This will be the final batch of photos from my Northern Ireland Trip. They were taken around the ruined Dunluce Castle and the last photo is a sculpture in Belfast. Some photos are HDR and some aren't.
All about my stumbling through life and my various projects to keep me occupied. Mostly photography orientated, but with whatever else I feel like thrown in as well.
Showing posts with label Sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sculpture. Show all posts
Friday, 29 March 2019
Photography: Dunluce Castle and Belfast
Labels:
belfast,
castles,
causeway coast,
cliffs,
coast,
cows,
dunluce castle,
fish,
HDR,
northern ireland,
photography,
photos,
ruins,
Sculpture,
sea
Thursday, 28 June 2012
St. Giles
I love St Giles cathedral. I don't know who St. Giles was, but I love it all the same, with its angel statue near the door and blue ceiling and decor that reminds you of being underwater. To me it's both ancient and modern at the same time. Both religious and light hearted. You do have to buy a photography license in there, but it's only a couple of quid, so I think it's well worth it. I went for HDR photos again, and it seemed to work really well. That was my first time doing them indoors. The biggest challenge for this shoot was trying to get shots without people in them! It wasn't high tourist season, but there were still plenty of visitors about. I suppose that's what comes of living in Edinburgh.
Some of my favorites from this shoot:
Not a great photo but I do really like the statue
So there you have it. St. Giles in HDR.
Some of my favorites from this shoot:
Not a great photo but I do really like the statue
So there you have it. St. Giles in HDR.
Monday, 28 May 2012
Jupiter Artland
All summer I waited for nice weather on one of my days off to go and see this place, and finally, in September, I got my wish. I went off to Jupiter Artland (http://www.jupiterartland.org/) with my camera, naturally! It's a plot of land with a collection of odd outdoor sculptures. It's like nothing I've ever seen before. The biggest and most famous one, Life Mounds, made me feel like I was in Super Mario Land.
This photoshoot was also my first attempt at HDR (high dynamic range) photography. The way it works is that you take 3 shots of the same thing, but bracket the exposures so that you get one "normal" shot, one overexposed one and one underexposed one. You then combine the three shots using clever software (Photomatix, in my case). This lets you capture as much detail as possible. Quite often with landscape photos you will expose the land perfectly, but find that you've lost all the drama in the sky. The underexposed photo will capture the detail in the sky and let you put it back into your photo. You can also make photos look very weird and cool! Like so:
Normal photo
Overexposed
Underexposed
HDR!
I was really surprised at how easy the software is to use, and how easy it is to get the photo looking good without too much time spent mucking about with it. I also discovered that the technique is not nearly as forgiving as I would have liked. If your "normal" photo isn't correctly exposed there's not really any way to rescue that in the HDR. Bother. I also discovered that there are many many different ways to edit an HDR photo and completely change its look. You can create something very surreal and very obviously HDR, or you can use the technique very subtly so that you can hardly tell the photo is an HDR at all.
I really enjoyed this shoot, and learning this new technique was really good fun. Jupiter Artland was well worth the money (though sneaking in without paying would be the easiest thing in the world) and a really interesting place to photograph. HDR is also definitely something I'll be trying again and hopefully I'll get better at it. :) Here are a few of favorite HDR pics from the day:
Very HDR
Much more subtle HDR
And a couple of non HDR photos from the day:
Normal photo
Underexposed
HDR!
I was really surprised at how easy the software is to use, and how easy it is to get the photo looking good without too much time spent mucking about with it. I also discovered that the technique is not nearly as forgiving as I would have liked. If your "normal" photo isn't correctly exposed there's not really any way to rescue that in the HDR. Bother. I also discovered that there are many many different ways to edit an HDR photo and completely change its look. You can create something very surreal and very obviously HDR, or you can use the technique very subtly so that you can hardly tell the photo is an HDR at all.
I really enjoyed this shoot, and learning this new technique was really good fun. Jupiter Artland was well worth the money (though sneaking in without paying would be the easiest thing in the world) and a really interesting place to photograph. HDR is also definitely something I'll be trying again and hopefully I'll get better at it. :) Here are a few of favorite HDR pics from the day:
Very HDR
Much more subtle HDR
And a couple of non HDR photos from the day:
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