View allAll Photos Tagged long_exposure
A single flower washed up on the sand by the retreating tide, under Herd Groyne Lighthouse, South Shields.
Llangorse lake is the largest natural lake in Wales and lies East of Brecon town and the Black Mountains. Its more than a mile long, with fantastic mountain views all around.
It also features a reconstruction of a crannog- an ancient lake dwelling
Long exposure early morning seascape taken on the coastline of Candelaria on the East coast of Tenerife.
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Getty
Cityscape - Providencia - Long Exposure-4
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© John Edward Bankson
Long exposure of the Giants Causeway This photo is now up representing northern ireland on artuk website www.artuk.org/visit/venues
The top floor had terrified me, quite frankly. Even Michael didn't like it and he's as stoic and calm as they come. We quickly descended to the floor below and walked through the long corridors, lined by these rectangular spaces, each which would have been a room in someone's flat.
In another life.
I always imagine building sites and occasionally these derelict places having wall-to-wall glass when finished. That's never the case - glass is expensive and I guess people need wall space to put stuff against. But still, in my head I could see this as a finished room with the hole in front of me as one giant. It would be marvellous.
Another take of this amazing coastline near New Plymouth. An image that I particularly like due to the long exposure effect on the water and the range of colour tones.
SONY ILCE-7RM3
SEL2470GM Lens @ 70 MM
ISO 100 / f16 / 30 Seconds
Lee Landscape Polariser
Lee 10 Stop IRND
Lightroom CC
(c) Dominic Scott 2019
Ein Jahr danach mal wieder an einem meiner Lieblingsorte. Dieses Mal mit neuer Kamera und neuem Objektiv, die frostigen Temperaturen waren aber die gleichen. Der Umgang mit 24mm auf Vollformat eröffnet neue Horizonte, wenn es auch eine Kunst ist, den Horizont gerade auszurichten und alles ansprechend im Sucher zu arrangieren.
A 4-second exposure on my Apple iPhone 6s of my favourite River Dodder weir. It was taken using my new app, Slow Shutter Cam, and a Gorillapod and Joby TightGrip holding the cameraphone to a riverside fence.
The concrete thing on the right was formerly the base for a millhouse.
Post-processing: Apple Photos.
Click on the photo to enjoy it large size.
Kinetic Photograph made with one single long exposure shot, printed straight out of camera.
If you’d like to read more details about how the shot is made see below. And for more of my kinetic photographs here’s my set, "Drawing with Light"
www.flickr.com/photos/motorpsiclist/albums/72157652166665058
Copyright © by John Russell – All Rights Reserved
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Kinetic: Relating to, caused by, or producing motion.
These are called “Kinetic” photographs because there is motion, energy, and movement involved, specifically my and the camera’s movements.
I choose a light source and/or subject, set my camera for a long exposure (typically around 4 seconds), focus on my subject and push the shutter button. When the shutter opens I move the camera around with my hands...large, sweeping, dramatic movements. And then I will literally throw the camera several feet up into the air, most times imparting a spinning or whirling motion to it as I hurl it upward. I may throw the camera several times and also utilize hand-held motion several times in one photo. None of these are Photoshopped, layered, or a composite photo...what you see occurs in one shot, one take.
Aren’t I afraid that I will drop and break my camera? For regular followers of my photostream and this series you will know that I have already done so. This little camera has been dropped many times, and broken once when dropped on concrete outside. It still functions...not so well for regular photographs, but superbly for more kinetic work.
A difficult long exposure to achieve with strong wind gusts doing their best to disturb the camera setup!
© Dominic Scott 2024