Not much to say to round the year off, to be honest, but the current series of storms to hit the UK in recent weeks have taken the afternoon off and I am able to do a bit of shooting before we slide kicking and screaming into the next year.
I'm at the beach with my camera by mid-afternoon; the sky a featureless grey; the tide falling. It all looks pretty hopeless but for the fact that the wind is brisk. This gives me hope, as I know from experience that the light can change quickly and suddenly as a result... and I am right. For a brief moment the clouds part and a watery, winter sun stabs through the gloom to create the image here. I like ephemeral moments like this, and the drama it creates, but you have to be quick or you miss it.
As I write I can hear the wind picking-up again outside, and the next weather front sweeps in from the south west. I make the mental note to check the clocks on my cameras.
Happy New Year.
24-70mm f/2.8G AF-S Nikkor. 1/250 second at f/8. ISO 200
© 2013
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Monday, December 30, 2013
'twixt the waves...
Overnight strong winds and rain quickly give way to bright sunshine by mid morning, and having taken care of the day's business early on I decide it's time for some photography. Conditions seem about right for kite surfing, so I pack a long lens and set off for the beach for some action shots. All too often I have the wrong lenses with me when these people are zipping about 'twixt the waves, so this time I feel I have all bases covered. The only thing stopping me is the total absence of any kite surfers whatsoever. Well, the was one that had been out there, doing it, but he was now in the process of packing up and no use to me at all. Very unusual, for the conditions. Perhaps they are all still at work.
I eventually find three canopies bobbing around in the distance - each one denoting a surfer somewhere beneath - and I get some shots before the light goes. Not quite what I was hoping for, but better than drawing a blank.
300mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor with TC-14EII converter. 1/640 second at f/6.3. ISO 640
© 2013
Labels:
Boscombe Beach,
Kite Surfer
Location:
Bournemouth, UK
Thursday, December 26, 2013
No bluebirds in sight...
Another splendid Christmas with Nic comes and goes (thank you, once again), as does the stormy weather the UK is currently experiencing, and it is only on Boxing Day that settled conditions make it realistic to spend an afternoon outdoors.
We decide on Samphire Hoe; a place created from the spoils of digging the channel tunnel (from England to France), and it is the famous White Cliffs of Dover that dominate the skyline in the photograph. As is traditional, many people emerge from the excess of the Yuletide season today in an attempt to burn-off all those extra calories (you wish), and the car park is almost full upon our arrival. Despite this, the area is large enough to absorb the multitudes effectively enough to keep them out of shot, and preserve the wild and desolate feel of the place.
Amongst other things that Nic gave me for Christmas, were two books; both featuring photographers known for their black and white images. Shadow and Light by Bill Brandt, and the other titled: Ansel Adams - 400 Photographs. Just the thing to stir those creative juices, and getting myself inspired during the long winter nights.
24-70mm f/2.8G AF-S Nikkor. 1/800 second at f/5.6. ISO 320
© 2013
We decide on Samphire Hoe; a place created from the spoils of digging the channel tunnel (from England to France), and it is the famous White Cliffs of Dover that dominate the skyline in the photograph. As is traditional, many people emerge from the excess of the Yuletide season today in an attempt to burn-off all those extra calories (you wish), and the car park is almost full upon our arrival. Despite this, the area is large enough to absorb the multitudes effectively enough to keep them out of shot, and preserve the wild and desolate feel of the place.
Amongst other things that Nic gave me for Christmas, were two books; both featuring photographers known for their black and white images. Shadow and Light by Bill Brandt, and the other titled: Ansel Adams - 400 Photographs. Just the thing to stir those creative juices, and getting myself inspired during the long winter nights.
24-70mm f/2.8G AF-S Nikkor. 1/800 second at f/5.6. ISO 320
© 2013
Labels:
Boxing Day,
Momochrome,
Samphire Hoe,
White Cliffs of Dover
Location:
Samphire Hoe. Dover, Kent, UK
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
11/12/13...
The last of the consecutive dates of the century - you had yours a month ago, America - and I plan to shoot something to mark the occasion. I had planned to take a photograph at nine minutes past ten this morning, but that idea fizzled-out shortly after I woke, purely because I had no location in mind.
Instead, I set off to the river with a selection of lenses to see if anything suggested itself as a subject. I stopped at a pond that I used a year ago to take images of leaves, and made a number of exposures before deciding to move on and try my luck further upstream.
As I'm riding towards a local weir on the Dorset Stour I am inspired by an idea that comes out of nowhere; to photograph a heron with a long exposure. It had not, for one second, ever occurred to me that a strong ND filter would be of any use for wildlife shooting, but the possibilities of how it could be achieved soon became all to obvious to me. All I needed was the subject.
I am gladdened by the sight of said heron as I approach my chosen spot that runs adjacent to a golf course, and hope that it doesn't fly off the moment I arrive. It doesn't, but merely stands patiently awaiting its next meal. I have time to set up my tripod; frame; focus; note the exposure value and apply the filter factor to compensate for the loss of light; screw the filter on to the front of the lens and fire the shutter. Frankly, I can't believe my luck with it all; being able to get the images I had in mind within five minutes of my arrival.
The bird does move position several times, but I am able to reframe and shoot as it feeds, making a good many exposures to be sure I get what I'm after. The fact that a heron will stay motionless for long periods of time whilst it eyes-up its prey is the key factor for getting shots like these, as the slightest movement ruins the image. I am more than pleased with the purchase of the filter, and wish I had bought one a year ago when I first thought about it. So many missed photographs; so many to come.
300mm f/4D AF-S Nikkor. 2 seconds at f/8. ND 1000 filter. Tripod and remote release. Mirror lock up. ISO 400
© 2013
Instead, I set off to the river with a selection of lenses to see if anything suggested itself as a subject. I stopped at a pond that I used a year ago to take images of leaves, and made a number of exposures before deciding to move on and try my luck further upstream.
As I'm riding towards a local weir on the Dorset Stour I am inspired by an idea that comes out of nowhere; to photograph a heron with a long exposure. It had not, for one second, ever occurred to me that a strong ND filter would be of any use for wildlife shooting, but the possibilities of how it could be achieved soon became all to obvious to me. All I needed was the subject.
I am gladdened by the sight of said heron as I approach my chosen spot that runs adjacent to a golf course, and hope that it doesn't fly off the moment I arrive. It doesn't, but merely stands patiently awaiting its next meal. I have time to set up my tripod; frame; focus; note the exposure value and apply the filter factor to compensate for the loss of light; screw the filter on to the front of the lens and fire the shutter. Frankly, I can't believe my luck with it all; being able to get the images I had in mind within five minutes of my arrival.
The bird does move position several times, but I am able to reframe and shoot as it feeds, making a good many exposures to be sure I get what I'm after. The fact that a heron will stay motionless for long periods of time whilst it eyes-up its prey is the key factor for getting shots like these, as the slightest movement ruins the image. I am more than pleased with the purchase of the filter, and wish I had bought one a year ago when I first thought about it. So many missed photographs; so many to come.
300mm f/4D AF-S Nikkor. 2 seconds at f/8. ND 1000 filter. Tripod and remote release. Mirror lock up. ISO 400
© 2013
Labels:
Dorset Stour,
Grey Heron,
Iford Weir,
Long Exposure
Location:
Dorset Stour, UK
Monday, December 09, 2013
Having fun...
No doubt about it. This new filter is giving my photography a much needed boost and I'm having a lot of fun with it in the process. I never have been a big user of filters for photography, apart from the occasional grey graduated or polariser, but for this one I make the exception. I am hooked.
I am on a local beach during late afternoon, and the sea and sky are exactly what I wanted: calm and cloudless respectively. I make a number of long exposures as the sun dips to the horizon, but it is after it has disappeared altogether that I start to make the photographs I am here for.
I have always been struck by the colour contrasts of the sky and water once the sun has set, and I use this to great effect to produce a simple, yet striking, image.
24-70mm f/2.8G AF-S Nikkor. 80 seconds at f/11. ND 1000 filter. Tripod and remote release. ISO 200
© 2013
I am on a local beach during late afternoon, and the sea and sky are exactly what I wanted: calm and cloudless respectively. I make a number of long exposures as the sun dips to the horizon, but it is after it has disappeared altogether that I start to make the photographs I am here for.
I have always been struck by the colour contrasts of the sky and water once the sun has set, and I use this to great effect to produce a simple, yet striking, image.
24-70mm f/2.8G AF-S Nikkor. 80 seconds at f/11. ND 1000 filter. Tripod and remote release. ISO 200
© 2013
Labels:
Boscombe Beach,
Dusk,
Long Exposure
Location:
Boscombe Beach, Dorset, UK
Saturday, December 07, 2013
Two bridges...
I'm going to have to watch myself with this new filter, as it might quickly become overdone. However, for the time being it will get as much use as I can put it to, so you will have to indulge me for a while yet.
All too often I bemoan the lack of good light when I want to shoot, but this filter has the opposite effect on me. I find myself hoping for grey, dull days and low light levels, so I can use long shutter speeds in the middle of the day, and not have to worry about stopping the lens down too much to help things along.
Today, I choose two local bridges as a subject. Both span the Dorset Stour at Iford; are 80 yards (73 metres) apart, and situated roughly three miles upstream before the river meets the Dorset Avon. Both rivers then empty into Christchurch harbour, and finally the sea. The old bridge is downstream from its more modern counterpart, and is a Grade II listed building. Originally built on the site of the fording point of the river, it dates from 1784 and built from Purbeck stone. The newer bridge carries the A35, and was opened in 1932.
12-24mm f/4G AF-S Nikkor.
Top: 50 seconds at f/11
Below: 45 seconds at f/11
ISO 200. ND 1000 filter. Tripod and remote release.
© 2013
Friday, December 06, 2013
Afterglow after sunset...
The storm that hit the northern parts of the UK didn't make it as far south as the forecasters said it would, although there was widespread flooding in low-lying areas due to the high tides that coincided with the storm front. Although the waters were higher than the storm of 1953 - which claimed hundreds of lives through drowning - the improved sea defences (as a result of the disaster), did their job admirably.
It was not clear if travel was going to be a good idea for my return trip, today, but the high winds never materialised in the southern counties, and the drive back to Dorset was not in any way a risk.
The sky looked good once I arrived home, and having checked the tide tables (a low one was due for early evening), I decide that an hour or so of late afternoon photography would be a nice way to round-off a very pleasant stay with Nic. The predicted low tide will occur in darkness, so I know I won't get the full effect, but all the same I hold off from making photographs until the sun has set. Once again the 10 stop ND filter is being used to create long shutter speeds, which makes the most of the afterglow. It only lasts for a few minutes, but I feel that I have what I came for. Lucky me.
12-24mm f/4G AF-S Nikkor. 60 seconds at f/11. ND1000 filter. Tripod and remote release.
© 2013
It was not clear if travel was going to be a good idea for my return trip, today, but the high winds never materialised in the southern counties, and the drive back to Dorset was not in any way a risk.
The sky looked good once I arrived home, and having checked the tide tables (a low one was due for early evening), I decide that an hour or so of late afternoon photography would be a nice way to round-off a very pleasant stay with Nic. The predicted low tide will occur in darkness, so I know I won't get the full effect, but all the same I hold off from making photographs until the sun has set. Once again the 10 stop ND filter is being used to create long shutter speeds, which makes the most of the afterglow. It only lasts for a few minutes, but I feel that I have what I came for. Lucky me.
12-24mm f/4G AF-S Nikkor. 60 seconds at f/11. ND1000 filter. Tripod and remote release.
© 2013
Labels:
Afterglow,
Boscombe Pier,
Low Tide,
ND Filter
Location:
Poole Bay, Dorset, UK
Wednesday, December 04, 2013
This time, Oare next...
I'm spending the week in Kent with Nic; drinking tea; eating cake and taking photographs. The UK is forecast to have storm conditions in the next 24 hours or so, with severe risk of flooding due to a coincidental tide surge, so we make the most of it while we can.
It has been overcast all day, but the cloud is expected to break during late afternoon. So, before we visit Oare Marshes for a photo shoot, we visit nearby Faversham for some of the aforementioned tea and cake (we had coffee, but it doesn't quite have the same ring).
The weather does its stuff as forecast (well done, The Met Office), and we are treated to beautiful light and a spectacular sunset across the marsh. There is plenty to point a lens at on the marshes, and one of these days I will make more of the numerous wrecks that litter Oare creek (below), but as they are unaccessible on foot due to the mud flats it will have to wait until I am carrying much longer lenses and a tripod.
Maybe next time.
It has been overcast all day, but the cloud is expected to break during late afternoon. So, before we visit Oare Marshes for a photo shoot, we visit nearby Faversham for some of the aforementioned tea and cake (we had coffee, but it doesn't quite have the same ring).
The weather does its stuff as forecast (well done, The Met Office), and we are treated to beautiful light and a spectacular sunset across the marsh. There is plenty to point a lens at on the marshes, and one of these days I will make more of the numerous wrecks that litter Oare creek (below), but as they are unaccessible on foot due to the mud flats it will have to wait until I am carrying much longer lenses and a tripod.
Maybe next time.
12-24mm f/4G AF-S Nikkor
Top: 1/250 second at f/8. + 0.33 EV compensation. ISO 400
Below: 1/160 second at f/8. + 0.67 EV compensation. ISO 400
© 2013
Labels:
Kent,
Oare Marshes,
Wrecks
Location:
Oare, Kent, UK
Monday, December 02, 2013
The big stopper...
Every once in a while a photographer will add something to the arsenal of gadgets and lenses that takes image making to another level for him or her. It is almost a year to the day that I first thought about buying a "big stopper": a ND1000 neutral density filter and actually getting one. I'm glad I did.
Such filters are almost opaque, and they prevent 10 stops of light from getting through the lens and on to the sensor. Quite why anyone would want that might be a mystery to some. After all, it's all about the light, isn't it? Well, yes, but being able to control the amount to such a degree opens up all sorts of creative possibilities.
So, armed with this new gadget I set off to the local pier to learn how to use it.
It is a grey day - ideal for what I have in mind - although the leaden sky does break as soon as I arrive, but no matter. It will all add to the effect. It is very time consuming to shoot with such a device on the front of the lens since once it is attached nothing can be seen through the viewfinder, and I have to unscrew it every time I change composition. Still, no bad thing as it slows me down and allows me to work in a more thoughtful way. Of course, a tripod is a must with this type of shooting.
Everything has to be done in manual mode - from meter reading to focusing - then the necessary filter factor applied to get a good exposure. Despite all that light being prevented from getting into the lens I am still forced to stop down the lens much further than I would like, due to diffraction, but for today's purposes I will let it go.
For a first attempt I was rather pleased with the results, and coupled with my renewed interest in monochrome imaging it has opened up new horizons for my photography. Which, let's face it, can be no bad thing.
12-24mm f/4G AF-S Nikkor.
Top: 16 seconds at f/22. ISO 160
Right: 50 seconds at f/22. ISO 200
Manual focus and metering. Exposures timed by my watch. Tripod and remote release. Mirror lockup in bulb mode.
© 2013
Such filters are almost opaque, and they prevent 10 stops of light from getting through the lens and on to the sensor. Quite why anyone would want that might be a mystery to some. After all, it's all about the light, isn't it? Well, yes, but being able to control the amount to such a degree opens up all sorts of creative possibilities.
So, armed with this new gadget I set off to the local pier to learn how to use it.
It is a grey day - ideal for what I have in mind - although the leaden sky does break as soon as I arrive, but no matter. It will all add to the effect. It is very time consuming to shoot with such a device on the front of the lens since once it is attached nothing can be seen through the viewfinder, and I have to unscrew it every time I change composition. Still, no bad thing as it slows me down and allows me to work in a more thoughtful way. Of course, a tripod is a must with this type of shooting.
Everything has to be done in manual mode - from meter reading to focusing - then the necessary filter factor applied to get a good exposure. Despite all that light being prevented from getting into the lens I am still forced to stop down the lens much further than I would like, due to diffraction, but for today's purposes I will let it go.
For a first attempt I was rather pleased with the results, and coupled with my renewed interest in monochrome imaging it has opened up new horizons for my photography. Which, let's face it, can be no bad thing.
12-24mm f/4G AF-S Nikkor.
Top: 16 seconds at f/22. ISO 160
Right: 50 seconds at f/22. ISO 200
Manual focus and metering. Exposures timed by my watch. Tripod and remote release. Mirror lockup in bulb mode.
© 2013
Labels:
Big Stopper,
Boscombe Pier,
Monochrome,
ND Filter
Location:
Boscombe Pier, Dorset, UK
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