andygates: (Default)
I'd heard that Tornado, the lovely new Peppercorn Class A1 steam loco, was going to be passing the South Devon coast today.  I'm no train-spotter, but thundering steam and pretty cliffs is a photo opportunity if ever there was one.  A plan was hatched: paddle out to a scenic spot, lay in wait and get a killer picture.

First, I'd need a sea anchor.  Kayaks drift in the wind, and inflatables doubly so: I need a parking brake.  A small Ikea bag was quickly repurposed: some coat-hanger to stiffen the mouth open, and many staples to hold it in place and discipline the handles.  Add a grotty old carabiner and Bob's your uncle: just clip to the anchor line (which is in the anchor trolley).  The sea anchor, it must be said, was great.  You could fish with this, easily.  I could certainly put the paddle aside and concentrate on the photography with both hands and full attention.  The boat went deliciously stable, and drift was right down under 10m / minute (tested with the GPS anchor-drag alert).  To work as a drogue I'll want to put a fist-sized hole in the base, to allow a smoother flow-through.  Still, pretty damn fine for free.

So there I was, watching the world go by, and very mellow it was.  The allotted time approached.  The light was awful: hard reflection off the water and the cliffs in shadow - should have guessed that.  Still, a thundering steam locomotive: that's teh awesum.  I can fix the rest in post.

Only the train never came.  I got excited over more bloody Virgin CrossCountry trains and more two-car local runabouts than is reasonable.  Eventually I had to pack up.  And it turns out all the train photos were rubbish anyway (though I did get a nice one of a tour boat, a poopy buoy and another mandatory cockpit shot).  A lovely calm, mellow little paddle even without the star of the show.

(title hat tip to Andy Horton, who may well have found a tornado today)
andygates: (Default)
It's no secret that I like 'gimmicky' photos.  Not photos that have been 'shopped, but ones that take odd tricks to get.  It struck me today, as I was bobbing around off Langstone Rock, just why.  It's not a fetish for novelty or toys (though I surely have both in spades); it's that I love getting photos that show something you can't normally see

Back when I did my first year of triathlon, I remember being utterly captivated by, particularly, the sight of the swimmer pack from within.  All that sleek eager thrashing, usually at dawn - once in fog - and the sight of all the swimmers felt like a very privileged view.  Something which, to see, you have to learn a trick or put some effort or take some risk or endure some modest hardship to see. 

Langstone's just a lump of sandstone, but as a walker you only see the landward side.  The seaward side with its little columns and tiny secret beach is hidden until you take out a boat (and waterproof a camera - Aquapac for the win).  Just a little effort, for a completely novel, hidden-in-plain-sight view.

The kite aerial photography - again, a gimmick and a toy, but you can't get these images any other way (well, apart from a balloon or a small plane: same deal with those).

Timelapse, now that does even more magic.  I'm just dipping my toe in right now but even this little test reel shows something you can't see as a regular person looking around: you can see how the clouds don't just move around but form and unform within defined (but invisible) frameworks.  The clouds are just emergent properties of these different air masses.  Timelapse lets me photograph air.  How cool is that?

I still haven't tried to get that swimmer-pack shot.  Maybe this year...
andygates: (Default)
These are two panoramic test-pieces made using Hugin.  Hugin is a free open-source panoramic photo-stitching program and it's pretty easy and really rather impressive (click for big versions, though Flickr has cropped them down from the ginormous 6000-pixel originals you'll find here and here).

  

Profile

andygates: (Default)
andygates

April 2017

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9 101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 19th, 2025 06:17 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios