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Author Topic: Dawn shot at Lake Baringo  (Read 6050 times)

Ed Blagden

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« on: July 11, 2009, 01:03:30 am »

Criticism appreciated, please.

Ed


[attachment=15295:IMG_2060.jpg]

(24mm, f/8, ISO100)
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wolfnowl

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2009, 01:49:02 am »

Well, I like it.  I'm afraid that's not very critical, however.  The trees on opposite sides of the upper frame provide a good 'barn door' effect that draws the eye and toward the center of the image, and the long exposure smoothed out the ripples on the water.

Mike.
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dalethorn

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #2 on: July 11, 2009, 02:01:04 am »

For composition it's not bad, but the colors are good enough to overcome any other shortcomings.
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Jeremy Roussak

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #3 on: July 11, 2009, 05:45:18 am »

Quote from: Ed B
Criticism appreciated, please.
[attachment=15295:IMG_2060.jpg]

(24mm, f/8, ISO100)
It gives a wonderful impression of serenity and peace (which I need, since there's a chainsaw running outside my window at the moment). I like it.

Jeremy
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dchew

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #4 on: July 11, 2009, 06:11:20 am »

I like the way the trees are reflected:  Deep black trunks but then the top branches produce a smokey mist.

I tried cropping some of the bottom junk away, but I'm not sure it worked because it lost too much of the water.  Moving down and closer might have eliminated some of that but you would have lost the L/R branches that Mike highlighted.

Nice.

Dave
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byork

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #5 on: July 11, 2009, 06:44:19 am »

Like it a lot Ed, best landscape you've posted. Love the colour tones, Sihlouettes, and misty waters. IMHO the bottom needs to be there, gives the impression of standing on the foreshore.

Cheers
Brian
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alangubbay

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #6 on: July 11, 2009, 06:48:00 am »

Quote from: Ed B
Criticism appreciated, please.

Ed


[attachment=15295:IMG_2060.jpg]

(24mm, f/8, ISO100)

I would have cropped  a little off the top. Nevertheless, a very pleasing and interesting picture.
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button

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #7 on: July 11, 2009, 09:00:14 am »

Those colors are absolutely fantastic!  They are so good, that personally I don't want to see much else in this shot.  If you shoot something like this again with that kind of eye popping color, I'd like to see you focus on just one or two elements, to keep it really simple.  Overall, though, a really special shot.

John
« Last Edit: July 11, 2009, 09:01:26 am by button »
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PeterAit

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #8 on: July 11, 2009, 10:12:43 am »

Quote from: Ed B
Criticism appreciated, please.

Ed


[attachment=15295:IMG_2060.jpg]

(24mm, f/8, ISO100)

Lovely, particularly the colors and the water texture. The only thing I might suggest is to have moved in a bit so you don't have that sliver of shoreline in the foreground.

Peter
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Ed Blagden

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #9 on: July 12, 2009, 07:38:24 am »

Thanks all.  I think this one will go on the wall.

I agree with various comments that the shoreline is problematic.  In fact the original had more and I cropped some of it out (sorry Russ... I know I shouldn't.  The thing is that the dawn light at the equator changes so fast you have little time to recompose.  A weak excuse, but there you are.)  

However when I tried to crop the shoreline out altogether the image somehow lost some sense of you actually being there.  It is of course a matter of personal taste, but I like landscape photos to have a sense that the viewer can walk into them.

Ed
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Kevin Gallagher

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #10 on: July 12, 2009, 07:58:27 am »


 Hi Ed, I too am a fan of the long exposure on moving water, well done.
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Kevin In CT
All Animals Are Equal But Some Are More Equal
 George Orwell

button

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #11 on: July 12, 2009, 10:15:19 am »

Quote from: Ed B
The thing is that the dawn light at the equator changes so fast you have little time to recompose.  A weak excuse, but there you are.)

Ed, if you want to revisit that locale for a redo or a different approach, then you might want to consider scouting the area during the day with your camera and picking your ideal composition.  You could even leave your tripod set up if you think it will be safe.  Then, just go back the next morning a bit early, set up your gear, and wait for that perfect light.  I've done this several times.  Keep the good work coming!

John
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cmi

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #12 on: July 12, 2009, 02:55:35 pm »

Ed, I like the colors and the mood in this one! Especially the sky towards the horizon, the wonderful water reflections and the overflooded trees. What I dont like so much is the shore line, and that there is too much going on, too much different elements in a scene wich is potentially very calm. I think it could benefit a lot by a different composition concentrating on the attractive parts, disconnecting them from their "ordinary" surroundings. Probably anything that gets less elements into the endproduct. But that said, I also like it as it is.

Christian
« Last Edit: July 12, 2009, 02:56:21 pm by Christian Miersch »
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Ed Blagden

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #13 on: July 13, 2009, 12:54:52 pm »

OK, the shoreline seems to have bugged a few people so here is another shot a couple of minutes earlier, taken at 55mm, f/8, 2sec.  I don't like it as much because the light isn't as good, but I suppose there is less going on in the image.

Ed

ps I didn't really want to get too close to the shoreline because I had seen a croc in the water.

[attachment=15375:IMG_2057.jpg]
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cmi

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #14 on: July 13, 2009, 02:31:51 pm »

Quote from: Ed B
OK, the shoreline seems to have bugged a few people so here is another shot a couple of minutes earlier, taken at 55mm, f/8, 2sec.  I don't like it as much because the light isn't as good, but I suppose there is less going on in the image.

Ed

ps I didn't really want to get too close to the shoreline because I had seen a croc in the water.

[attachment=15375:IMG_2057.jpg]

Ed,

I would prefer the first one over the second too. Not so much because of the light (the shoot could still be enhanced by more contrast and saturation) but because of the composition wich works better in the first one.
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Jeremy Roussak

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #15 on: July 13, 2009, 03:21:35 pm »

Quote from: Ed B
ps I didn't really want to get too close to the shoreline because I had seen a croc in the water.
Pah! Feeble excuse. Crocs don't eat photographers. It's a well-known fact. They just think about it.

[attachment=15382:croc.jpg]

Jeremy
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Ed Blagden

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #16 on: July 13, 2009, 04:15:14 pm »

Quote from: kikashi
Pah! Feeble excuse. Crocs don't eat photographers. It's a well-known fact. They just think about it.


Jeremy

If I ever go on a shoot with you, Jeremy, I will bring my running shoes... I don't have to be faster than him, just you

Ed
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byork

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #17 on: July 13, 2009, 09:56:32 pm »

I still prefer the one with the shoreline Ed...and if you'd worn those running shoes, with the croc in even better.

Cheers
Brian
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John R

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #18 on: July 14, 2009, 12:38:51 am »

Quote from: Ed B
OK, the shoreline seems to have bugged a few people so here is another shot a couple of minutes earlier, taken at 55mm, f/8, 2sec.  I don't like it as much because the light isn't as good, but I suppose there is less going on in the image.

Ed

ps I didn't really want to get too close to the shoreline because I had seen a croc in the water.
Before I started photography in a serious way, I was always taken by coloured surnrises and sunsets, and still am in many ways. But one thing I learned was that you can't escape good design no matter how impressive the colours in a sunrise or sunset. That's just a general comment on such shots. IMHO the shot would be better without the trees framing the image. It does not look like a natural frame but a cut-off part. If you crop you lose a lot of sky and some foreground but it still looks great cropped with its simple silhouetted elements. I may crop differently, but that's up to you. And, I agree many suggested crops ruin the spirit of an image. The ideal would have been the same shot without the trees framing and the foreground distractions.

JMR
« Last Edit: July 14, 2009, 08:42:40 am by John R »
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kaelaria

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Dawn shot at Lake Baringo
« Reply #19 on: July 14, 2009, 06:17:16 am »

Here's what I would do:

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