Miami, Florida.
In April 2019, we spent two weeks on our second Panama Canal cruise. Our first, in 2013, was to be that once-in-a-lifetime event that we would share in conversation with family and friends. Be careful when you do that, or you’ll be experiencing it again with family or friends who want the experience themselves and want you to accompany them.
It wasn’t much arm-twisting to get us to go along for the trip. It’s always more fun when you can share an experience with others. Besides, it gave us the opportunity to sail in the opposite direction, from California to Florida instead of the other way we sailed on our first trip. We also saw a couple of different countries and had the chance to try other excursions than on our first trip.
About the photo: A couple of months ago, I was reviewing photos for the weekly Lens-Artists Photo Challenge and I came upon a cellphone photo that I’d captured on my Samsung Galaxy 7 but had forgotten to write up a Cellpic Sunday post for it. On the last day of our cruise, we were sitting in port on departure day. I was up early as usual and out on the promenade deck when the Celebrity Equinox sailed by on its way to discharge passengers and pick up new ones.
While the image doesn’t make it appear that the ship is very close, it was too close to fit in a single cellphone image. I snapped two images, one of the front half, one of the back half, and then used the Panorama function in Adobe Lightroom to stitch them together. After a few tweaks, I moved the image to Luminar 3 for final processing. Be sure to click on the image to enlarge it for a better view if your browser supports the function.
I encourage fellow bloggers to create their own Cellpic Sunday posts. I never have a specific topic for this feature, and the only rules are that the photo must be captured with a cell phone, iPad, or another mobile device… If you have an image from a drone, that’s acceptable as well. The second rule is to link your challenge-response to this post or leave a comment here with a link to your post in the comment.
John Steiner
That’s a beautiful photo. Thank you for sharing how you accomplished it.
Thank you. I was certainly pleased with how well it turned out.
That’s a really effective image 🙂 I rarely share my phone photos (we would say ‘mobile phone’ rather than ‘cellphone’!) but maybe I’ll see what I have for your challenge one of these days 🙂
You are correct about the terminology. These days, though, I’d guess “phone” is all that is necessary for most people who no longer have a “landline” phone. >grin<
I chose the term "Cellpic simply for the alliteration in Cellpic Sunday.
I will look forward to seeing your challenge-response when you get the chance.
[…] is my entry for John’s from Journeys From Johnbo blog, Cellpic Sunday. This is a new challenge and I thought I’d join in this […]
That is a remarkable photo. Looks so glitzy and shiny 😀 😀
Here is my entry for this week.
Thank you! And thanks for participating in the challenge. You are my first challenge responder. I will check out your photo entry now!
I’m happy to play along and help you out. 😀
I just tried to comment on your challenge page and got an error that won’t allow me to post. It is probably because I am on my iPad right now. When I get back to my desktop, I will try it again.
Neat picture, that must make everyone want to get on board again.
It sure makes me want to sail away again. We have cruises set for January, but we are still a bit wary. We have cancellation privileges with the cruise line almost right up to the day of departure.
I agree that January can still seem risky if it’s Latin America, besides the sanitary risks there is also the disorganization with all the places that are closed or restricted, not ideal to visit.
Time will tell!!
That’s a great photo. I like the sky behind the liner. Amazing that today’s AI assistants can get the bright illumination of the liner and the dim lights of the sky together into one photo so well. Let me respond with a much simpler one:
It is also a tribute to the quality of the camera sensors that they have the range to capture that wide range of gradations in the digital image from the start.
Thanks for putting together a response. I will check out your post!