Turning Sherwood Forest on it's head
For a few years, I've been a big fan of camera rotation photography where the camera is rotated on it's lens axis during a continuous single exposure. This evening we had a little walkabout around Sherwood Forest and this is the results:
Just a simple dead or nearly dead tree without much foliage makes a good subject for rotation. For these shots, I turn the camera to a 45 degree angle and expose for the first of four rotations. In between each rotation I replace the lens cap with the camera still running and turn 90 degrees and repeat for the full circle:
Turning Sherwood Forest on it's head
For a few years, I've been a big fan of camera rotation photography where the camera is rotated on it's lens axis during a continuous single exposure. This evening we had a little walkabout around Sherwood Forest and this is the results:
Just a simple dead or nearly dead tree without much foliage makes a good subject for rotation. For these shots, I turn the camera to a 45 degree angle and expose for the first of four rotations. In between each rotation I replace the lens cap with the camera still running and turn 90 degrees and repeat for the full circle: