Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Alps Climbing 2011

Descending the Midi RidgeDent du Geant, Rochfort Arete and Grand JorrasseMeTour Ronde North faceView from Helbronner Cable CarPinnacles
Crossing the Vallee Blanche GlacierMont Blanc du TaculSunset @ 3500mSunset (Explore # 229)




Alps Climbing 2011, a set on Flickr.


Some photos from my recent climbing trip to the Alps. I'm particularly plased with teh sunset shot as that made it into Flickr's EXPLOPRE @ #229. My best showing yet.

Despite a couple of bad weather days we managed to get a lot done and I got some great photos with a borrowed Canon G12. We didn't achieve our main objective of Mont Blanc due to the weather, but thats just an excuse to go back next year.


We climbed ...

Petite Aiguille Verte
Traverse of the Valle Blanche
Cosmiques Arete
Mont Blanc du Tacul
Gran Paradiso





Wednesday, April 27, 2011

The Joy Of Running 1


Getting quality shots of moving subjects is relatively simple using a DSLR. Here are some tips.

Shoot in RAW, it means you can fine tune the white balance later, as well as have more leeway in finding details in shadow areas and avoiding clipped highlights.

It was a bright sunny day so I was able to shoot @ ISO 100 and still have a high enough shutter speed. If it's a bit dull or less light consider increasing the ISO to raise the shutter speed.

Set the camera to AI servo mode, this tracks moving subjects and keeps them in focus so long as you keep your finger half pressed ont he shutter buttton.

Set your camera to high speed burst mode and rattle off shots of the moving subject.

Don't start shooting too soon though, remember you are shooting in RAW and the buffer may fill up before you get to the real action you want to record.


Take a look in your manual to refresh your memory on how many shots your camera can take per second in high speed burst mode and how many shots in RAW will fill the buffer, causing the shot rate to drop.


Import the shots into your viewer (I use Lightroom) select the keepers and flag those short of the mark for deletion. You can then convert the RAW file as you wish, playing around with teh sliders or using a preset. I opted to use an x=equals preset called warm storm. This has given a great separation of the subject fromt he background and really accents the bright sunny day that we had on the beach.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Three from Four ?


Three
Originally uploaded by Mark1970Vintage
I've not been taking many photos over the last 3 months or so due to a severe outbreak of decorating in the house !! But what I have shot has been very purposeful and specific. This last week I shot based on the theme of the number 3 ( a competition at work) and these 4 shots are the results.

2 out of the 4 are water drops on a DVD. one is treated with a quadtone conversion (a speciality of mine) to give a really rich B&W. The colours on the other one were just spectacular so I left them be and enhanced them some.

The third shot is a digital recreation of a film effect called the "Harris Shutter". Read here for more details. http://www.flickr.com/photos/marklandon/5464828842/in/set-72157626028668207/

The final shot is the word three from the Oxford English Dictionary with a heavily processed texturisation in photoshop.



I've also finally got around to creating my 2011 signature.... and it's already nearly march !!