Majestic Ashlar Hall. Like Memphis it's largely inscrutable to outsiders. It's known to be haunted as well as cursed by its previous owner. No subsequent owner has been able to do anything with the building; there plans go to rot - such is the ferocity of that madman's ill will!
I think you won't go wrong with either in terms of sharpness. The shots here are mostly taken with the Tamron 150-600 version 1. I have compared it with the Nikon 200-500 results and they are quite similar.
I would look into a consumer Photoshelter account. It allows you to store your images in folders, share them, provides multiple permissions levels, and even can do print orders. A basic plan is very cost friendly.
You may eventually want to upgrade to Photoshelter for Brands but that might be a bit more costly than you need for a small npo.
Good luck!
True, I should have said "bumpers and hubcaps." The bigger parts were left in fields and lakes. Walk through the woods in New England and you'll see lots of stuff like this. Out of sight, out of mind.
haha, THEY ARE REAL MAN DON'T GO UP THEM
Nah, a lot of the trails around here have stone staircases. That picture is of Mt. Tecumseh, which is probably the most of any mountain around here I've seen. We get a lot of people on the trails, especially the 4kers, and erosion is a problem. They build the staircases to help reduce the wear on the trails and to redirect the water that inevitably runs down it. Most of the time it might just be a couple in a row, for whatever reason the Tecumseh volunteer maintainer has lined a pretty significant part of the trail with them. If they weren't put into certain areas, or other rock/wood redirects, the trail gets muddy, which makes people go around the mud and widen the trail, which makes it muddy...and so on. They usually try to be a little more subtle...