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Posts Tagged ‘light’

Do you ever find yourself in such beautiful light that you are almost desperate to find a suitable subject? Saturday morning, for a brief period, the rays of the sun were producing wonderful light and incredible reflections in the water of my local marsh, reminding me of some of my favorite Monet paintings.

I looked all around and finally spied this male mallard duck and his mate and they became my models. They didn’t take instructions very well and wouldn’t stay still in one place for very long, but I was able to get some shots that I like.

mallard1_blogmallard2_blog

Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved

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I spent much of today at home waiting for a FedEx package that required a signature, so it was late afternoon when I finally managed to get out with my camera. The sun was already pretty low on the horizon when I arrived at my favorite marshland and I didn’t find many subjects to shoot. However, almost as compensation, I was treated to a spectacular sunset. The sky was blue and there were a good number of clouds in the west to reflect the colors of the setting sun. I tried to catch the sun as it was setting as I looked across the marsh; as I looked out to the distant treeline after the sun had already gone down; and as I looked through some nearby trees at the beautiful reds that appeared. It was a gorgeous way to start the weekend.

Looking into the marsh

Looking into the marsh

Looking toward the treeline

Looking toward the treeline

Looking through the trees

Looking through the trees

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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It was just after 5:00 in the afternoon and storm clouds were gathering for rain showers that eventually came. I headed back to my car and just as I reached the parking lot I looked up. Beautiful late-afternoon light was shining on the tops of the trees with dark clouds in the background and I snapped a few shots. I decided to fight my temptation to tweak the image (for fear of messing up what I had) and didn’t crop at all.I did just a little sharpening and a slight increase in saturation. I don’t know if the image adequately (and accurately) captured the wonderful light, but it gives you an idea of what the scene looked like to me.

Stormy light

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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After a photo shoot this past weekend with my neighbor and photographic mentor, Cindy Dyer, we retired to her house to look over our images. I was still in the mood to shoot photos, so when she had to take a phone call, I picked up one of her Nikon D300 cameras with a Tamron 180mm macro lens and looked around for things to photograph. It was late in the afternoon and the light was starting to fade a little, but her camera allowed me to set the ISO all the way up to 3200. Even with the extreme ISO, I still found myself shooting with settings of F5 and 1/125 sec with natural light. Here is a photo of the object that I decided to shoot. Can you guess what it is from this photo?

Coke bottle glass

If you looked carefully you might have been able to detect the eyes and nose of a woman. Cindy has a clear glass woman’s head in her living room and I was photographing the light coming in from the window behind the head.

Here is another view of the head from a different angle.

Close-up glass lady head

Some of the colors in the image above were picked up from the objects that were behind the glass lady, but they have been enhanced by tweaking the tint and saturation levels in Photoshop, which gives a very interesting effect. I shot the photos, but it was Cindy who did the enhancements. I liked the shapes, textures, and lighting in my shots, but she had the vision that the images would be even better with more vibrant colors (and she was definitely right). You should check out her blog for more wonderfully creative images and beautiful flower and insect macro shots.

Here’s one last shot that shows almost the entire face of the glass head woman.

Glass woman head

You may notice that there is more blue in this image. I think that I managed to pick up some of the color of the sky, which was a beautiful shade of blue at the time.

This kind of “artsy” photography is not my normal style, but it showed me that simply picking up the camera and photographing whatever happens to be around me can sometimes lead to beautiful (and unusual) images. Somewhere I read recently that one of our primary creative goals as photographers is to photograph usual things in unusual ways. That’s a real challenge, but I think it’s a worthy aspirational goal.

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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I have always been fascinated by light and shadows.

Shadows often hide or mask details of a subject, although they also may reveal elements of a subject that might otherwise be concealed. Sometimes shadows are an accurate reflection of the subject (like a silhouette), but other times they distort reality. Shadows intrigue me too because they often pick up characteristics of the surfaces on which they are cast in addition to those of the subject.

My musings on shadows were prompted by this photo of an unidentified wasp (I think it is some kind of wasp) that I shot yesterday morning. The wasp was back lit by the morning sun, causing a hidden part of his body to be revealed in the shadow.

A few months ago I decided to photograph the morning light coming through a small flower in my neighbor’s garden. As I getting ready to shoot, an ant started walking across the back of the flower. It’s not a technically good shot but I like the effect that was produced by the ant’s shadow.

Folks who follow this blog know that I love dragonflies. In early June I took some photos of dragonflies on a sunny day, resulting in lots of shadows. The dragonfly’s shadow makes me think of the position of a person hang gliding and it even looks like the dragonfly is wearing a little helmet.

The undulating surfaces on which the shadow falls really make a difference in the shape of the shadow. I especially like how the shadows of the wings fall on a separate leaf from the shadow of the main body. The shadows of the leaves themselves make this image even more interesting for me.

In this final photo a dragonfly literally is casting a long shadow. The distortion caused by the angle of the sunlight causes his legs to appear much longer and I find that this dragonfly looks much more menacing than is typical of a dragonfly.

Can a dragonfly actually look menacing?

© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.

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