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Let There Be Light
 
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Image Title:  Let There Be Light
  0
Favorites: 1 
 By: Ian Cameron  
  Copyright ©2007

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Photographer Ian Cameron  Ian Cameron {Karma:1163}
Project #42 Moody Landscape Camera Model Pentax 67II
Categories Landscape
Film Format Film 6x7cm
Portfolio Scottish landscapes
Lens 55-100 zoom
Uploaded 10/17/2007 Film / Memory Type Velvia
    ISO / Film Speed 50
Views 739 Shutter 45s
Favorites Aperture f/11
Critiques 8 Rating
Pending
/ 2 Ratings
Location City -  Glencoe
State -  HIGHLANDS / SCOTLAND
Country - United Kingdom   United Kingdom
About While leading a 1-2-1 field trip with a very nice fella called Richard and after just about finishing for the evening I noticed a lightening on the hills on the Three Sisters at Glencoe. It wasn't until we rounded the corner and simultaneously exclaimed "oh my God", or words similar that we realised the blanket cloud that had plagued us most of the day had finally parted and let some of the most impressive light we had seen shine through. The area of light being relatively small I realised that to make the most of it we would need a reflection and this was the only spot that came to mind that had the floe of the river meandering in the right direction. Richard got some cracking shots and I must admit I was pretty pleased with my own.

Pentax 67II, 55-100 zoom, F11 at 45 seconds, 4 stops ND grad across sky allowing mountains to drop into silhouette.

NEW!! Photographic Holidays at Transient Light
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There are 8 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
jacques brisebois   {K:73883} 10/19/2007
great colors, very nice use of DOF

  0


Alessandro Capelli Alessandro Capelli   {K:34805} 10/19/2007
WOW! Amazing landscape!
Incredible light ant reflections..another GREAT work from you Ian!
All the best my friend!
Ale

  0


Shirley D. Cross-Taylor Shirley D. Cross-Taylor   {K:173980} 10/18/2007
WOW...just amazing, Ian...deserves an award! 7/7

  0


Debjit Ghosh Debjit Ghosh   {K:3494} 10/17/2007
Ian, to some extent I see the same effect with digital. with long exposure there are sometimes magenta cast at sunset, especially, when the sky is clear. Sometimes I am in two minds whether I should correct it in post processing or leave it just as it is but I guess it will depend on a case by case basis :-)

  0


Ian Cameron Ian Cameron   {K:1163} 10/17/2007
Hi Debjit when the lighting gets extreme as in this case all sorts of unusual colours become apparent. The problem is your eyes become quickly accustomed to the colours and slowly but surely neutralise them. Try it for yourself, go from one type of lighting to the next, say tungsten to fluorescent initally the colours look very strongly biased towards orange and then horribly green but slowly your eyes make sense of this and the cast is largely ignored. Film does not become accustomed to these casts, it also shifts marginally towards magenta with long exposures where a phenomena known as reciprocity failure begins to occur. This inherent "disease" of film has long been used by landscape photographer's to their advantage and in my case, I regularly exploit the effect with Velvia film, fully aware of the effect that is likely to occur.

  0


Debjit Ghosh Debjit Ghosh   {K:3494} 10/17/2007
you haven't left anything to say apart from WOW :-) in some of your landscape, as this one, I see a purple coloring in the foreground, which I like very much - is this from the Velvia you are using or is this what you saw ? I am asking since I haven't used Velvia much myself.

cheers,
~deb

  0


Mattia L. Mattia L.   {K:7625} 10/17/2007
Amazing, simply amazing!
Congratulations!

  0


Theo Esterhuizen   {K:89} 10/17/2007
WOW!!!! that is a stunning shot!

  0


  1

 

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