Friday 29 January 2010

Swans, Grey Heron and Canada Goose

After a recent talk on natural history photographs at the local camera club, I felt inspired.
I headed off to Par Beach Pool (just behind Par Beach in Cornwall) to see what was there. I haven't got a telephoto lens, and there looked like there were some more interesting birds that were sadly out of my range.

Still I managed to get some half decent attempts with my Tamron zoom lens.

This is my favourite shot, a Mute Swan Cygnet. I loved the golden tones.



Mute Swan Cygnet

There were some adult mute swans too:

Mute Swan at Sunset




Mute Swan



And a Canada Goose:


Canada Goose

I managed to borrow a lovely telephoto lens, so I returned to the pool a couple of weeks later and had more luck I think...

Canada Geese in Flight
(This looks much better large!)

A Wagtail:

Pied Wagtail



I was also really excited about catching a Grey Heron - it was only there for the briefest of moments, so I didn't have much of a chance to zoom in or compose it more thoughtfully. It does look better in a larger format (click the photograph for a larger size)



Grey Heron



My Flickr

Wednesday 13 January 2010

2009 - Faces

Click on the photograph for larger version

Portraits. Still so much to learn!

I bought a cheap strobist lighting kit at the end of the summer - experimenting using an umbrella and a couple of strobes resulted in these:

First Strobist Attempt...

Jon

Headshot

Ant

Self Portrait

and a few without all the fancy *coughs* equipment

Beach Candid

Roundabout

My Flickr

2009 - Summer - Daisies and Painted Ladies

Click on photographs for larger version

With a boom in the population of immigrant butterflies such as the Painted Lady, by the time summer came around, my macro lens was itching to get out.

I couldn't have asked for a more beautiful day!

(these really need to be seen larger - check out the butterfly tongue!)

Painted Lady on a Daisy

Painted Lady on a Daisy

Daisy

Daisy, Daisy, Give me the sky so blue...

Daisy

Other Macro / foliage shots I took over the summer included:

Flight of the Bumble Bee

Sunrise

Foxglove

I Heart Seaweed

My flickr

2009 - Spring, Still Life, Snails and Stalking

Click on photographs for larger versions

Digital Photography School Forums inspired me to experiment with photographic still life in the spring. Their weekly assignment topic was wisdom, which I found quite inspiring, as it can be interpreted so many different ways.

Another hobby of mine is genealogy - finding out where I came from and understanding what my ancestors experienced helps to put things into perspective. I decided to focus on this as a source of wisdom, the wisdom of knowing where you came from, to construct a still life to photograph as my entry into the competition.

The photographs are of my two great grandfathers (although you can't really see at this size - click photographs for larger versions).


Genealogy


It was also around this time that I discovered my mums table was ultra reflective, and she also owns some quirky looking bits and bobs, so I thought I would take a few shots of this antique clock, and I quite liked the resulting reflections.

"Reflections of Time"

Refections of Time

I found this little fella in my garden, sliding along the now dead (I'm still upset. This was the down side of the snow/frost) red banana plant. My macro lens (a Tamron) was blurring the background beautifully, but it was all a mass of browns, and I wanted more contrast, so I propped some coloured card behind him.

Snail

Here's a stalking little cat on a hot tin roof!

Stalk

My Flickr

Tuesday 12 January 2010

2009 - Winter - Snow, Frost, Graffiti and Kittens.

Click photographs for larger view

I was beginning to think it would never snow like it did when I was a kid - you know, enough to close your school and deep enough to build a snowman in - and then 2009 saw the return of some decent wintry weather.

It always makes me laugh how the most mundane things suddenly get photographed because they have a few inches of snow on them. Benches for example. Surely everyone at some point has taken a photograph of a bench covered in snow.

I was up in Shropshire staying with family, and the beautiful countryside a short walk away made it impossible not to grab my camera, pull on some fingerless gloves and go out and explore. It was the first time I had ventured out alone with a camera, and it's amazing how much more you take in when you aren't half focused on people around you.

Even graffiti on the railway bridge demanded my attention - normally it's just background noise.

Graffiti on the Railway

As I walked off the bridge, I was totally smitten by the frost on leaves by the side of the railway. I took this shot, which has astonished me with its popularity on flickr - 220+ favourites and increasing daily!

Orange Frost

I would love to show you the rest of the beautiful photographs I had taken that day... but I had a computer malfunction which resulted in the loss of all the other photographs I had taken that day. Including the bench photograph.

Frustration.

Even more annoyingly there was a thaw overnight, and I never got to retake the bench I had found, when it was all snowy and abandoned.

Not quite as atmospheric, but just as abandoned - here is my bench.

Bench

The thaw brought about some other photo opportunities though :

Seed Head

Granny's Little Angel

Birmingham provided more frosty scenes later that January, so I decided to take some photographs of someone elses garden:

Frosty Strawberries

Junk

I love the texture frost gives when you convert a photograph to black and white!



my flickr









Monday 11 January 2010

2008 - The Beginning...

Click on photographs for larger version

In the beginning there was a birthday.

Finally I had a real camera. Not the convenient shove-in-your-handbag point and shoot I had used forever, but a shiny new Canon EOS 450d, complete with an 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS kit lens, and a Tamron 70-300mm f4/5.6 DI LD Macro lens.

I had to take it out for a trial run, so headed up to Warrens wood at St Blazey to make the most of the Autumn colour scheme. I had a quick look at the manual, but with so much to take in, decided to dial it to manual and experiment with the settings in the hope that I might take a shot that I liked.

Autumn Tree Swing


My macro lens still needed testing, and with the Autumn weather giving way to the chill of Winter, I felt some indoor practice was in order. Water seemed like a good place to start, so to the bemusement of those around me, I spent a weekend taking photographs of various combinations of water, oil and cds... as you do!

Chasing Rainbows

Bubble Ring

Pink Bubbles


Flowers seemed like the logical progression, and since I was new to the world of macro, I headed outside to shoot the only flower still standing (in my defense - it was December by this point!)

Dew on Flower


What my back garden lacked, the supermarket provided, and I bought some flowers. I must be naive, but I didn't realise they actually dyed flowers... I thought I had bought blue flowers, but it turned out I bought white ones that someone had dyed blue.

I felt duped, but they were still pretty!

Blue


I finished the year trying to make a crap Christmas tree look better.

Trying to Make a Crap Christmas Tree Look Better...

My flickr