The Quiet Picture

Finding my voice in the silence of nature

Oct 18

Stop snap go

That's how cold the night wasI had big plans for the weekend, but I had to revise them already when I woke up – the cold night had turned the wet roads into icy roads, so I had no business driving around with summer tires. I waited until the sun was high enough to thaw out the worst and then got out to discover new places. I don’t know why but there are still some forest roads around Loos that I haven’t checked yet, and it’s definitely my loss because this road turned out to be one sweet photographic experience. It’s just perfect in the morning light and I didn’t have to kick myself too much for not going out as early as I had planned because the low sun wouldn’t have reached the scenery anyway (forests and hills in the way). The downside was that there was thin high cloud again so while the sun was shining, it also wasn’t. The sky cleared towards noon but the light wasn’t the same anymore.

Old boatAt the Össjön lake I found these old boats, some completely broken and rotting away and others still in one piece but probably not sea-worthy (lake-worthy?) anymore, and the place was complete with a boathouse with a caved-in roof. All you needed to do was to avoid the colourful new(er) boats in the composition and it was photographic eldorado right there! It worked fine at this time of the day, but it would look even better at bit earlier in the morning.

Stitched panorama of 3 vertical imagesI didn’t find any opportunity to test the new ND filter, but I was able to put the leveling base and ICE through their paces. I took a 3-image panorama with the polariser mounted on the lens and important detail in the foreground. Foreground is normally almost impossible to stitch manually unless you’ve found the nodal point of the lens, which I can’t even try because the 24-105mm lens doesn’t have a lens collar and I don’t have a specialist panorama head. ICE did another perfect job though and the result is an image that could’ve been taken with a wideangle lens, but my 38mm (24mm x 1.6) wasn’t enough for the scene so I decided to try stitching it together. A very useful experiment, and a very useful technique!

Such a productive day and it would’ve been even better if I had had the light early on. Driving along with beautiful things all around, stop and look, take some pictures, move on to the next one…

3 comments

3 Comments so far

  1. Miika October 19th, 2008 11:53 am

    I like the first one very much. Only complain is that I did not manage similar yesterday :D

    Purely beautiful light in the second one then. Great weather it really was then!

    Regarding the panorama… Did exposure change or is that just the way it really looked like?

  2. Rane Olsen October 19th, 2008 6:27 pm

    I like the second one most! We haven’t had any frost or snow yet, but hoping to see some this winter :)

  3. Minna October 19th, 2008 7:52 pm

    Miika, do you mean that the panorama is lighter on the right side? I use manual settings the exposure was the same in all frames, so I reckon that the change was introduced by the polariser and/or ICE. Should be easy to fix with a gradient in LR, but this was just a test so I didn’t bother… the good light was gone when I took the image, and most of the ice had melted as well. :(

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