Friday, November 30, 2018
Spares save the day
The effects of sea air can be brutal on photographic gear. The constant battle against airborne contaminants on the front element of a lens never really goes away, but the biggest threat from salt-laden air is when it gets into the innards. That, and impact damage. Both of my regular lenses are packaged and are sat, waiting for the off to the repair shop. The wide-angle zoom got bent out of shape due to an accident whilst out shooting this week, and the 24-70mm is in desperate need of a service; its first in the 9 years I've had it.
But all is not lost as I resort to a couple of back-up lenses I keep for such an eventuality. Neither delivers the colour and quality of my preferred optics, but they are better than nothing at all at those focal lengths. However, it has been some years since I've used either, so I set off for a casual stroll along the beach, just so I can reappraise each lens.
Optical distortion is my main worry, and the wide zoom has it (not good when there is a straight horizon towards the edge of the image), but Lightroom - and some judicial cropping - is able to deal with it (as with the photo above).
The standard zoom is fine for what it is (an ageing Sigma 24-70mm D EX DG f/2.8), but using both lenses frequently catch me out in use. Neither are AF-S, and the focus ring rotates as the camera achieves focus; something I'm not used to when hand-holding. But again, First World Problems. Thankfully, I have both optics as spares.
18-35mm f/3.5-4.5 D ED Nikkor. 1/1600 second at f/8. Matrix metering. -0.67 EV compensation. ISO 100
© 2018
Location:
Bournemouth beach, Dorset, UK
Monday, November 26, 2018
I dodged a bullet (apparently)
Before I committed to digital photography I gave some serious consideration to the 4x5 film format. At the time it all involved investing in a new system anyway, and large format had its appeal, however unwieldy such a camera may be in the field.
In the end I opted to stay with a smaller SLR system (switching from Olympus to Nikon), and with hindsight that was possibly a good decision. Today, I checked the price of what I would have to pay for "going large". At the time of writing, what with cost of sheet film (Fuji Velvia for preference), and processing, it would work out at £9.70 (€10.06 / $12.08) per shot. Okay, I would have got superb detail, but the aforementioned figures didn't involve digital scanning or making prints.
Occasionally I still crop to the 4:5 ratio just to see what I am missing in that respect, but the cost of it all tells me I made the right decision.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 4 seconds at f/8. Matrix metering. - 0.67 EV compensation. Tripod and remote release. ISO 100
© 2018
Labels:
4x5 format,
Afterglow,
Boscombe Pier,
Low Tide
Location:
Boscombe beach, Dorset, UK
Sunday, November 25, 2018
Not what I had hoped for
Low tide (and not an especially low one at that), is to occur some 45 minutes after sunset this afternoon, and I plan to shoot at around that moment. There should still be enough residual light in the sky to keep things interesting, and enough exposed wet sand for some good reflections. I set up and wait.
Unfortunately the afterglow that I had hoped for didn't happen, so I use an insurance shot - the second exposure I made shortly after my arrival - instead.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/60th second at f/8. Matrix metering. Tripod and remote release. ISO 100
© 2018
Labels:
Boscombe Pier,
Low Tide,
Reflections,
Sunset
Location:
Boscombe Beach, Dorset, UK
Friday, November 23, 2018
The lowest of the low
The first of the lowest low tides of the month, and I am stood alone on the beach wondering what I am doing here. The light is dreadful and the cloud cover is a solid grey. I contemplate packing up and going home, but out of nowhere there appears a crack of light in the sky.
I have to work quickly as the shape is rapidly changing, and manage to shoot several frames before it's gone. This was the best of the sequence.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/125 second at f/8. Matrix metering. ISO 200
© 2018
Labels:
Boscombe Pier,
Low Tide,
Monochrome
Location:
Boscombe Beach, Dorset, UK
Thursday, November 22, 2018
Back to square one
It's back to Boscombe beach for low tides, and those oh-so-wonderful reflections in the wet sand when the sky is doing its thing. Anywhere else just doesn't seem right to my eye, and the pier doesn't dominate the view as much as its big sister, a mile or so along the coast.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/250 second at f/8. Matrix metering. ISO 100
© 2018
Labels:
Autumn,
Boscombe Pier,
Low Tide
Location:
Boscombe Beach, Dorset, UK
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
No light, so black and white
Showers and a blustery wind is the order of the day, weather wise, and by the time I reach the beach this afternoon it is all but deserted. As there is no spectacular light to be photographed - but enough break in the scudding clouds to make things interesting - I shoot with the conversion to black and white in mind.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/60th second at f/8. Matrix metering. + 1 stop EV compensation. Mono conversion in Silver Efex Pro 2. ISO 125
© 2018
Labels:
Autumn,
Monochrome,
Seascape
Location:
Bournemouth Beach, Dorset, UK
Monday, November 19, 2018
In need of boots
Autumn has arrived good and proper as temperatures drop to single figures. As a result, casual walkers stay away in droves, leaving the windswept beaches to the more committed outdoor type... and photographers.
I needed a pair of boots to allow me to get into the water to make the most of the reflections; something I didn't have today. However, there are low tides during late afternoon come the weekend, and all I need for photographic bliss is good light... and that pair of boots.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/160 second at f/8. Matrix metering. + 0.33 EV compensation. ISO 200
© 2018
Labels:
Autumn,
Bournemouth Pier,
Reflections,
Sunset
Location:
Bournemouth Beach, Dorset, UK
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
Avoiding the weekend rush
Catching the light at the end of the day is one thing, but to be assured of the beach to myself - at least on a week day - an early start pays dividends, as with this pre-sunrise image of Boscombe Pier.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/60th second at f/11. Matrix metering. Monopod. ISO 200
© 2018
Location:
Boscombe beach, Dorset, UK
Monday, November 12, 2018
The best place to be
It's a blustery day, with showers blowing in off the Atlantic, and there's only one place I'm going to be come late afternoon. The brisk wind continually moves the cloud, producing ever changing light, and the low tide is the icing on the cake.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/80th second at f/11. Matrix metering. + 1 Stop EV compensation. ISO 200
© 2018
Labels:
Autumn,
Bournemouth Pier,
Low Tide,
Sunset
Location:
Bournemouth beach, Dorset, UK
Sunday, November 11, 2018
Thursday, November 08, 2018
To the point
"There are two times of the year: Autumn and waiting for autumn."
A quote by persons unknown, but it sums it up perfectly for me.
300mm f/2.8 AF-S VR Nikkor. 1/1250 at f/2.8. Matrix metering. -0.33 EV compensation. ISO 100
© 2018
Location:
Bournemouth, Dorset, UK
Sunday, November 04, 2018
Two's company...
... three's a crowd.
24-70mm f/2.8 AF-S Nikkor. 1/400 second at f/5.6. Matrix metering. ISO 100
© 2018
Location:
Eastwell Park, Kent, UK
Thursday, November 01, 2018
The "thing" on the end of the pier
The "thing" on the end of the local pier, as it is sometimes labeled by the curious (and usually from a distance), always reminds me of a malevolent alien that you might find striding the landscape in a sci-fi film (The War of the Worlds springs to mind). The reality is it is nothing more innocuous than the starting point for a zip line that runs to the beach.
12-24mm f/4 AF-S Nikkor. 1/100 second at f/8. Matrix metering. ISO 100
© 2018
Labels:
Bournemouth Pier,
Zip Line
Location:
Bournemouth pier, Dorset, UK
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