photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Eighteen: Light and Landscape – combining personal vision with nature’s gifts > Upper Falls, McCloud River, California, 2008
previous | next
13-SEP-2008

Upper Falls, McCloud River, California, 2008

I built this image around the light falling on the plants on either side of the turbulent water. The sunlit plants are like pathfinders, illuminating the way for the onrushing waters. I used my spot-metering mode, exposing for the highlights and letting the shadowed portions of the image slide into darkness. I also stress the texture and frozen movement of the water, which required a fast shutter speed. Some photographers would have used a tripod, a neutral density filter, and a slow shutter speed to blur the water as a silky torrent. However I have long felt that such silky water can call attention to technique itself at the expense of the natural world, and when used repeatedly can become gimmicky. I feel that as a nature and landscape photographer, I am expressing my ideas as a witness, and my images should bear true witness to its wonders. For that reason I do not employ special photographic effects at either the moment of exposure or later in post processing in nature and landscape photography. I try to let the landscape speak for itself, and as far as I’m concerned, this landscape does.

Leica V-Lux 1
1/400s f/5.6 at 12.3mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
share
Phil Douglis27-Sep-2008 19:10
I know how you feel about silky water, Tim. It can express motion and a sense of timelessness -- it all depends upon how and why such a technique is used. I find that too many photographers apply the silky water device to nearly all of their images showing moving water, turning a potentially expressive device into a photographic cliche. And yes, I do use my spot metering technique, which is my way of "painting with light," here to isolate the illuminated plants on the opposite banks and make them seem to bridge the turbulence here. I keep my spot metering choice enabled at all times -- it allows me to emphasize or minimize subjects in light and shadow as each situation calls for it.
Tim May27-Sep-2008 18:36
I don't completely agree with you about silky water - sometimes I find that the use of silky water expresses, for me, the timelessness of the flow of the water. But I do agree that it is often the subject of the image rather than the landscape itself. Your use of spot metering is a technique to express your sense of wonder in the scene which creates a drama in the image.
In this image I love the light on the plants it is almost as if they are communicating across the turbulence.
Type your message and click Add Comment
It is best to login or register first but you may post as a guest.
Enter an optional name and contact email address. Name
Name Email
help private comment