Batu Caves

(Statue of Lord Murugan by the entrance to the Caves. 47.2 meters/ 156 feet)
Once again, Cheryl and I set out to a place to home in on our photography skills. Me, being quite an over-thinking novice at this would need to practise (Yes, I acquired a SLR about 2 weeks back, but that shall be the subject of another posting, which I had planned on doing, but was too lazy to start). Thanks to Cheryl, the day turned out to be quite a fruitful one...what more with lenses loaned by Yee Boon. I used the Canon EF 17-20mm f/2.8 USM lens whilst Cheryl got YB's Canon EF 24-105mm f/4.0L IS lens. Had no idea how to use a telephoto lens, but then again, one has to embrace new challenges...right...
So, Batu Caves was the pick. The caves are the sacred place for the Hindus in Malaysia. Once a year, the Hindu's celebrate the Thaipusam festival. As many as 800,000 devotees and other visitors may throng the caves. As a form of penance or sacrifice, many of them carry kavadis (literally, "burden," such as a pitcher or jug). These are large, brightly decorated frameworks, usually combined with various metal hooks and skewers which are used to pierce the skin, cheeks and tongue.




3 Commentsjavascript:void(0):
Uncle,
The lens you borrowed from YB is the EF 70-200mm f/2.8 L IS ... not 17-20 ler.
Yeah!!! Now I have u, another photographer buddy! Hehehe... wait till I come back... I'll b dragging u to many places to take photos! ;P
So, not only underwater buddy anymore. But photography buddy too! Yeah!
By the way... I love your first 2 photos. Love the colors & depth-of-field with the person walking down the stairs & the monkeys. What format did u shoot in and wat aperture-shutterspeed did you use?
Good job... keep it up!
Great to see you have joined the BRIGHT-side with the Canon DSLR. It rocks.
It takes time to master, definitely but that's all part of the fun, no? Just be careful that lens-disease doesn't eat you up too fast. There's a cancerous tendency to wanna buy more and more lenses quickly.
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