





Anybody know which building interior that is?
Nikkor 24-120 f/4. Shot at 120mm, f/4, 1/40, ISO 400. From the slopes.
If you wanna follow me, I'm conover.photography on insta!
Settings: 1/25, F10, ISO 64 handheld over a railing
I was in Pitt for one night, and the morning was insane the city covered in fog. I set up with a tripod and took some shots as the sun came up the fog started to clear and everyone else went home, the incline started up and I leaned over the railing of the overlook waiting for the right time and snapped this shot of the tram going down. Shot handheld at 1/25 giving a little blur to the tram to show the movement of the morning and the city waking up.
Shot on Nikon Z5II + Viltrox 35mm f1.2 LAB.
My insta is @ conover.photography if anyone wants to follow!
Before the 1950s, many stop signs across the country were actually yellow instead of red. In 1954, the federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices standardized stop signs to the red octagon design we know today for better visibility and consistency on public roads.
That means signs like this are usually older signs that were never replaced, or are located on private property or less-regulated roads.
Had a nice time at the mother's day market.
Homewood cemetery and south park.