“Fenced off”

Hi everyone, another shot from yesterday.

Best wishes,

Leigh

“I’m lovin’ it” :)

Hi everyone,

No, not a reference to a popular fast-food chain, although I have to confess to having eaten my fair share in the past, especially during my student days πŸ™‚ but rather my early experiences with restricting myself to one-camera-one-lens. Actually restricting is totally the wrong word as I haven’t felt restricted in any way. I have been taking my small zoom but haven’t once felt the need to switch to it from my 20mm f/1.7 Lumix lens. I have decided to leave the zoom at home and just take the 20mm lens and I might switch the camera over from my Olympus E-M5 II to my Olympus E-M1 Mk 1 as I just love the grip on that camera, I find that it fits like a hand in a glove.

One thing that I’ve been thinking about for some time especially when looking at my 10×8 inch framed shots which adorn my photo-wall, is that using wide angle lenses for landscape work although having their merits don’t work very well for smaller print sizes. Fine if one want to print large at say 16×20 inch or larger, I have a large print and I can see every blade of grass and leaf on a tree but these details, although still there, gets lost in smaller prints unless one puts one’s nose to the frame and I naturally want to frame tighter, which is the reason that my 12 mm (24mm) lens has been sitting on the shelf unused for so long, less is more?.

I’m a realist and experience more than tells me that, occasionally I’ll find my self in a situation or two where I’m thinking, that I wish that I’d had such and such a lens with me but, at what cost in wear an tear to my body and sprits by carrying heavier gear?, a trade off I’m more than happy to make if it means that I can get out and get shots.

So, onwards and outwards, next time around just my E-M1 and 20mm, a spare battery and a CPL filter although I don’t know how much use I’ll find myself putting the filter to from past experience but I’ve got one (actually several) so I might at least take one as I can afford an extra few grams in my bag as weight is, blissfully, no longer such a factor. πŸ™‚

Kind regards to all,

Leigh

PS. Oh, and another one from this morning’s outing, “All quiet on the Southern front”

“Bright and Cold”

Hi everyone,

“Bright and cold”. Bognor seafront, very cold wind coming from the sea but otherwise nice and sunny.

All the best,

Leigh

“Bognor” – Bognor Regis Landscape

Hi folks,

Taken with my EM-5 II and Lumix 20mm combination.

Kind regards

Leigh

“About as simple as it gets”

Hi everyone,

Monochrome landscape view from Bognor Regis Pier looking out to sea. Olympus E-M5 II and Lumix 20mm f/1.7

Best wishes,

Leigh

Going back to my roots.

Hi everyone,

Back in the 70’s when I got my first serious camera a 35mm Olympus OM-1 manual film camera with the then pretty much obligatory 50 mm f.1.8 lens the one thing that I remember above all is the fun of having a one camera one lens lightweight setup which felt so natural in one’s hand and was a joy to use. Sure over time I bought other and more specialised lenses as I have with my modern gear but there’s something liberating and fun about that kind of gear.

So, trying to dismiss any feelings of nostalgia and being objective, I’ve decided to do just that all over again with one of my favourite cameras and lenses , my Olympus OM-D E-M5 II and my Lumix 20 mm f/1.7 (40mm equivalent) lens. I will also take my tiny Lumix 14-42 mm II zoom, a very capable lens in it’s own right, as it weighs next to nothing at 3.9 ounces! (I love plastic) πŸ™‚ and it’s there if I feel that I need it but it is my intent to try and stick with the 20mm as much as possible. The other reason for taking the zoom is that, mobility-wise I cannot zoom with my feet like I used to and my opportunities to get out and take photographs have become quite rare and I really want to be covered if I’m somewhere when I need other focal lengths but not at the expense of lugging heavier gear around.

I know from years of experience that this focal length range feels the best and most natural for me with the sweet spot more or less right in the middle at about 20mm thus I almost certainly should be able to capture just about everything that I want. One thing is for sure it’ll be a lot of fun and, when it’s fun, it not only feels better but like as not ends up with some of my favourite “keeper” shots. Photography is as much about state of mind as it is anything else.

Kind regards,

Leigh

“Almost straight down the middle”

Hi,

“Almost straight down the middle” Shoreham-by-Sea landscape. Olympus E-PL8 and Lumix 14-42 mm II

Kind regards

Leigh

“To the sea”.

Hi everyone,

Another of my landscape shots of Shoreham-by-Sea, this one taken with my PEN E-PL8 and Lumix 14-42 mm II lens. Taken with my pistol grip/release held high over the Bridge barrier, 5-frame handheld HDR. A bit hit and miss in terms of seeing what I was framing, I’m no fan of LCDs but worked okay.

Best wishes,

Leigh

As promised… shot with my M.Zuiko 40-150mm f/4-5.6.

Hi folks,

As promised, one of my shots taken today of the River Adur in Shoreham-by-Sea with my Olympus E-PL8 and M.Zuiko 40-150mm f/4-5.6 lens @f/5.6, as usual 5-frame handheld HDR. It’s going to take a while for me to get used to using longer lenses in landscapes but it’s a start. VFM-wise one of the best Β£80 odd quid that I’ve ever spent on a bit of photographic gear πŸ™‚ .The pistol grip also came in useful not only for added stability but also to get the angle held high above the bridge’s tall barrier. The lens is sharp but, I often, as here, like to introduce some softness and diffusion in my landscape shots as it’s less clinical looking and more atmospheric, I think it’s a case of finding the right balance. A nice thing about the Micro Four Thirds system for landscape work is the increased depth of field for a given aperture when compared to full-frame sensors which works to one’s advantage without having to stop down further resulting in slower shutter speeds, something I definitely don’t want when shooting handheld HDR and, ultimately, introducing unwanted diffraction, I’m not looking for creamy smooth bokeh, I’ll leave that to my portraiture brethren :). More to follow ASAP.

Kind regards

Leigh

“Icon”

Hi everyone,

Seen outside a church in Malaga, Spain.

Best wishes for a Happy Easter,

Leigh