Out tomorrow, a photo walk in the sunshine.

Hi,

I’m off to a place called Pulborough in West Sussex tomorrow. I’ve passed through it on the train several times and there’s one shot in particular, a really nice scenic view that I really want to try and get. It might require something a bit wider than my 20mm so I’m taking either my tiny 12-32mm lens or my even tinier 14mm lens with me as well as from the vantage point I have in mind there will be little room for manoeuvre. It’s rare for me to plan a shot but I know exactly what I would like to get tomorrow. I’m also going to give my PEN-F camera an overdue airing as I haven’t used it for a while. Not running tomorrow but runs at the weekends, there’s also the South Downs Light Railway that I intend to check out with a view to a return visit. We’re currently enjoying a nice warm sunny spell here so the weather should be really pleasant. One small, lightweight camera, two small, lightweight lenses, a sunny day photo walk with a pit stop for light refreshments, what could be better?! πŸ™‚ , as Robin Wong calls it, “shutter therapy”. I’ve posted lots of images taken with the 20mm and 12-32mm lenses, In case you’re unfamiliar with the 14mm f/2.5 lens, here’s one that I took in a local shopping centre some years ago with this lens and a second shot taken with the 14mm lens and MCON-P02 Macro Converter attachment and diffused bounce flash.

Kind regards

Leigh

“Water Feature”

Hi,

Something a bit different. πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

“Fun in the park”

Hi,

“Fun in the park”, Hotham Park, Bognor Regis.

Have a great weekend.

Leigh

Sharpness, is it the holy grail?

Hi,

I recently saw a comment by a chap in which he mentioned that he had “broken the rules” by softening an image. I very often deliberately soften or diffuse my images in order to try and get a more atmospheric, dreamy look in my landscape work as I find that one gets a result bordering on the clinical when the images are tack sharp. Of course this is purely a personal thing and, for a lot of subjects/genres very sharp imagery is what’s desired. I’m not talking about “bokeh” here, that’s different, I’m talking about the image as a whole although one could argue that using bokeh has become a sort of rule in it’s own when it might be more interesting not to habitually isolate the subject and remove it from the context of the surroundings.

I’ve always believed that there aren’t any or, maybe better put as shouldn’t be any rules in creative arts, it seems to run contrary to the very nature of things and the antipathy of experimentation. In an age where advances in AI are causing such concern in general and, specifically in this context, in photography, if ever I get replaced by a robot landscape photographer, I can only hope that someone gives the thing an artistic soul and programs in that rules are very often made to be broken or, better still, there are no rules. πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

New work: “A walk in the woods”

Hi,

A woodland scene.

“Three boats, two ducks and a jetty”

Hi,

River Thames at East Molesey.

Best wishes,

Leigh

“Where did all the boats go?”

Hi,

“Where did all the boats go?”, deserted boating lake, Hotham Park, Bognor Regis