Movement in nature can work for you as well as against you.
Dick Arentz made a photo once with a 12X20 camera inside a large building where chickens were raised, printed as palladium print. The long exposure of several seconds shows the white chickens as a blur as they run around in front of the camera. I wanted to make the same type of image but those type of buildings where chickens were raised that were at one time common in the south have pretty much disappeared.
Sandy
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It depends on how one visualizes the scene.
I waited a good while for the dangling vines to pause for this one, but it wouldn’t have matched my visualization for them to be blurred.
Espada Acequia Aqueduct, 1991. FP4, 1/2 second at f/22.
Rick “usually interested in a sense of endless detail” Denney
Sandy, while I'm sure that D. Arentz' "running chickens" photograph is stunning...the concept somehow does not sit quite as well with me personally as does P. Caponigro's "running deer." Oh well...horses (or chickens? or deer?) for courses, I guess!
It has been said, by Paul Strand I think, that a tree disturbed by a gust of wind will settle back as it was before the gust arrived. This exactly for every leaf, twig, and branch. I haven't done enough daylight time exposures to confirm this. Can anyone?
Photography:first utterance. Sir John Herschel, 14 March 1839 at the Royal Society. "...Photography or the application of the Chemical rays of light to the purpose of pictorial representation,..".
In my experience, the wind only starts to blow when I pull the dark slide.![]()
Funny thing I learned about Saguaro cacti many years back...that they can continue to resonate long after the wind dies down. Thing is...sometimes they'll resonate for a few seconds, then be absolutely still for a few more before resonating once more - the trick being to watch carefully and trip the shutter during a "non-resonant" phase (or not, depending on ones goals).
Maris Rusis, I've read that Strand used that technique. Certain of his nature close-ups from the 1920s suggest it; I'm thinking of a well-known image of a toadstool.
Dugan, you've described a law of nature.
John Layton, your discovery surprises me. I live surrounded by saguaros now; but the light here is generally so bright that long exposures are difficult. And I don't photograph in the late afternoon when the wind blows hard...
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