The TAMRON 18-270mm F/3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD (Model B008) is quite a controversial lens. I just had to get one to find out for myself what this lens is all about. Follow my blog as I use this lens on a daily basis and discover for yourself if this lens is indeed a diamond in the rough, or if it simply just another average, try to do it all, kit level lens.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Coffee Gallery

Some HDR shots taken with the Tamron VC PZD of the Mojo Coffee house (first photo) and the The New Zealand portrait Gallery building (second photo) for your enjoyment. The original photos were quite desaturated even in the early morning sunrise. Simple saturation, vibrancy and tone adjustments would have made a huge difference but I've found shooting buildings is best done bracketed and then passed to good HDR software to make the most of the photo.

Don't you just love the tools available to the digital photographer these days. It makes me wonder how photographers of days past managed to process and publish the amazing photos they shot within the tools limitations they've had.


Canon 600D, Tamron 18-270mm f3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD. Focal length 20mm, Exposure 1/80sec at f8 +2/3EV, ISO 400, Focus auto, VC on, Flash none, Filter none.





Canon 600D, Tamron 18-270mm f3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD. Focal length 18mm, Exposure 1/160sec at f8 +2/3EV, ISO 400, Focus auto, VC on, Flash none, Filter none.

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