hello,
have recently gotten a 4x5 large format camera and am thinking of getting back into photographing lighthouses here and around the northwest. i own a sinar f1 with 2 lenses(nikkor 135w mm and schneider 90mm super angulon). i have been shooting up here at mt rainier nat'l park and have been givin this some thought and would like to get back into shooting lighthouses soon. as far as film preference, i use either velvia 50 or whatever b/w film i can get my hands on-preferably ilford. as far as filters a polariser or a red or yellow for contrast. i have some regular color negs on order. if anyone has any tips on shooting lighthouses, i'd happy to hear them. i have been to long beach, and cape disapointment here in washington and want to go back and re-shoot them with my 4x5. i have no problem goin as far south northern california-up to british columbia, as long as it did't interfere with my job. anyway, that is my situation if you can help it would be great...looking forward to hearing from everyone!!
Like the image on the ground glass, your priorities may be inverted, Dan. You need to get a job that doesn't interfere with your photography. (lol)
There are plenty of interesting lighthouses along both coasts. And, while they all tend to have slightly different characters, I've never met a lighthouse I didn't like. Early morning and late afternoon to sunset are my favorite times for lighthouse portraits.
I've been thinking of doing a series on the lighthouses of the great lakes in 8x20. In doing a little research I found over 300 lighthouses on the great lakes alone. That means this series could take some time.
There are lots of resources on the web, from new and used books at Amazon.com to detailed regional guides like www.photographamerica.com. Here are two sites with comprehensive lighthouse info: http://www.nicholsonprints.com/Lighthouses.htm and http://armchairtour.com
hello again,
i only use velvia when i go up to rainier here in washington. any other time i usually use black and white or any simple plain color film(35mm based that is). as far as shooting lighthouses go, i am wanting to do this from an architectural point of view. this is part of why this camera was made i think. being able to shift converging lines to change distorted views. being able to shift your front or rear elements to conenside with the existing road that may go off to the right. this can not be done with a 35mm or a mf camera. this is what makes this camera fun and more challenging to use. plus it makes you slow down and actually compose your shot so your get more out of your picture than just a nice picture. this just my opinion. i really think lighthouses are cool to look at and they also have a history that goes back in time. when i shoot them, i shoot them for me and take great pleasure at photographing them. sure they are overrated...but what isn't these days??? try and find a style of photography that anyone else hasn't already done and let me know. my other favorite thing to shoot or go and visit is the local state fair here in washing...and its almost that time again...can't wait!!! :-)anyway, gotta go now...have to work tomorrow. later! :-)
Trite? Overdone material? Thousands of nudes were done before Michelangelo carved David it's a good thing he didn't listen to such hogwash statements. Photograph them in your style, with your vision and voice and never let anyone deter you from what you want to do with statements like, " it's been done before". Just like any work of art... it hasn't been done like you will do it.
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