Monday, April 29, 2024

Rolling Country

The opposite ends of the year are so different in Australia. This country would be grey-yellow in high summer—as it is now, at the end of April as I post this, for the simple reason that while the days are shorter and the temperatures cool, there has been no rain to trigger the greening. Fair’s fair, the last green didn’t vanish until; February this year, but the rains are taking their time... This photo was taken in August, 2020, and is a view of the farms off Robinson Rd. in the Adelaide Hills. The place is so lush and tranquil it could be the English countryside. Colour contrast and sharpness were given small adjustments. Fuji FinePix S5600, automatic. Image by Mike.

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Smooth Gradient

 

One can lose track of photographs when one takes a great many, and after a little recent organisation of files I came across sets from 2019 which had been overlooked. A couple of country drives not long after my birthday that year took us to some spots in the south, and this particular shot was taken in the late afternoon from Crow’s Nest Lookout, which is on the hills above the south coast. At the time (April 16th, 2019) I was giving another camera a workout—it’s still on standby for when my old S5600 finally gives up the ghost. This is an exercise in how the chip handles high contrast, looking past trees silhouetted in the light of the low sun. The gradient of colour in the sky is quite amazing, and the image has a great deal of “body” to it. The chip handles the conditions very nicely indeed—I must use this camera more! Note the super-wide format selected, and the higher DPI. Minor enhancement only—some gamma adjustment in effort to pull out detail in the foreground. Fuji FinePix HS10. Image by Mike.


Wednesday, April 17, 2024

The Wide Sky

 

A favourite photo stop is the top of Mt. Alma, South Australia. A hill, of course, as all our “mountains” are, and the road leads over the summit. But that view! In fair weather or foul, the breadth of sky is amazing, and the farms below are spread out like a toy landscape. To the south you can catch the Southern Ocean between folds of the hills, and it’s always quiet up there—birds and the bleat of sheep, wind in the grass... I took this shot on December 13th, 2019, after an excellent early Christmas lunch at Inman Valley Country Kitchen, and you can see the country is already getting into summer mode—quite a contrast to this summer gone by in which green persisted locally until February! This wide-angle shows the breadth of the Australian landscape rather to perfection. This is a phone pic, and no enhancements were done at all. Leagoo M9. Image by Mike.


Wednesday, April 10, 2024

950 Years of History

This is Durham Cathedral, one of the oldest in England, whose origins date back to the early years of the Norman conquest. I grabbed this and several other frames through the window of a train on Tuesday, November 16th, 2010, having departed Sunderland at 10.30 on my way to London for my return flight to Australia. The train passed through Durham’s elevated railway station, thus the views over the city and across to the bluff above the river bend where the Cathedral and castle were built. The morning, though quite clear, was hazy, and the train window adds to the effect. In this frame I managed to not pick up my own reflection, which is always a hazard—I have memories of pressing the camera to the glass to avoid reflections in many instances. I would have loved to spend some time in Durham, exploring this amazing place and its history, but that was set aside for a future trip—which unfortunately hasn’t happened yet. This picture marks the beginning of the second year since I resurrected this blog (April 9th, 2023).Very minor enhancements were done—there’s not much more to pull out of a frame as soft as this. Fuji FinePix S5600, automatic. Image by Mike.

 

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

City Streets

 

In contrast to the last few images, which have celebrated the natural world, mostly forests, here is the complete opposite—no blade of green to be seen. This is the view from Grenfell Street, Adelaide, South Australia, toward what was built as the REM-Myer Centre, back in the 80s, along the pedestrian-only James Place. I remember when I grabbed this shot, in June, 2020. I had been to the city for shopping and was heading back to my bus stop when I saw the vertical symmetry, the light catching it just so, and had to stop, grab out my phone and record what I saw. Phones are great for those moments when an interesting composition presents itself. The contrast, colour and sharpness were minimally enhanced. Leagoo M9. Image by Mike. Mm