Sunday, November 28, 2010

Snow time

I've been waiting for the snow to hit Minnesota with some excitement, looking forward to the opportunities that it might present for blurs. I have seen some very inspirational images from William Neill taken in the snow.
Other commitments meant that I wasn't able to get out with my camera until this morning. I think this first effort is quite promising

Aspen Trunks bay lake

Another blur from a very productive walk before breakfast one late fall morning near Bay Lake, MN

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Fall colours

I've been going through my blurs from the fall, looking for something to post. There are just so many of them and I honestly could spend hours and hours trying to tweak them in photoshop trying to get them just right.
I like this one, Its some aspen trunks up near Bay Lake, MN

long time no post

I can't believe its been a month since my last blur posting. So its about time I quickly did another one. Oak trees in Minehaha Park, Minneapolis, early morning

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Holiday Snaps, Snowdonia

The Snowdonia National Park in North Wales is one of my very favourite places in the whole world. I love the mountain scenery and this time on our vacation in the UK were were lucky enough to return there. We based ourselves in the Royal Victoria Hotel in Llanberis in a room with a view of Llanberis lake from one window and the mountains from another.
One morning I awoke and threw the back the curtains to see a pool of light moving slowly across the mountain side. I quickly grabbed my camera and instead of a horizontal or vertical pan I moved the camera along the angle of the slope. I think the effect is quite effective.
Most of the time we were there the weather was gorgeous. But these are mountains and the weather can change very quickly. One afternoon, while driving down the Aberglaslyn pass, I was amazed to see banks of cloud appear over the tops of the mountains and chop the tops off. A perfct opportunity for some blurs I thought. So we stopped at a convenient scenic viewpoint and I clicked away, sweeping my camera across the magnificent vista as I did so. This must have been much to the chagrin of the photographer with his camera mounted on a tripod fiddling with all manner of filters and inspecting the histogram on his camera trying to take a photograph down the valley.
This last shot is my particular favourite from our sojourn in North Wales. See how the clouds, mountains and the highlights and shadows have worked together to create some kind of reflection of each other. Super.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

More Holiday Snaps

OK so its been a long time but I've been busy. I have acouple of minutes to spare, so returning to my list of pictures I have to post here's a couple of the tide washing in against a shingle bank on the seafront at Folkestone. As the waves gently break on the shore they make an interesting effect


Monday, September 20, 2010

Holiday Snaps 2 The English Channel

While we were in the UK we had a chance to stay with an aunt and uncle who lived in Folkestone, Kent in an apartment that overlooked the English channel (yes I could see France and yes, I did try to do a blur-o-graph of the French coast more of that later maybe)
The mornings were alway gorgeous and the light on the water was too good to resist. Here then are a couple of blurs of the English Channel...
This first one is a blur of the clouds in the sky
This shows the shadows of the clouds on the water.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Holiday Snaps (part one)

Greetings!
It has been pointed out to me that things have been quiet on the blur-o-graphy front lately. Well the truth is I've been on holiday back home in England and I've taken lots of photographs both normal and blurs. So its taking me a while to go through them. But I do have plenty of blurs to share with you. This first group of three come from the Rimac nature reserve North of my home town of Mablethorpe in Lincolnshire.
Rimac is a remarkable place of sand dunes and saltmarsh. Quiet and tranquil and though you are less than half a mile off the main coast road you would thing that you were in the middle of nowhere.
These views are of the saltmarsh with the sea and some surf in the background.


I'm inclined to think that these pictures would look pretty good displayed as a triptych.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Light Rains down

Another one from the weekend. This is probably the most abstract I've ever produced. I've stripped this one down to light and shadow. Shape and form are pretty much out of the window on this one.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Apres Georges

Georges Seurat that is.
The Impressionist school of painting has always been one of my favourites. Particularly the work of Georges Seurat. So imagine my surprise when I looked at these images and found myself thinking
"Georges Seurat would have painted like that." Actually any one of a dozen Impresionists would have painted like this but the small dot-like texture of these images put me in mind of the pointillist style adopted by Seurat.


Sunday, August 8, 2010

Forgotten forest

For some reason I forgot all about the shots I took in the woods behind the cabin this morning. I just found them on the camera just as I was about to erase the files on the memory card. Good job I checked. I'm quite pleased with the feeling of light breaking through the leaves into the woods with this one. I found I'd taken about 8 shots of this scene all imperceptibly different.
ISO 100 f22 4.0 secs 27mm ZD 14-42 ND8

Crazy Day

Well, not so much a crazy day as a crazy hour this morning up at the cabin. It was about 70F and very sticky when I got up this morning with som early morning mist on the lake. But that very quickly burned off and by the time I'd got back from my curtailed run the sun was shining quite brightly and I managed to produce some quite interesting images of some tree trunks in the front yard. The particular trunk below I'm very happy with as it has some good detail in the trunk while tending towards the abstract. Rather than having a painterly feel to it there's a roughness almost like a pastel drawing.
Above: ISO 100, 4 seconds, f9 42mm ZD 14-42 ND8

This Vee'd tree has a particular fascination for me. I'll probably take more shots of it before long. Perhaps I should even find out what sort of tree it is. Perhaps I should find out what all these trees are...
Above: ISO 100, f 10, 3.2 secs, 37mm ZD 14-42, ND8

Then the strangest thing happened. The fog blew back in again. I've never seen that happen in all the years I've been going up to the lake. Visibility came down to 100 yards or so obliterating all detail in the far side of the bay. Perfect conditions to try a blur-o-graph
Above: ISO 100, f22, 5 secs, 200mm PL 45-200, ND8

Lessons in lighting

A weekend jaunt up to the cabin always presents me with new photo opportunities and fires up my creative juices. So here's a few from Saturday. The first two are of some birch tree trunks in the front yard. Exactly the same trees. Its just that for some unknown reason I managed to underexpose the first shot by a stop and a half and by the time I'd pulled that stop and a half back with CameraRaw the tree trunks took on a different hue. I like them both.

These birch grove shots were an exercise in patience. I saw the grove in the light of the setting sun and knew I had to get a picture. But by the time I had my camera ready. The sun had gone behind a cloud. I had to wait some 15 minutes for the sun to return, meanwhile mosquitoes feasted on me... In the first shot the sun was just starting to appear from behind the clouds in the second was a fleeting moment of full sunlight. Just as quickly it was gone.

Friday, August 6, 2010

waterswirls

By way of a bonus heres some extra pictures from down at the river this afternoon. These were all shot almost wide open with all the ND filters on the PL45-200 lens and as a result I was only getting exposures of 1-2 seconds at ISO 100. These were all hand held. When I saw them on the camera screen I wasn't all that excited with them but I knew better than to delete them just like that, I could see some interesting patterns and textures in there and after I'd boosted the sharpness, contrast, clarity and blacks and boosted the saturation in CameraRaw I was starting to get happy with them.
Above: the swirls on the right hand side are particularly appealing f9 2.5 secs
Above: though in a shorter exposure of 1 second at f9 the swirls disappear
Above: I get the feeling of an impressionist painting from this one f9 2 secs
I almost want to believe that this is a rough sea in a violent storm, but I know that those whitecaps are only a few inches tall f7.1 1.3 secs
This is what I find really exciting about blur-o-graphy. You really never know exactly what you've go until you get the pictures home and see them on the computer, full size. In that way in these days of hi-tech we have a photography process that is just like getting prints back from the processor. The more things change the more they stay the same eh?

Water, water everywhere

Whilst out for a run at lunch I came across a scene that I liked and after I'd run home, showered and changed I returned camera in hand to take this picture of a water fountain. All nice and symmetrical that just cried out to be photographed in a panoramic format. I was quite lucky in that it only took me 12 attempts to get something I liked.
Above: ISO 100, 1.3 secs, f 22, 91mm PL 45-200, ND 2, 4 & 8 filters

So, buoyed by the success of the panoramic format shots I headed down to the river in town to see what I could do there. Even with all my ND filters mounted on my PL 45-220 and using f22 I could only get 8,10 and 15 second exposures. I would have liked perhaps 30 seconds but these three pictures are not entirely unpleasant


Saturday, July 31, 2010

Down to the river...

Armed with a full selection of ND filters and tripod and in the middle of the afternoon I headed off to the river to see what I could do with the water there. I've not taken any pictures of water trails for quite a while and it is one of the most accesible subjects for blur-o-graphy. The first four pictures were taken with the camera mounted on the tripod and with all three of my neutral density filters mounted in front of the lens the ND2, 4 and 8
Above: ISO 100 f22 13 secs

Above: ISO 100 f22 25 secs
The next two were taken from the same viewpoint (OK so the camera moved a tiny bit) with the same settings. It just goes to show that the flow of the water can make subtle differences in the image
Both ISO100 f 22 4 secs
Below: ISO100 f22 5 secs

Friday, July 30, 2010

Out and about with ND filters

On Monday my selection of Cokin ND filters arrived. I was excited to try them out but had to wait until today, Friday to do so. So I went down to Riverside park in Princeton to try them out on some of the trees down there. It was a cloudy day and with the ND4 and ND8 I could really slow the shutter speed down with the aperture wide open. It was quite fun to mess around. I've also started to tweak the images more in CameraRaw.
Above ISO 100 f 5.6 0.5 sec 42mm ZD 14-42 ND4 + ND8

ISO 100 f4.5 0.6 sec 42mm ZD 14-42 ND8

Above: ISO 100 f 4.5 1 second 26mm ZD 14-42 ND4 + ND8

Above: ISO 100 f5.6 0.3 sec 42mm ZD 14-42 ND4

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Coneflower studies

The beautiful conditions at the cabin this weekend must have inspired me for when I saw the Coneflowers in the garden I fair attacked them with the camera. Some of the results are seen below
Above: Blowing in the wind. ISO 100 f22 0.6 sec 200mm PL 45-200 ND2 filter

Above: "Coneflower spin". ISO 100 f16 0.5 sec 24mm ZD 14-42

Above: "Shining". ISO 100 f16 0.5 sec 24mm ZD 14-42

Above: "!" ISO 100 F16 0.8 sec 42mm ZD 14-42

Above: "Centre" ISO 100 f 16 1 sec 42mm ZD 14-42

Thursday, July 22, 2010

On Order

Yesterday I placed an order for come Cokin neutral density filters. They will help me open the aperture up and slow the shutter speed down when I carry on taking pictures

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Further Lilly Studies

The Lillies in my wifes garden are providing me with excellent subject matter this week.