Showing posts with label long exposure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label long exposure. Show all posts

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Sunset Walk Along Clyde

I walked along the south bank of the Clyde from our Travelodge, recording the changes in light and colour as the sun set. For the walk back along the north bank, most of the light had left the sky giving long exposures and great reflections.

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

CCC London Trip: Thames Night Walk

A selection of images from our night walk along the Thames on Sunday evening. The first image is a panorama of two long exposures to show the span of the Millenium Bridge (this should come after image 9 in temporal sequence but is the right aspect ratio to share on Facebook). They are a mixture of long exposures (up to 15sec) on the FujiX100V and live composites from the Olympus EM1-II with base exposure of 30sec and variable number of added exposures (need more experimentation with exposure values and number of shots!!)



 

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Norfolk Windpumps

This is the final set of 'windpump' images taken with a wide-angle (10-24mm lens) and a graduated neutral density filter plus 10-stop ND filter in most cases. Exposures range from 1 second to 60seconds in the white house on blue water. I captured the one ray of sunshine that day as it illuminated this house.

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Wet Evening on Riverside

Only  Malcom (with a very clever tripod umbrella clamp), Paul (with his fancy torch), and I braved the fairly heavy rain for last night's Wednesday workshop at Riverside in Cambridge. Certainly no chance of star trails!! I used a fish eye and then a 18-55mm lens (different star burst effects), neither of which have an adequate hood but here are a few shots that I liked including one of several boats exercising up and down the river.



 

Monday, January 31, 2022

Madingley Hall and American Cemetery

A very enjoyable meet up with other CCC Members on Saturday at Madingley Hall. As there were wonderful clouds, contrasty monochrome worked well. Some of us then visited the American Cemetery where I decided to experiment with exposure blending to simulate long exposure technique (30 images with 1 second exposures were stacked together to give the equivalent of a 30-sec exposure)