Wedding Photographer, Wakefield, West Yorkshire
Posts tagged rocks

Dunstanburgh Castle Landscape Photography
Apr 29th
I was up at Dunstanburgh Castle in Northumbria on a bit of a motorbike/photography trip with a friend recently when I got this photo. Unfortunately there wasn’t much of a sunset and there was even less of a sunrise but we did the best with the light we had. Dunstanburgh castle is a very photogenic location, with waves rolling in over the large round boulders as foreground interest and the ruined castle on the hill top it gives the landscape photographer numerous opportunities to create a great image. A great sky would really set the image off but as the clouds weren’t really dancing I made sure the sky wasn’t really the focal point, one of the ways this was done was by positioning the horizon on the top third as opposed to the bottom. I wanted the motion of the waves to appear misty, this was done by having the camera on bulb mode and keeping the shutter open for 90 seconds (a very opaque neutral density filter such as a 10-stop is pretty essential for long exposures).
A ride through the Peak District
Oct 5th
I went out with a friend on the bikes today to take some photos, I think he’d been inspired by some of the river shots I did recently and wanted to have a go at them. The day was pretty overcast so we didn’t have hard light coming through the leaves and as it was pretty shaded we had some fairly lengthy shutter speeds to work with to get the movement in the water. I didn’t get much at the river so we drove on.

Tree in the Peak district with rocks in the foreground with the sun hitting them through a break in the cloud
We stopped quickly to get this tree shot as I can’t resist lone trees and the rocks made a good leading line to the subject (spotted by my friend, credit where it’s due). The sky wasn’t up to much and the light was pretty flat so I wanted to try and give the impression of the sun breaking the clouds and hitting the rocks in the foreground. This effect was achieved through an off camera flash with a CTO gel off to the left. A photographer named Joe McNally does this type of shot quite a bit and his books explaining the ins and out of it are great if you are interested, there’s always strobist too which is pretty much the Mecca of off camera flash. The shot here was taken at ISO100, 19mm, f/16 at 1/50, underexposed slightly to emphasise the lit part. I thought it had a bit of a resemblance with one of my first shots I took with my 5D of top withens near Haworth (this one).


