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Monthly Archives: March 2010
Hardy Hill Brook
I again challenged myself by photographing the assignment I gave to my Photo–SLR class for homework this week. In doing so I “discovered” a fun spot less than three miles from my home. I also used this opportunity to make new images I could use to illustrate this week’s class topics. A brief summary is below. If you want the full version I urge you to sign up for my course announcements and take a course or two.
The main topics I touch on here are:
- Timing matters. A day later, an hour earlier, or sometimes a minute can make a lot of difference in the images you get.
- A slow shutter speed (long exposure) can produce nice images of moving water. But you need to use a tripod, electronic release or self-timer, and mirror lockup (if you have it) to get the sharpest image of the non-moving elements.
- A polarizer is very useful for controlling reflections and it also allows about a factor of four longer exposure.
- If you want to change the perspective you must move. You cannot change the size relationship of elements in the photo by simply zooming your lens.
- Digital photography has opened the world of very large and detailed panoramic images to mere mortals. And they are fun.
I went down the road to Hardy Hill Brook, just over the border in Lebanon, two days in a row. Between my photo sessions, we got a bunch of rain. So the placid brook the first day was running full the second. Rocks in the brook I stood on to make images were submerged the second day. You can examine the images here and the panoramas I made to see the difference a day made.
Below is a pair of images taken looking in the same direction before and after the rain. You can see from the images here that I used a slow shutter speed to blur the moving water. I normally prefer a soft blur of the moving water to what I might get freezing the motion with a fast shutter speed. For the images in this blog I used an exposure between 0.3 and 3 seconds.

The following two images illustrate the use of a polarizing filter to control glare. Simply rotating the polarizer gave me the two different images below.


The next three images were taken from the same spot with different focal lengths. The perspective, defined as the size relationship of different objects in the image, did not change. The 200mm version is identical in perspective to a cropped version of the 18mm image. In order to change perspective you must move your feet.



For the following image I moved very close to the large rock and used a wide angle lens. Now the perspective is different from the preceding three images.

When I made the image above, I was balancing on some flat rocks that were oriented vertically. These same rocks are seen in the image below taken the next day.

I conclude with three images. If you click on any of these three you will be taken to a page of panoramic images I made along Hardy Hill Brook the two days. You can zoom in and examine details and see better the difference a day made.
Posted in Outdoors, Photography Tips
Tagged Hardy Hill Brook, Lebanon, Motion Blur, Moving Water, perspective, polarizer, shutter speed
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Iceland Gull in Lebanon
A semi-rare (for this area) Iceland Gull was spotted this morning in Lebanon. I spent about a half hour photographing it. Here is a brief slide show of some of the photos I took.
New Roubaix Bike
I picked up my new Roubaix bike at Omer & Bob’s in Lebanon two weeks ago. Breck spent hours helping me choose the right bike for my body shape and riding plans, and Richard fitted the bike and my new shoes. (These were the most expensive shoes I have ever purchased, and fitting them to the pedals so I would not torque my knees the wrong way took an hour.) I’m finding this bike is a great way to exercise in early spring while the trails are too wet for my mountain bike. I purchased a rack and “trunk” which I can quickly attach to the seat post so I can take my DSLR along without carrying it on my back. My trusty LX3 (used for the shadow image in the show below) rides in the small under-seat pouch with emergency tools when the rack in not installed. I expect I will ride both bikes throughout the summer and fall.
I asked the class to produce a photo essay on a subject of their choosing as the first photography assignment of my Spring Photo–SLR course. I like to challenge myself to also do the assignments so I figured I would showcase my new bike with a photo essay. (This is a great way to improve your photography–give yourself photo assignments.) While I was doing this essay I thought about what I planned to teach in upcoming classes: depth of field, using shutter speed creatively (to show motion, for example), focal length as a creative tool, lighting, macro, and composition. So I worked to incorporate examples of these topics in the essay. The toughest challenges were photographing myself riding toward the camera (a tripod and a setting that would take a photo every second until I stopped the camera helped) and making photos from the moving bike without crashing.
The photo essay I created follows. I minimized the use of Photoshop in creating this essay, although all the images were shot in RAW and processed with Adobe Camera Raw (in Bridge, which for my style works much better than Lightroom). Only one image is a composite of several images–me riding through the covered bridge along River Road in Lyme. I attempted to use shutter speeds appropriate to my objective in each photo–either freezing motion or blurring it. I expanded space using a wide angle lens. I made some shallow depth of field and macro images using a 50 mm f/1.8 lens that I discuss HERE. And I practiced an important rule of photography–”have fun out there”.
Baker Bush Maple Sugaring
The Upper Valley Land Trust hosted a hike and maple syrup tasting event at the Baker Bush property in Strafford Vermont today. Susan Baker conserved the parcel in honor and memory of her late husband, Chas Baker, who invested his time and energy in developing and maintaining a sugarbush and sugarhouse on the property. Tig and Elise Tillinghast now run an wonderful maple sugaring operation on this site. Here is Elsie in the sugar house.

We hiked the hill up back and saw the extent of the sugar bush. Four energetic Brittany Spaniels accompanied us.


Here Tig explains us how gravity, with an assist from a vacuum system, gets the sap to the sugar house.

From up top the view to the east toward NH was beautiful, even though the day was a bit gray. If you click either of the two images below you will magically be transported to a page where you can zoom into either picture and examine it in considerable detail. But please return to this page to view the remaining images from the day.
We returned to the sugar house where Tig boiled some syrup. The taste of the sweet warm maple syrup was wonderful. I just wish there was some to purchase to take home. They sell their syrup online like high quality wines.








