Articles Tagged 'Dusk'
I captured this twilight view of Sydney on 18/12/2013, which was the first photography outing for me in over six months. It has been an even longer time since I photographed the Sydney skyline, and the presence of a substantial number of cranes at Barangaroo, which is now a major development site, is testimony to [ continue reading ]
On a wet and cold Sunday, I decided to re-visit a six-year old image and process it quite differently. Firstly, here is the result: In this version, the distortion has been corrected, and the contrast is much less aggressive. As a point of comparison, here is the original version: Naturally the perspective correction resulted in [ continue reading ]
This Easter long weekend has presented both the opportunity and desire to do something I have not done for a while: seascape photography. The last time I shot a dawn or dusk seascape image was last October. I was not happy with my images from that morning, and never published anything from that shoot. I [ continue reading ]
Shalom from Tel Aviv. Xenedette and I are in Israel for a few weeks. Tonight we headed to the Azrieli Centre in central Tel Aviv, where I shot this twilight cityscape looking south-west over Tel Aviv and towards the Mediterranean Sea. Unbelievable as it may sound, our time in Israel so far has been wet [ continue reading ]
It is well after 9pm here in Johannesburg, and we have returned this afternoon from the Timbavati region of Kruger Park in Mpumalanga province, South Africa, where we have spent an intense four days in the wilds of Africa, seeing, hearing, experiencing and photographing the amazing wildlife which inhabits the area. Tonight we experienced an emotional [ continue reading ]
Having not shot a seascape in over a month, and with a predicted (and actual) craptacular sky yesterday morning foiling my plans for a Saturday dawn shoot, I felt a bit itchy this afternoon. I checked SkippySky, and the forecast was for some interesting cloud cover, so I headed down to a local seascaping haunt [ continue reading ]