Saturday 23 February 2013

What do you look like when you close your eyes?

You've probably seen photos of yourself when you've blinked just as the shutter opened. But what about while you are sleeping, daydreaming or just zoning out? Here's a small collection of my friend and longtime muse, Summer, with her eyes closed.

If it's true that the eyes are the window to the soul then perhaps closing them encourages a viewer to imagine your dreams. What do you think?

Click on a picture to purchase a collectable art print

Thursday 21 February 2013

Seeing in Black and White (again)


During my transition to digital I noticed that I was seeing less and less in black and white while out photographing personal work. It eventually got to the stage that I was only really seeing the potential for a black and white print while I scanned through the files after loading them onto the computer. This didn’t seem a problem whenever I was commissioned to provide B&W for a corporate client - I guess my professional eye would just work to the brief.

For a while I wasn't sure why I was seeing less B&W scenes until I went back over how I learnt much of my photography. For many years I only shot 4"x5" or medium format, often exposing a polaroid first. I would have the (almost) instant gratification of seeing a print of the scene in either  B&W or colour. I think this is what helped train my photographic eye to almost instinctively assess a scene in terms of it's colour saturation or monochromatic tonal range. 


Like most photographers I left my LCD screen to display in colour  - even when making black and white images. To help reignite my black and white imagination I began wandering around on self assignments determined to only photograph scenes that would suit a fine art black and white print. So, to re-capture the old process of shooting a B&W polaroid, I  set the camera's LCD to display a monochrome image and tested my ability to ‘see’ in black and white.

Once I had found what I considered a suitable scene then thoughtfully set the framing and exposure, I would open the shutter and check my visualisation against the LCD. Whether using a tripod or hand held I slowed the whole process down to better appreciate the nuances of light, shade and tone.

I even used the mindset I operated under in my learning days: polaroids and large format film were very expensive so I would look carefully at every scene, fine tune the composition and make a lot of spot metering measurements before I made an exposure. Quite often during this process I would decide not to take a picture at all! I know how ridiculous that sounds in these times of free pixels.

So, I think the slowness of my money pinching mindset is also part of the process. As I only ever capture Raw files and even though the camera is making a B&W jpeg to show me on the LCD, I still have all of the information I need to make a fine art print.

This is, in effect, the digital age workflow of how I would make many of my black and white pictures all those years ago. Back then Polaroid made a beautiful Pos Neg film (Type55 I think) which allowed me to get a polaroid print and an excellent negative in the same exposure. The only drawback being the requirement to carry around a small bucket of solution to wash the negatives. Not quite as convenient as checking an LCD - especially when trekking around the bush! 

From time to time I revisit older pictures and apply new techniques and knowledge to the original RAW files. Sometimes the changes / re-workings are minor, other times I see the original completely different to how I saw it at the time of capture. While I would do this back in my B&W darkroom days as well, the immediacy and accuracy of these digital times makes such revisiting original files an important part of my personal photography practise today.

As my digital black and white conversion skills improve and with the help of the technique I  have adapted from the 'old days' I am again ‘seeing’ in B&W. The gallery here has some comparison pictures to show how my interpretations can change with time and skill. Please let me know your thoughts in the comments below.

Monday 18 February 2013

Cathedral Rocks Shoreline, Kiama, East Coast Australia.


February 16th, 2013

I had seen a number of pictures recently of this place and decided to check it out for myself. The aptly named rock formation is very impressive but wasn’t exciting my photography bugs on this particular evening. Instead, I found myself drawn to the slippery, rocky shoreline and the intricate nooks and crannies surrounding it.



The waves were surging in through a narrow u-shaped channel at a regular interval and seemingly of a consistant size. Unlike the conditions I experienced shooting Rainbow Sunset. Despite these benign seas I knew I would still need to be alert. Positioned behind a tall rock shelf, I would not see the approaching waves until they flooded the rocks and channel I decided to shoot.

Occasionally, a heavy thud and a spray of whitewater rising above the far side of the rocks, hinted a larger than usual wave was coming. So, before setting the tripod and camera up, I had spent 30 minutes or so higher up the cliff behind me watching the sets as I tuned into the ocean’s rhythm.

Arriving early is wise for shoreline photography. It leaves time for scouting the best shooting position, a dry spot to leave gear not being used as well as plan an escape route if a rogue wave does turn up. Even with all this prep and respect for the ocean there’s been a plenty of times when I have (very ungracefully) rock hopped to safety while holding the tripod and camera high above a surging wave. 

Today, though, was calm and comfortable with time to appreciate the warm, summer evening and slowly, softening light. Shielded from the direct rays of the sun by the cliff, my cocoon of wet, glistening rocks and foaming waves was bathed in the reflection of the last blueness of late afternoon sky.

Nature’s colours were subtle and muted this evening but I was seeing in black and white. I made some exposures based on where I wanted shadow detail then others to hold the texture of  the highlights all the while visualising how much contrast I would need to properly show the flow and substance of the scene before my tilted lens.

Tomorrow I would lay three or four of these exposures on top of each other and paint in (or out) the tones I wanted to keep (or not). I love the digital ‘light’ room - all the techniques of past learning without the smell and red darkness.

Right now, however, I would enjoy this place - it’s mood and beauty - until the last of the light had soaked into the rocks and washed away on the waves.