... photographs don't turn out quite as you hope or expect!
This is a case in point!
The weather here has been quite variable. In some ways it's been a bit like that expected for April with showers and some sunshine. So sitting in my usual place at the kitchen table I looked out at the rain streaming down the window glass and saw our weeping willow tree simply covered in flowers of the Clematis, 'Montana Alba'.
Interesting! Go grab a camera. Try to take a shot and realise that the automatic focus locks onto the window pane rather than the garden tree!
Looking at the result I rather like the streaky glass but I would have had a bit more definition to the flowers. Do they look too much like 'balls of cotton wool'?
And as I sat there wondering how to kid the camera into focusing on the tree I realised that I really needed to 'manually focus' the camera - and I didn't know how because I had never thought I needed that feature.
'It's bound to rain tomorrow' - the thought went through my head.
'Go find out how to manually focus your camera'.
'Take another photo tomorrow'.
Now I do know how to manually focus my little Lumix LF1.
It did rain today.
But the light wasn't the same - it never could be!
And the rain didn't beat across the window!
Opportunity gone!
And what am I left with?
Never Again
Sunday, 22 May 2016
Friday, 20 May 2016
You Never Know ...
... just what to expect when you are out walking with a camera. Always a good idea to have one with you just in case! Maybe that camera on the mobile phone will do and it probably will if you are concerned with capturing incidental experiences. But if you want that extra bit of detail perhaps a 'proper' camera is more suitable.
Here is a such a situation.
It's any easy choice for me - I haven't got a camera phone so I have to take a 'point and shoot'. And looking at the results I got on this particular afternoon I'm glad I had what I did have, a Lumix LF1.
Charlie is a builder.
Charlie has an open space he uses as his yard. Perhaps he shouldn't as its only a piece of scrub land at the side of a public road.
Charlie has an incinerator.
It's best described as a sheet metal cube with the top missing.
Over years of use it's got battered and bent, rusted in the sun and roasted in the heat of many fires. Looking over the edge with afternoon sunlight making hard shadows the colour and general scaliness is revealed 'in all its glory'. Best captured I think with he sort of camera I was carrying.
And moving round the bin the variety of iron oxide colours showed up so well.
Just looking at the pictures without any explanation would you have guessed the subject?
And if you weren't interested in just looking at what there was around you would you have ever considered looking at Charlie's bin, let alone thinking that it might make a good photographic subject?
I just love finding unconsidered objects like this and then trying to realise the photographic potential. I'm even considering getting large prints made, framing them, and hanging them as 'abstracts', with the knowledge that they are more than that!
Here is a such a situation.
It's any easy choice for me - I haven't got a camera phone so I have to take a 'point and shoot'. And looking at the results I got on this particular afternoon I'm glad I had what I did have, a Lumix LF1.
Charlie is a builder.
Charlie has an open space he uses as his yard. Perhaps he shouldn't as its only a piece of scrub land at the side of a public road.
Charlie has an incinerator.
It's best described as a sheet metal cube with the top missing.
Over years of use it's got battered and bent, rusted in the sun and roasted in the heat of many fires. Looking over the edge with afternoon sunlight making hard shadows the colour and general scaliness is revealed 'in all its glory'. Best captured I think with he sort of camera I was carrying.
And moving round the bin the variety of iron oxide colours showed up so well.
Just looking at the pictures without any explanation would you have guessed the subject?
And if you weren't interested in just looking at what there was around you would you have ever considered looking at Charlie's bin, let alone thinking that it might make a good photographic subject?
I just love finding unconsidered objects like this and then trying to realise the photographic potential. I'm even considering getting large prints made, framing them, and hanging them as 'abstracts', with the knowledge that they are more than that!
Thursday, 19 May 2016
Went Back!
I thought the last photograph I posted showed an interesting location and one worth visiting again. So on a sunny day, with camera in hand, off I went walking up the Lane to find the same spot.
No trouble in identifying the tree and the gate but as for getting in quite the same place it just wasn't possible. Of course it was a different time of year but there weren't leaves on the hedge so that shouldn't have been the issue. I guessed that the hedge must have grown that little bit so looking over it I wasn't going to get the same view. But perhaps I had shrunk a bit in height too, and supposing the bank that I was trying to balance on had settled a bit.
It certainly seemed to be the case of 'never again' being able to get in quite the right place to replicate a photo. So I gave up! It had been a good idea while it lasted.
Instead I had another look - never mind what I had intended.
- and in the end I was rather pleased with what I had captured!
No trouble in identifying the tree and the gate but as for getting in quite the same place it just wasn't possible. Of course it was a different time of year but there weren't leaves on the hedge so that shouldn't have been the issue. I guessed that the hedge must have grown that little bit so looking over it I wasn't going to get the same view. But perhaps I had shrunk a bit in height too, and supposing the bank that I was trying to balance on had settled a bit.
It certainly seemed to be the case of 'never again' being able to get in quite the right place to replicate a photo. So I gave up! It had been a good idea while it lasted.
Instead I had another look - never mind what I had intended.
- and in the end I was rather pleased with what I had captured!
Sunday, 1 May 2016
Looking Back
Been going through a lot of the photographs stored both in my computer and as back-ups in two external hard disks. This hasn't been just a random search because I thought I would collect together seven photos with a common theme, have them printed, then uniformly mounted to fit in a hand made box. That was the idea when I started out. Now I'm beginning to wonder if it was such a good idea after all. I'm finding it difficult to spot photos that fit together and I get side-tracked into looking at something that suddenly catches my eye. Perhaps it would be better just abandoning that approach and taking seven new photographs to fit my specific theme.
Inevitably though I've come across photos initially discarded and that when looked at again now I rather like. Obviously I suffer from the common photographer's syndrome of being over enthusiastic with photos just taken and where the emotions swamp a more clinical appraisal. I know its been suggested before that a good strategy is to leave photos for a month or so before a careful look. Perhaps this needs more discipline with digital photography than in the 'film days' when you had to wait for a roll to be developed. No instant looking at results then.
So here is a recently discovered 'find'! Or is it?
Taken a year or so ago only a few hundred yards away up the Lane it typifies the sort of weather that the valley has during Winter months. The surrounding hills have disappeared and there is a view over the newly pletched hedge to a misty entrance gate into an unknown world.
Inevitably though I've come across photos initially discarded and that when looked at again now I rather like. Obviously I suffer from the common photographer's syndrome of being over enthusiastic with photos just taken and where the emotions swamp a more clinical appraisal. I know its been suggested before that a good strategy is to leave photos for a month or so before a careful look. Perhaps this needs more discipline with digital photography than in the 'film days' when you had to wait for a roll to be developed. No instant looking at results then.
So here is a recently discovered 'find'! Or is it?
Taken a year or so ago only a few hundred yards away up the Lane it typifies the sort of weather that the valley has during Winter months. The surrounding hills have disappeared and there is a view over the newly pletched hedge to a misty entrance gate into an unknown world.
Tuesday, 19 April 2016
Hole in One
It's good to be able to have plants around the house. They add that personal touch that helps turn a house into a home. Having pots that can be planted with bulbs to flower over the winter or early spring gives variety to those that remain as more or less permanent feature plants. It's the same for the garden too - plants for the season intermingled with permanent planting. However the size of container needed for outdoor planting is rather different from those for indoors.
So what best to use - a variety!
Heavy clay pots are ideal for permanent display and our garden has several used for Clematis. Plastic pots are all very well but few convince me that they aren't plastic, and do I need plastic in the garden? How natural a material is this in a natural environment?
We have used wooden half barrels before and I rather like these for early year bulbs and then use them again for Summer display but now filled with bedding plants - Geraniums for instance. There is a downside though. After being filled with damp soil for several years these wooden tubs tend to rot away and disintegrate. Replacements need to be found, and that isn't either all that easy or a cheap matter.
Last year we had seen some half barrels advertised as being ex-whisky use, enquired, only to be told that they were not available any more. We thought that the same could be the case this year when a similar mailing from the local Farmers Mart arrived. Enquiring revealed that there weren't any locally, the sizes were smaller than advertised, but ...... two would be ordered for us and they would be arriving in the following week. 'We will phone you!'
Surprise, surprise - phone call to say that two had arrived and saved for us - come and collect or ... We went to collect and discovered we had a choice of half barrels. Two selected, and paid for. No reduction in price because they were smaller than those originally advertised! Take them or leave them!
Have you tried fitting two half barrels onto the back seat of a small saloon car - they did just fit with an inch or so to spare, and no barked knuckles either loading or back home unloading although there are a few marks on the seat!
The general disintegration of the half-barrels over time must be associated with drainage through the soil fill. Of course there will have to be stones or crocks at the bottom but drain holes obviously help a lot. So the issue to be faced was drilling holes through the 1" base wood - and how many. I thought five would be enough in the first I attempted - one hole in the centre and four roughly symmetrically placed towards the edge. So out came the old Black & Decker drill that M and I bought in Colchester all those years ago before we were married. It's been rewired a couple of times and the on/off switch modified but it still works well enough. And I have a 1" wood bit - really suitable for a 'brace & bit' but if carefully fitted will go into the electric drill clutch. Surprisingly quickly the holes were drilled - lots of small wood cuttings and a sweet smell from what was previously sherry and whisky soaked wood.
The second half-barrel was just as easy to deal with but six holes this time because there was a centre join in the wood fillets - six roughly symmetrically placed holes.
Now for the filling with both soil and potting mix - then a settling time before the planting. Will it be Geraniums or Begonias or something else?
Sunday, 27 March 2016
Another Day - Another Bike Ride
So it's another fine afternoon and what better than hop on and ride off. Where to? Not too far so perhaps up the Dysynni valley to Castell y Bere our local ruined castle. But I didn't get that far, only as far as a turn off out of the valley.
The two local rivers, the Dysynni and the Fathew run in glacial valleys which result in an outlier of ground between them. This joins to Cader Idris the dominant small mountain of mid-Wales. There is just one local road that climbs the outlier ridge to connect with valley roads, and this is the road I decided to take.
There is no way that I can cycle all the way up the road from either of the two valleys , the road is just far too steep. To be honest I suppose on this ride I did about half the climb from the Dysynni valley to the rather flatter section at the top, and all in the lowest gear of my off-road bike. Even then I did have a lengthy stop part way because I spotted a view of Craig yr Aderyn (Birds' Rock) through the trees and I just had to get a photograph.
Having got my breath back the last section of the climb to the top wasn't too bad. It's level enough here to be the site of a cluster of farms and houses called Abertrinant. Rather posh slate name signs are obviously an indication in change of affluence. The old Chapel has been converted to living accommodation, and the two existing cottages appear to be holiday homes. A scatter of farm buildings still exist - a few still in agricultural use but many abandoned tens of years ago. The mixed farming of even the mid 1950s has given way to sheep rearing and really nothing else. Who wants to live here when in the winter the steep access roads can be impassable, and what work there is to be had is now restricted to jobs in Tywyn and even further afield?
Just before I came to one of those slate name boards there is a cluster of abandoned farm buildings, 'Tyddyn-y-berllan' - a name I found when looking at the very battered paper map we have at home. Worth a bit of a scramble to explore, provided I was careful! More risk of tripping over and getting scratched on well rooted brambles than probably anything else. But worthwhile because even though the roofless farmhouse itself was too dark and overgrown some of the outbuildings provided super subjects. How best to capture their essence on a short visit with existing light provided a challenge.
As for the ride back home, all downhill to the Fathew valley road that ups and downs for the last couple of miles. Tired when I got in but quite pleased with the pictures I had.
(Several days later talking to an old postman who knows the area well, I understand that the farmhouse at 'Tyddyn-y-berllan' suffered a serious fire which resulted in the house being abandoned. Fire damage certainly wasn't obvious when I looked inside, but then it happened many years ago.)
Saturday, 26 March 2016
The Gwalia
Every town must have odd areas which don't seem to quite fit. The Gwalia is one such in Tywyn. I not sure how big the area is or even the origin of the name but it is certainly one of the oldest areas. Before the Dysynni river was dredged, river banks built up, and the area generally drained the high tide used to come up to moorings for small fishing boats. Now it's only in exceptional high tides driven by a westerly wind that bring any possibility of flooding. Having said that perhaps this year was one of those times because the small industrial units situated there had several inches of water over their floors.
Since the days of the fishing smacks with the cluster of small stone cottages a lot has changed. True several of the older habitations remain in a much renovated state to be weekend and holiday cottages. There was some building in Victorian times at the College Green end - the one nearest St Cadfan's Church - a three story terrace with a public house at one end. Of course marking the times, the pub is long closed and only a very faded painted end wall with its undecipherable name remains.
The Gwalia now gives the impression of being very run down - it is! There are unoccupied industrial units that must in some instances date to pre WW2 days. There is a closed Council yard. A builder has the usual clutter and expanse of discarded material. A car mechanic with an inexplicable number of cars in states of abandonment and disrepair continues to operate. A Double Glazing and Glass company has an office, and a skip, and piles of discarded frames and doors. On a bright sunny day it isn't in any way an attractive area to visit, on a dull rainy winter day .....
Should it be any surprise then to find a glass fibre hulled boat half hidden in brambles and general undergrowth - difficult to judge its length but 35' is probably a substantial underestimate. Goodness knows how the boat came to be laid up in this yard. Certainly been there for quite some time, certainly not in a good state of repair, and certainly not going anywhere soon. She had a name and harbour clearly readable, the 'Juno Meirion' of Milford.
The more you look the worse the paintwork becomes but the general state of fenders is even worse. No chance of being able to look inside the hull, the outside was enough to gauge her general state. Could she ever 'sail' again? Who knows! Who cares!
Possible to get a general record shot of her place in the yard but there isn't a great deal of point in doing that because that can be done anytime. Best to use the available sun to try for the detail that was there - another time and the sun will be different. Never again will she look the same.
Since the days of the fishing smacks with the cluster of small stone cottages a lot has changed. True several of the older habitations remain in a much renovated state to be weekend and holiday cottages. There was some building in Victorian times at the College Green end - the one nearest St Cadfan's Church - a three story terrace with a public house at one end. Of course marking the times, the pub is long closed and only a very faded painted end wall with its undecipherable name remains.
The Gwalia now gives the impression of being very run down - it is! There are unoccupied industrial units that must in some instances date to pre WW2 days. There is a closed Council yard. A builder has the usual clutter and expanse of discarded material. A car mechanic with an inexplicable number of cars in states of abandonment and disrepair continues to operate. A Double Glazing and Glass company has an office, and a skip, and piles of discarded frames and doors. On a bright sunny day it isn't in any way an attractive area to visit, on a dull rainy winter day .....
Should it be any surprise then to find a glass fibre hulled boat half hidden in brambles and general undergrowth - difficult to judge its length but 35' is probably a substantial underestimate. Goodness knows how the boat came to be laid up in this yard. Certainly been there for quite some time, certainly not in a good state of repair, and certainly not going anywhere soon. She had a name and harbour clearly readable, the 'Juno Meirion' of Milford.
The more you look the worse the paintwork becomes but the general state of fenders is even worse. No chance of being able to look inside the hull, the outside was enough to gauge her general state. Could she ever 'sail' again? Who knows! Who cares!
Possible to get a general record shot of her place in the yard but there isn't a great deal of point in doing that because that can be done anytime. Best to use the available sun to try for the detail that was there - another time and the sun will be different. Never again will she look the same.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)