janet Smith
pro member

It rained heavily through the night on Saturday, on Sunday the Dales were sodden, some fields were flooded and waterfalls had sprung up all over the place, this being one of them....
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It rained heavily through the night on Saturday, on Sunday the Dales were sodden, some fields were flooded and waterfalls had sprung up all over the place, this being one of them....
Who doesn't like a delayed exposure waterfall photo.........
I like this one. Nice and contrasty.
I must admit, I have some issues with the custom, even driven need to render the flowing water with wisps of white blur. Is that the only agreeable way? Can the falls be shown with sharp droplets and spray, since that's what one gets in one's face and clothes?
I agree with your comments about long exposures and water, it is an overused technique, yet I wasn't at all pleased with the results I have where I used faster shutter speeds. I've been photographing waterfalls a lot over the last few days, and will be doing more over the coming days/week, it's still very wet here! I'll be mindful of your comments about spray and droplets over the next few days when I'm shooting more, I'll see what I come up with......
When you shoot from a tripod (I don't know if you lug it along on your hikes) you can try shooting both long and short, and see if a selective blend/masking between them brings something new
This is not really a cliche waterfall shot. The water falling is not the prominent subject; it's the trees that are clinging to the rocks horizontally! You could turn the image 90 deg cw and crop the bottom of the falls to end up with a shot of rapids.
Very unusual. I'd like to see a lower contrast version for more information.
The high-contrast of the image at this small size has removed a great deal of information from the image.
Hi Ken
A wider shot, less contrasty, not sure about this one either..... is this better or just different?
You have encouraged me to visit a part of your world that I have not seen before. That to me is the real beauty of your photograph. was it as damp and coldish as it appears to me?
Very different, but beautiful in its own right. Wow, that looks like quite a place to feel away from it all.
But since the eye looks for form first, I saw the tree forms oriented horizontally and thought this had been rotated 90 deg ccw! This is not really a cliche waterfall shot. The water falling is not the prominent subject; it's the trees that are clinging to the rocks horizontally! You could turn the image 90 deg cw and crop the bottom of the falls to end up with a shot of rapids.
this visual effect is really strange and well done, it adds to the atmosphere of mystery. Very good picture, well served by dense and rich colors. I really like the first version
Hello Cedric
I keep coming back to the first one, I like the density too, it seems to emphasise the tangle of soaked vegetation better than the second one (I think!) when it's viewed at full size the detail is intact and very sharp.
Thank you for commenting, have a good weekend.
I don't know much about landscape work Jan but I really like the first one no matter what the subject is.
Another thing to underline in this first pic, different zones are very well delimited : white water behind black trunks, blacks rocks behind green vegetation, some touchs of bright red to enhance the comp, a darker layer of the right to close the frame... Verticality and horizontality are also very visible. Well, a picture to watch again and again.
You could turn the image 90 deg cw and crop the bottom of the falls to end up with a shot of rapids.
I couldn't stifle the urge during an idle moment.
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New Title: "Raging River"
What a different image, eh? A good lesson in the power of orientation and perspective. We come to imagery carrying heavy baggage of personal precedents.