Nikon D810, Nikkor 200mm f/4.0 micro lens, 1/640 sec., f/11, ISO 2000. |
Sunday, December 31, 2017
A Venture Into Macro Photography
Recently, I've gotten more deeply into macro photography. Over the years, I've dabbled in it from time to time, but lately I've been bitten by the bug, so to speak. I acquired a Nikkor 200mm f/4.0 micro lens (Nikon's name for macro lenses), an excellent lens that lets you shoot a respectable distance from your subject. Not long ago, I made a field trip to a nearby vacant lot where there are a lot of thistles growing. I made this shot into the sun so it would be backlit. I think it shows up the structure of the thistle quite well. What do you think?
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
My Most Recent Book, on Landscape Photography
My recently published book, Creative Composition for Landscape Photography, is available in both paperback and Kindle editions on Amazon.com.
Written especially for beginning and intermediate landscape photographers, it includes 170 color and B&W photos along with instructional captions to illustrate the concepts presented.
The cover of the paperback edition |
- This book, which includes 170 photographs, introduce a wide variety of techniques that can easily be applied to your own photography, including:
- · The rule of thirds
- · Centered subjects
- · Positioning the horizon
- · Showing depth in two dimensions
- · Incorporating horizontal, curved and zigzag lines and circles
- · Using triangles in compositions
- · Showing perspective with receding lines
- · Using framing and overlapping to show depth
- · Using atmospheric layers to show distance
- · Showing distance by using relative scale
- · Focal length and focus point as compositional techniques
- · Using lighting and texture in compositions
- · Color priority and color contrast
- · Single dominant elements in compositions
- · Incorporating balance and weight
- · Symmetry and asymmetry in compositions
- · The rule of odds
- · Using repeating elements
- · Simplicity as a compositional technique
- · Using themes as organizing principles
- · Having creative fun in composition
- · Combining multiple compositional elements
Written especially for beginning and intermediate landscape photographers, it includes 170 color and B&W photos along with instructional captions to illustrate the concepts presented.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Using the Lensbaby Edge 80
Part of the Lensbaby Composer Pro II kit is an 80 mm lens called the Edge 80. It's called that because instead of having a round "sweet spot" in the center, this optic makes a creative "slice" that can be moved around the image. When the Edge 80 is pointed straight forward, it acts as a very good 80 mm lens. But when it's tilted to one side, the image shows a sharply focused slice surrounded by an area of blur. How much blur there is depends on the degree to which the lens is tilted and the choice of aperture. Where the slice is located is determined by the direction in which the lens is tilted.
The image below was made with the Edge 80. The exposure was about 1/1000 second, ISO 100, f2.8, or wide open with this lens optic so I had maximum blur. I positioned the slice so it ran along the lower fence and roadway, which emphasized the curvature of the fence and the S-curve of the road, while throwing the less important treeline in the background out-of-focus. The darkening sky was also rendered fuzzy, which I think adds to the brooding quality of this image. If I'd had this image at the time my book was being written, I'd have included it as one of the composition examples.
The image below was made with the Edge 80. The exposure was about 1/1000 second, ISO 100, f2.8, or wide open with this lens optic so I had maximum blur. I positioned the slice so it ran along the lower fence and roadway, which emphasized the curvature of the fence and the S-curve of the road, while throwing the less important treeline in the background out-of-focus. The darkening sky was also rendered fuzzy, which I think adds to the brooding quality of this image. If I'd had this image at the time my book was being written, I'd have included it as one of the composition examples.
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Starting Out with Lensbaby
I recently purchased a Lensbaby Composer Pro II kit, which includes three lenses, or what they call optics. The kit includes a "lens" that tilts and several "optics": the Sweet 35, a 35 mm lens that fits into the Composer Pro body, a Sweet 50, which is a 50 mm lens, the Edge 80, an 80 mm lens, and two macro lenses that can be fitted to the other lenses for close-up work.
I've finished reading two Kindle books on the Lensbaby and have started experimenting with the kit. It's a way different way of working. The Sweet 35 and Sweet 50 optics create a circular "sweet spot" that's in focus and that can be rotated via the Composer Lens body so the focus spot can be moved around the frame, with the out-of-focus zone in a place of your choosing.
The following photo was made using the Sweet 35 lens focused sharply on the stone fence and then tilted to the right so the "sweet spot" would be on that side of the frame, highlighting the fence and softening the tree at the left so it is barely recognizable. I converted the photo to B&W in post-processing.
I'm having fun with these lenses, though I have a lot to learn about them yet.
I've finished reading two Kindle books on the Lensbaby and have started experimenting with the kit. It's a way different way of working. The Sweet 35 and Sweet 50 optics create a circular "sweet spot" that's in focus and that can be rotated via the Composer Lens body so the focus spot can be moved around the frame, with the out-of-focus zone in a place of your choosing.
The following photo was made using the Sweet 35 lens focused sharply on the stone fence and then tilted to the right so the "sweet spot" would be on that side of the frame, highlighting the fence and softening the tree at the left so it is barely recognizable. I converted the photo to B&W in post-processing.
I'm having fun with these lenses, though I have a lot to learn about them yet.
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