Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Placid Waters

A simple shot but it has the feel of a classical painting—the composition of the far shore and island, reflected in the barely-rippled surface... This is Playford Lake at Belair National Park, South Australia, a frequently-shot destination, and though the scenery remains more or less the same, time of day can dramatically change how the lake looks. Light, is, after all, everything, and the lake can often demand to be photographed by the sensitive observer. I captured this frame during a hills meander on May 9th, 2023, looking east from the top end of the lake. Frame-up and keeping the image level were the keys here. Minor adjustments to contrast and sharpness in Irfanview; Fuji FinePix S5600. Image by Mike.

 

Friday, December 12, 2025

Sunset in Telephoto

Sunsets are organic images, building, changing and g-fading in response to natural factors. The configuration of the clouds, the angle of the sunlight falling on them—all conspire to make each sunset different from every other. I shot this one on May 23rd, 2023, almost at the end of a lengthy series, as the finale to a long day's expedition that took us all overt the near north—Lenswood, the Barossa, the Whispering Wall, Gleeson Wetland and so forth. With the sunset building, we pulled over and spent a while shooting the flaming sky from beside the highway, as photographers sometimes do. No particular photographic effects, though this is a high telephoto shot, closing in on the richest point in the sky. Unzoomed frames are mainly blue-toned, with the reds confined to a band low toward the horizon. Minor adjustments to contrast and sharpness in Irfanview; Fuji FinePix S5600. Image by Mike.


Friday, December 5, 2025

Brooding Clouds

The Southern Ocean can always turn on dramatic skies, and any day on the south coast of South Australia can yield a broad canvas of light. I recorded this frame in a sequence at Clayton Bay, down on the Alexandrina Lakes system, on May 26th, 2018. I’ve posted from this shoot before. The weather was changing dramatically as a front moved up, May typically being the tail-end of the warm weather down here (though this year the hills weren’t green until June!) No particular photographic effects; this was how the chip handled the high contrast of looking into the brightest part of the sky. I adjusted colour, contrast and sharpness in Irfanview, plus some squaring up with fine rotation; Fuji FinePix S5600. Image by Mike.