -- http://www.thomashaynesphotoshoot.com/
I have pursued operating a photography business with mixed success. Corporate and family photography has been my primary business in 2014-2016. I offer pro level work at competitive pricing. Renderosity is a wonderful outlet and encouragement in seeing the artistry of others.
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Comments (14)
MrGorf
You've really captured the feel of it. Great atmosphere! I like the effect and I'm sure it's a lot cheaper than platinum printing...
sandra46
SPECTACULAR, GORGEOUS IMAGE
jocko500
do look like a old photo
MrsLubner
Pristine B/W. Outstanding postwork and composition. Excellent work.
DreamersWish
I do not know how you created the coloration, but it definitely has a very old image feel. Marvelous work!
rainbows
Wonderful capture and treatment, dear Tom. You have certainly created a great mood here. Hugs and God Bless. Di. xx
kgb224
I love the old feel of this capture my friend. Outstanding work.
FriedaFelicia
I really does look old! Wonderful shot and editing.
flavia49
fantastic image and work!!
mininessie
amazing...love it!
SoulEatar
Great work !
billcody
Good idea to do it in B/W. Looks very old, very fine old mood!
tommorules
That fascinating contraption with the seat looks like something from Edwardian Farm on the BBC - and lethal! A fine image with great atmosphere!
Chipka
I just love that bucket seat...top of the line ergonomics, if you ask me...okay, well maybe not, but it does look nice and comfy in a rather farm-implement-seating contraption sort of way. I love the effect you've achieved here. I'm always looking for new things to do with digital photographs, and I've tried my hand at creating stuff like fake lomo-photos (lomographs?) and daguerreotypes, and such things. It's endlessly fascinating, and you've done a stellar job here. Had you not come clean and said that you were simulating this, I'd have thought that it was an authentic palladium print...well, it is it's just a digital one. Needless to say, I like this immensely! I'd love to see you do more of these, and maybe add a wee bit of grunge to make it look a bit worn and damaged. But that's just me...I always think: why leave a perfectly gorgeous photo alone, when you can ruin it on purpose? I'm weird like that.