This picture was made on the Hume Highway on the way from Adelaide to Canberra.
I'd been driving from Hay, I was tired , so and I took a break before driving on the Barton Highway into Canberra.
This picture was made on the Hume Highway on the way from Adelaide to Canberra.
I'd been driving from Hay, I was tired , so and I took a break before driving on the Barton Highway into Canberra.
On a recent trip to Canberra to visit my family, I briefly explored the Cotter River with Judith Crispin. She knew the area well from exploring it photographically whilst working at Manning Clark House, and she kindly showed me some of her favourite places along the river valley.
It was an all too brief visit, but I find the location and the region----- the Namadgi National Park ----very interesting, and I will certainly revisit it the next time I am in Canberra. The next trip will be primarily a photo trip.
I've started scoping for work for the Fleurieu Four Seasons Prize for landscape photography. It's a competition and I don't have much success in them.
The Prize is for a suite of four photos that are taken in the western part of the Fleurieu Peninsula over the four seasons. I don't know this area very well photographically so I've started exploring it on my away to and from Victor Harbour.
On the way down this trip I was looking for a late afternoon coastal location that would be suitable for 5x4 film work, and which had fairly easy access. This location looked a possibility. The picture was made at midday and so the light is terrible. I will scope it out in the late afternoon on my way back to Adelaide to see what the light looks like then.
I've started back working on my sea abstracts and pink gum and Xanthorrhoea projects which have been constructed in terms of DIY books in progress. It has been several months since I worked on them. I've been waiting for Posthaven to get their publishing platform up and running after migrating the work from Posterous.
I've also been scoping for subjects for an 8x10 colour shoot. The new Toyo double sided film holders are loaded with film--Kodak Ecktar 100ASA. I've returned to a number of locations that I had in mind, but winter has changed things dramatically. The winter grasses have returned and its a green world now as opposed to the dry landscape of a few months ago.
It's been frustrating as possible location after location has been rejected. I'm going to have to start with a couple of abstracts of the redgum trunks in the reserve across the road from the studio.
The digital suite of Encounter Studio is now up and running and I'm starting to pick up the photography from where I left off before spending the week at American River in Kangaroo Island.
I've upgraded the operating system of the 27" iMac to Mountain Lion, now that it has a new hard disc courtesy of Apple. I can now connect with my computer in Adelaide. I've also upgraded some of the photographic software--Lightroom and Silver Efex Pro--that I regularly use in my digital darkroom.
This picture of, what I take to be a salt lake, was snapped near D' Estrees Bay on Kangaroo Island. It was next door to the Cape Gantheaume Conservation Park. I had been looking for some salt lakes with easy acces without much success. We just stumbled upon this one on our way back to American River.
It was the last afternoon of our holidays on the island. We left for Adelaide the next day.
This is an abstract of the trunk of a river gum in the reserve across the road from the studio in Encounter Bay, Victor Harbor
The tree that had been bought down from Arkaroola by Suzanne's mother as a seedling back in 1982 . It was planted in the reserve and it is now a solid tree.
I've taken a number of photos over the Xmas break with a digital camera--a Sony NEX-7--- mostly as a study for a large format shoot. I am thinking about using the 5x4 Linhof in an early morning shoot.
Whilst my 8x10 black and white negatives are being developed by Chris Reid at Blanco Negro in Sydney I've have been looking out for, and scoping, more subject matter.
This picture is one possibility. The form is okay and it is reasonably easily accessable from the car park at Petrel Cove:
I pre-visioned the picture in black and white:
It looks okay. The rock face works better in black and white.
The problem I have is that I don't have many other pictures lined up for the 8x10 apart from a studio picture.
I went searching for this "rock face" this afternoon and I couldn't find it. I found the area but I could not the rock. It was very different this time because it was heavily overcast, with rain threatening so and there was no sunlight on the rocks.
It's a minute section of some rock form on the foreshore. I was probably lying on on the sand to make it. That would make it rather difficult to reshoot with a large format camera, which is what I was considering.
This happens to me a lot. I take some snaps on a poodlewalk and I forget their location. Most are just a detail. I then spend ages trying to relocate the detail.
Exhaustive checks ended up with the conclusion that the electrical storm of a week ago had caused the studio's Fritzbox modem to frizz. Surge protectors are useless for this kind of electrical interference apparently. I had to get a new modem from Internode. The studio finally has internet connectivity and I can now post online.
This is the second time a modem has been fried by an electical storm this year. This digital storage and equipment is nerve wracking.
I've also managed to get my old Lacie external discs properly formatted for the iMac. 3 years of digital files from the digital cameras have been backed up. The digital files of my film cameras have also been backed up.
Backup is making a duplicate copy to prevent a problem in the event of something like a computer failure. Archive is safe storage and at least one archive copy of your photos should be stored off-site (away from home).
I now have two sets of backup at the studio--they have already been backed up on a Netgear mirroring hard disc. So I have three separate sets of my digital photos. This double backup insurance means that I'm feeling a little bit more secure about digital file storage and hard disc collapse. I also have the photos on a Mac Pro in Adelaide, which is also backed up.
It's a long way from the file cabinets, briefcases, safety deposit boxes and the fireproof safes of the analogue world.
The above picture is one of the ones that I took the day after the electrical storm when I was walking along the coast trying to make more pictures for the sea abstracts book. This project is not going well and I'm frustrated by the failures.