January had been quite warm and dry but then came the snow;
and did it. For once we had quite a decent
coverage but not too much to cause havoc as it quite often does here.
I have an interest in images that are quite minimal. I like dead space and of course I like
monochrome photography. So it was the
perfect time to go out with my camera.
I drove around a bit looking for an image and couldn’t find
anything I really liked. Eventually I
ended up in Barley struggling for inspiration.
I then remembered a shot that I had taken in the past at nearby
Newchurch. The shot was already done in
monochrome previously but the days conditions meant that it would work
well. So I set off in that direction.
I first stopped off at a plantation near Barley Bank Farm. I quote like the idea of something disappearing
deep in to the photograph and I thought that this work well. It does, sort of. The image also has an appearance of being
monochrome when actually it is full colour.
In the end I got to the location and it couldn’t have been
more perfect. The snow was pristine and
the sky was grey. Nice for subtle
changes in colour. Dialling in a bit of
exposure compensation would mean that the snow would be almost paper white and
the image would contain all the shades of grey (not just 50!) through to almost
black.
A bit of fine tuning in Lightroom meant I had one of the
most beautiful images I have ever made.
Snow photography is interesting. You either go for an images that is real and
as a result you’ll have a blue-ish cast to the image or you dial in exposure
composition and have white snow. At the
time I wrote about this for Pixel
Magazine.
Incidentally, I do tend to print the images I make and I
like. This one prints gorgeously!
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