A set of images of St. Nicholas church in Arrington taken with my very old Canon 1DmkII which I had converted to infrared. It produces beautifully sharp images with shallow depth of field (all at f2.5 with 50mm lens) with an interesting colour combination when the white point is adjusted to neutral on some area of the frame. I even found a couple of carved angels in the churchyard - a favourite subject of mine for infrared.
Saturday, March 13, 2021
Friday, March 12, 2021
Creative Cityscapes with Household Objects
Our Camera club project for this month is Creating landscapes etc using household objects. Here is the contents of our 'odds and ends' box (set up shown at end). These are unmanipulated images - the daytime ones use a printed cloud background. The city is on a black tile on our black kitchen table which is covered by a thin film of cooking oil to give a wavy reflection.
Thursday, March 11, 2021
Cormorants Nest building
The Cormorants are very busy building their nests at the moment and bring back all kinds of materials such as a feather in the first picture, twigs and even a whole reed. This proved to be quite a challenge getting it up to the nest high in the trees so after two failed circuits round the lake trying to gain enough altitude, it landed on the water to rest and then took off with the reed even heavier from the added water but successfully made it to the nest. Then time to fly off and take time to rest and dry off in the sun. I only saw one non-breeding bird (last image) - the rest were resplendent in their breeding plumage.
Tuesday, March 9, 2021
Great Crested Grebe Courtship Dance
Spring was definitely in the air this morning with the Grebes performing their courtship dance and starting a bit of nest construction. There was a lot of head turning and bobbing at all possible occasions.
Monday, March 8, 2021
Ely Cathedral Park
Saturday, March 6, 2021
Spring Flowers Closeup - Sexuality in the Primrose
All the years I have been photographing flowers, I was under the impression that Primroses were examples of "unisexual" monoecious flowers where either the stamens or the carpels are missing in all the flowers in a clump. Researching how the primrose ensures an even distribution of 'male' (pin-eyed plants) and 'female' (thrum-eyed plants), I discovered they are in fact bisexual but have different arrangements of the male and female parts - see diagram.
Most of these are taken with a Fuji compact X100 V fitted with a X4 plus a X2.5 diopter close up lens in combination giving very close focus.
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