In the old days, a single light bulb was enough. Ten years ago on Boracay, walking on the beach in the dark, the only way you could tell where you were was by looking for a tiny light on a coconut tree.
Nowadays... Classy or cheesy, watchuthink?





At first I thought there was something wrong with my LX3's white balance. Notice that the left portion of this last picture is warm, while the right is cool.

Switching to energy-saving bulbs in stages, maybe. But why different colors?
Trip lang?
No comments:
Post a Comment