Showing posts with label iPhoto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhoto. Show all posts

21 October 2014

Holiday Photographs!

For the October break we visited Nairn, up past the Scottish Highlands. I figured I should take my camera along and see what I can come back with. I had ample opportunity to photograph my surroundings during our week there and came home with a total of around 500 images in total. I then proceeded to give a select few a quick look over in iPhoto, which led to me choosing these 6 photographs below.

I was aware during my time roaming around with my camera, that I was certain to end up with groups of images that looked very similar and had the same subject matter. So, during my cull of the original 500 I discovered this to be true. These 6 images below aren't my favourites or anything, I picked them because each one is different - whether referring to colour, composition, shape, light, colour etc.





This is the view from outside Primark in Inverness city centre. The sun was in my eyes and I wasn't exactly sure at the time what I was photographing...but I think it turned out okay.




This one was from a rest stop alongside Loch Ness. We stopped the car and continued down the small set of stairs that led us to a rocky patch of ground, and this was the view! The reflection astounded me and I like how you can just make out the misty fog lying on top of the loch in the background.




I quite like this image. The log you see in the foreground was about 6 foot tall and stood in the sand as if originally planted there. I took the photograph in black and white and made sure that my mum and sister had just about moved out of sight - this way the space on the left of the upright tree is left empty. Personally it gives me the feeling that the figures are going to disappear behind that log. I of course know that they won't completely disappear behind the log (they didn't) but, I can't help but feel that way when I look at the photograph. Strange!




This photograph was taken as a tester to see if the timer worked well. It seems 10secs was long enough for me to dart back across to the shore and pose so gracefully, unlike my sister and mum. I blurred our faces out on iPhoto to create an anonymity of sorts - I know everyone who will see these already know who we are but sometimes I feel faces distract too much and give away too much.




I genuinely can't remember where I was when I looked up at the sky and took this one, but I remember capturing the glare and light and thinking "I won't delete that one!". Composition was always on my mind whilst taking these photographs, I regularly remember that certain things in a photograph may look great aesthetically and pleasing to look at, but at the same time aren't technically in the right place. I hope that makes sense!




This one may not look like much at first, and you may notice that I took this from a moving car... But I guess the reason, or at least the main reason I kept this one was the juxtaposition of the trolley pushing couple in the foreground, and the fictional Specsavers customers in the background. Although not completely in shot, I think this little contrast is the main subject of the image. I struggled deciding how much of the left side to crop, I wasn't sure how much I should bring it in.

1 October 2014

Black & White Photography

Some of the following photographs were originally taken in black and white, while the others I edited afterwards upon realising they worked a lot better that way. Reducing the amount of colour in a photograph drastically changes the effects it has on the viewer. In this case there wasn't much colour to work with in the first place, most of the clouds were white and grey and all the blue sky was covered up by the clouds. I guess I just liked the way it looked as I peered out my living room window armed with my camera. I have a limited amount of flexibility at my house when it comes to perspective, especially if I'm just sitting with the window open, stuck in one spot for an hour or whatever. But I'm determined to collect as many interesting and different photographs from this position. Anyway, these are the images I came up with!




Upon first glance all I saw was clouds, going from dark at the bottom slowly getting brighter near the top, until I noticed the sun (or moon? not sure haha) in the top left corner. This illuminates the clouds and creates a beautiful image that looks rather like a close up of a mushroom cloud...strange.




A larger scale photograph taken on the same night. Giving the viewer much more to look at and scan over with their eyes. The inclusion of the telephone wire in the bottom right corner was a decision I made whilst cropping certain areas out. Now that I'm looking closer I'm having doubts about whether it belongs there or not... Then again I like that it's just sitting at an angle in the corner. I'd rather it positioned there than it going further along the bottom of the image. I think without it, the photograph would look far too bare. It also gives the viewer some idea of where the photograph was taken from, what perspective I had or where I was when I took it.




I was annoyed when I came to edit this particular one because I was under the impression it was completely in focus! Sometimes when you preview a photograph on your camera screen it looks better than it actually is... Anyway I think I made the most of what I had. I cleaned up some of the loose, individual branches with iPhoto just to give the impression the branches are longer than they are. I used the sharpen tool to a certain extent as I desperately wanted the branches more in focus - I didn't want to go too far, though. On second thought actually I have no idea how I managed to take this photo! The bush that those blurry branches belong to is just over about a metre tall and with all the houses and the road in front of my house I can't understand how I was able to set those branches against this backdrop?! I took it from my living room window as well...I don't get it. Maybe I should refrain from admitting these doubts and just say everything was deliberate and for a reason haha.




This is probably my favourite out of these 4. Again, like the other 3 this photograph was taken on the same night. (Yeah it was definitely the sun behind those clouds, really looks like a sunset in this one.) My first instinct was to crop out the foreground. I figured that because the sky looked so clear and the clouds were in focus, the photograph didn't need anything else! But when I adjusted the contrast ever so slightly - I realised the roof, chimney, telephone wire and the very tip of that branch worked well as a silhouette in the foreground.


I'm pleased with what I was able to produce from just sitting at my living room window. When it comes to photographing the sky, I feel it's important to have something to tie it all together (especially when it comes to black and white images) for example even if it's a bird flying past or even better - a collection of birds! I'm lucky to have such an interesting view from my living room window, although there's only so far I can go. I know that the sky can look different every day and night, and the way that clouds form is beautiful and does encourage me to look up at there every now and then and see what I can capture - and these 4 images are evidence of that.