Landscape Photography From Snapshots To Great Shots V413HAV
Landscape Photography From Snapshots To Great Shots V413HAV
Landscape Photography From Snapshots To Great Shots V413HAV
Great Shots
Rob Sheppard
Landscape Photography: From Snapshots to Great Shots Rob Sheppard Peachpit Press 1249 Eighth Street Berkeley, CA 94710 510/524-2178 510/524-2221 (fax) Find us on the Web at www.peachpit.com To report errors, please send a note to errata@peachpit.com Peachpit Press is a division of Pearson Education. Copyright 2012 Rob Sheppard All photography Rob Sheppard except where noted William Henry Jackson photograph courtesy of DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, AG1982.0124x, Les geysers dAmerique, Mud Geyser in Action. Editor: Susan Rimerman Production Editor: Lisa Brazieal Developmental/Copy Editor: Elizabeth Kuball Proofreader: Bethany Stough Composition: WolfsonDesign Indexer: James Minkin Cover Design: Aren Straiger Cover Image: Rob Sheppard Interior Design: Riezebos Holzbaur Design Group Notice of Rights All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. For information on getting permission for reprints and excerpts, contact permissions@peachpit.com. Notice of Liability The information in this book is distributed on an As Is basis, without warranty. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of the book, neither the author nor Peachpit shall have any liability to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused or alleged to be caused directly or indirectly by the instructions contained in this book or by the computer software and hardware products described in it. Trademarks Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations appear in this book, and Peachpit was aware of a trademark claim, the designations appear as requested by the owner of the trademark. All other product names and services identied throughout this book are used in editorial fashion only and for the benet of such companies with no intention of infringement of the trademark. No such use, or the use of any trade name, is intended to convey endorsement or other afliation with this book. ISBN-13: 9780321823779 ISBN10: 978032182377X 987654321 Printed and bound in the United States of America
DEDICATION
To all of the beautiful and amazing natural landscapes of our world. They deserve the best from all of us as photographers and lovers of beauty. And of course, I also dedicate this book to another beauty, my wife of many years, Vicky.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I suppose my love of nature started with my dad being transferred to Minnesota when I was a child; he took us camping and shing into the beautiful places of Minnesota, so I thank him for that. I have no idea where my interest in photography came fromit started when I was very young (I built a darkroom when I was 13) and no one else in my family or friends were photographers. This book would not exist without the encouragement and wonderful support of all the folks Ive worked with at Peachpit: Ted Waitt, Susan Rimerman, Elizabeth Kuball, Lisa Brazieal, and others who have worked on the book but whom I havent met. This has been such a great group of folks who have made this book a true pleasure to put together. I also thank all my students in my classes and workshops, such as those at BetterPhoto.com and Light Photographic Workshops. Theyre such a wonderful resource of questions and photographic ideas. Im always learning new things from the way they photograph and approach the world. From beginners to expert photographers, theyre all amazing. I also want to thank Steve Werner and Chris Robinson with Outdoor Photographer magazine. Theyve long been friends and supporters of my work, and they both have always made me think. Ive learned so much from both of them. Even though I never met them and theyve long passed from the scene, I really do appreciate all that I learned from Ansel Adams, Eliot Porter, Ernst Haas, and Andreas Feininger, photographers who inspired me as I grew up as a photographer. Finally, I have to acknowledge my wife who always supports me. It is such a joy to have a life partner who acknowledges and accepts me as I am. I also thank my professor son, Adam, who makes me think about how we communicate to others, and my sports-information daughter, Sammi, who keeps me thinking about photography and how it affects others.
Contents
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1 2 4 6 14 20 23
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43 44 46 48 54 61 67
Structuring Your Image to Communicate about a Landscape Poring Over the Picture Poring Over the Picture Getting Out of the Middle Paying Attention to Relationships Valuing Your Point of View
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Gaining Control by Changing Lenses, Positions, and Apertures Poring Over the Picture Poring Over the Picture Perspective Depth of Field Going for a Deep Depth of Field
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97 98 100 102 111 115
CHAPTER 6: SKY
Working to Bring Out the Best in the Sky Poring Over the Picture Poring Over the Picture Deciding Whether the Sky Is Worth the Effort Using Sky Effectively in a Composition Tackling Exposure Challenges Found in the Sky Bringing Out the Clouds
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Seeing How Ansel Adamss Ideas Still Resonate in the Digital Age Poring Over the Picture Poring Over the Picture Poring Over the Picture Rene Your Photos with Traditional Darkroom Techniques Basic Photo Needs: A Workow Case Studies
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INDEX
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CONTENTS
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Introduction
One of the earliest photographs that I remember taking was of Gooseberry Falls in Minnesota as a teenager. I have gone back to that location again and again over the years, even after leaving Minnesota for California. Early impressions can denitely affect a lifetime of work. Youll even nd Gooseberry Falls State Park images in this book. Growing up in Minnesota was challenging at times as I was learning to become a nature and landscape photographer. Minnesota has no towering mountains, no roaring rivers, no geysers, no skyscraping redwoods, and no dramatic deserts. Yet, I think that this gave me an education in working with the landscape that forced me to nd good pictures, not simply make snapshots of spectacular locations. Throughout this book, youll nd all sorts of landscapes. Ive tried to include images of landscapes from throughout the country, not just from the dramatic West. Certainly, there is a long tradition of Western landscape photography starting with William Henry Jackson in the 1870s. That was also promoted by the wonderful photography of Ansel Adams. My growing up in Minnesota really encouraged me to go beyond simply pointing my camera at the obviously dramatic landscapes. Good landscape photography goes beyond such subjects. It requires a sensitivity to light, perspective, composition, and more. If you learn to work with these aspects of landscape photography on any landscape, all your pictures will improve. Your photography will denitely go from landscape snapshots to landscape great shots. Sure, a bold, dramatic landscape is nice, but sometimes that great subject can distract you from getting your best images. Weve all been distracted by beautiful scenes that so overwhelm us that we forget that we cant cram that beautiful scene into our camera. We can only create a photograph that represents it. We have to interpret that scene because the three-dimensional, wild scene itself cannot be forced into the small, two-dimensional image that is a photograph. Only an interpretation can bring something of that landscape into a photograph.
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I really want you to feel successful when photographing landscapes. I want you to be able to get excited about any landscape, not just a landscape you see once every few years on vacation. Our world is lled with wonderful places all around us that deserve to be photographed every bit as much as the icons that weve seen so many times. That isnt to say that photographing iconic landscapes cant be a lot of fun and a wonderful way of using your photography. But these landscapes are simply not available to most of us most of the time. The techniques in this book are designed to help you bring the most out of landscapes wherever you are, whether thats an iconic national park visited rarely or a nature center near where you live. The landscapes in your area are important, no matter where you live. They provide a sense of place. You honor that sense of place by getting great photographs of those locations nearby. You also feel more connected to your landscape when you go out and explore it photographically. No matter what you do, take a lot of pictures. A great thing about digital photography is that once you own the camera and memory cards, you can take as many pictures as you want without any lm or processing costs. Those costs used to be a lot and could restrict how many shots professionals took. Now you dont have to have those restrictions. Experiment with the ideas in this book. Ive included assignments at the end of each chapter and I would like you to try them out! Make sure to join the books Flickr group and share your results with other readers: www.ickr.com/groups/landscapesfromsnapshotstogreatshots. Dont be afraid to experiment with new ways of taking pictures and expect some failures. I think thats how we learn. I cant tell you how many pictures Ive tossed out over the years because I tried something new. But I learned from every one. And I still do. Most of all, have fun. Enjoy your time outdoors in this beautiful world around us. Discover the possibilities of landscape photography wherever you are.
INTRODUCTION
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ISO 100 1/20 sec. f/5.6 17mm (Four Thirds)
Equipment
UNDERSTANDING YOUR GEAR TO TAKE BETTER PHOTOGRAPHS
Bring up the subject of camera gear if youre around any group of photographers, and youre sure to stir up all sorts of discussions. You have some sort of camera and lens in order to take a photo, but exactly what type of gear you need depends on a lot of factors. This isnt a simple discussion at all. Or maybe it is. Truthfully, you can take ne landscapes with any camera on the market today. Ansel Adams was one of the nest of landscape photographers, and he often said that whats in your head and how you use the gear are more important than the gear itself. Professional landscape photographers will pick and use specic types of camera gear because of certain features that work for the way that they take pictures. Whether that can work for your way of taking pictures is a different story. In this chapter, I examine some of the things that are important to consider about your gear and landscape photography.
The scene between the rocky cliffs of the mountains of Kolob Canyon kept giving different views because of the shifting clouds. This made for exciting landscape photography!
The cameras white balance can be very important for conditions like this so that colors are rendered well.
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A large area of sky can fool the camera into thinking the scene is too bright, so I gave the scene more exposure than the meter suggested.
I used a telephoto zoom during this shoot so that I could constantly change my composition.
CHAPTER 1: EQUIPMENT
How you look at a scene is as important as the gear you use. For this scene, I was in Everglades National Park in Florida. I was looking for some interesting landscapes, but the light wasnt quite right when I got to this location at West Lake. So, I left my main camera, lenses, and tripods in the car as I took a short trail to check on the lake. Out on a short boardwalk, I saw these amazing mangrove trees, and the light was perfect for their color and texture. I had my small Sony HX9V compact digital camera in my pocket, so I quickly got it out. I treated that little camera the same as my big cameras in how I looked at this landscape as a photograph. This is no snapshot, but an image carefully considered for its composition and how I responded to the scene.
Even on what is essentially a point-and-shoot camera (though a very nice one), white balance can be set to ensure that colors are recorded properly. Auto white balance is usually a poor choice for conditions like this.
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The camera had image stabilization built into it, which ensured a sharp photo at the shutter speed used, even without a tripod.
I dont allow any camera to choose an ISO for me, so I specically set this camera to ISO 100.
The contrast of the exposed stems above the water with the beautiful green texture of the leaves created a strong structure for the image.
CHAPTER 1: EQUIPMENT
CAMERAS
Cameras come in all shapes and sizes. Its certainly still possible to shoot excellent landscape images with lm, but lm cameras have basically disappeared as a major way of taking pictures. Digital cameras simply offer too many advantages over lm, from being able to immediately see what your photograph looks like on the LCD to gaining very high-quality images with a large range of ISO settings.
BRAND
Go to any camera club and ask what the best camera is, and youre sure to start a big argument about which brand is doing the best for photography today. And you know something very interesting about that discussion? All the photographers advocating for specic brands of cameras are right, and theyre all wrong, too! The right camera for one person may be the wrong camera for someone else. Ive owned and shot with Canon, Nikon, Olympus, and Sony. Ive created excellent landscape photographs with all of them, and Ive had my share of duds with all of them as well. In addition, when I worked as an editor of Outdoor Photographer magazine, I had the chance to shoot with every brand of camera, and I found that I could get excellent landscape photographs with any of them. So, it doesnt matter what brand of camera you have, right? Not exactly. One important thing about using a camera is being comfortable with it. You need to have a camera that you like using (Figure 1.1). You need a camera that has the right controls for you and thats organized in a way that makes sense. Some of it comes with experience, so when you have a particular camera brand, youre usually best staying with that brand because it makes photography easier. But there are some things to think about when choosing a camera or when changing a camera brand that will affect how you take pictures. This usually is not about ultimate picture quality (because cameras are so good that image quality is extremely good from camera to camera). One thing that a brand will affect is the options you have for lens choice and other accessories (Figure 1.2). When you buy a camera, youre not simply buying a camera. Youre also buying into a system of lenses, ashes, and more. It can be important to look at that system to see that it has what you need and want for your type of photography.
L A N D S C A P E P H O T O G R A P H Y : F R O M S N A P S H O T S T O G R E AT S H O T S
FIGURE 1.1
When youre comfortable with your camera, youll like using it and enjoy the photography more.
FIGURE 1.2
When you buy a camera body, you also gain access to a certain set of lenses and other accessories.
CHAPTER 1: EQUIPMENT
MEGAPIXELS
I saw rsthand the beginnings of the megapixel race among camera manufacturers. I worked at Outdoor Photographer magazine through the entire transition to digital, starting before the average photographer even considered digital as a way of shooting until it became the main way that photographers took pictures outdoors. When digital cameras rst came out, sensors had less than 1 megapixel. Pixels are the smallest picture element and the smallest points that capture light on the sensor. More pixels allow you to capture more detail up to a point. With the rst low-cost sensors, there werent enough pixels to fully capture the detail of any scene. So, the megapixel race began. At rst, megapixels really did make a difference. Then at 3 megapixels there was a signicant change. Images had enough detail to match 35mm lm at an 8-x-10-inch print size (Figure 1.3). At 4 to 5 megapixels, there was enough detail to easily print 11-x-14-inch images that matched 35mm. A lot of careful workers were even nding they could go much bigger. And once 6 megapixels was reached, many photographers were creating excellent 16-x-20-inch images.
FIGURE 1.3
I shot this Newfoundland landscape early on in the digital transition. I used a 3-megapixel Nikon 880.
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By 10 megapixels, you could essentially match 35mm imagery at any print size. By 16 megapixels, most photographers were nding they could match medium-format lm. Except now there started to become a problem that the megapixel wars didnt address: As pixels are more densely packed into a sensor, some problems occur: Noise increases. Sensors have a harder time dealing with tone and color capture. Simply adding pixels can mean that youll have a decrease in image quality even though you have more megapixels in the camera. A high-quality 10-megapixel sensor can outperform a high-megapixel sensor that simply has too many pixels crammed into its surface. As technology gets better, camera manufacturers are able to increase the density of pixels and maintain image quality (Figure 1.4). However, there is no question that manufacturers often push this to the limits and introduce cameras that have more pixels than they really should have for the technology available at the time.
FIGURE 1.4
A modern-day digital camera sensor holding millions of sensing elements or pixels.
SENSOR SIZE
One of the most misleading aspects of digital photography is the physical size of the sensor (this is an area size and is not part of megapixels). I hear people all the time say that they have to have a full-frame sensor in order to get the best images, especially of landscapes. And, of course, there are all those crude jokes about whether size matters. This is, to put it bluntly, nonsense. Sensor size does affect certain things, and it can be worth considering, but there is no arbitrary good or bad about sensor size simply based on the size. Youll sometimes hear people refer to the APS-C size format as a cropped sensor. This is one of the worst names for that format because its totally misleading. If you really think about it, youll see that either there is no such thing as a cropped sensor or every sensor is a cropped sensor. You see, there is always a bigger or smaller sensor than any sensor that is in a camera (obviously at some point there is an ultimate huge sensor size, but that is not something thats going to be in a camera), so all sensors can be considered cropped, but that is pretty silly.
CHAPTER 1: EQUIPMENT
Sensor size is a format size, just like 35mm, APS, medium format, 4 x 5, and so forth are lm format sizes. And just like lm sizes, sensor size or format affects how lens focal lengths perform and certain aspects of image quality such as noise. The common digital formats are, from largest physical size to smallest, full frame (which is technically full 35mm frame), APS-C, Four Thirds, and variations of compact digital camera sensor sizes (compact digital cameras do have some common sensor sizes but they dont have specic names), as shown in Figure 1.5. Heres what sensor sizes do: Larger sensors require physically larger lenses and longer focal lengths for the same equivalent angle of view of the landscape. Conversely, smaller sensors use physically smaller lenses and shorter focal lengths for that angle of view. Larger sensors require bigger camera bodies and mean that you have heavier and larger lenses to carry with you. Smaller sensors can be put in smaller camera bodies and result in lighter and smaller gear to carry. Larger sensors of the same technology as smaller sensors will have less noise at higher ISO settings. This usually means that you can use larger sensors at much higher ISO settings than smaller sensors. Larger sensors of the same technology may offer more nely separated tones and colors, but a newer small sensor will often match an older large sensor. Larger sensors need longer focal lengths for a given angle of view, which results in less depth of eld at any given aperture. Smaller sensors need shorter focal lengths for a given angle of view, which results in more depth of eld at any given aperture.
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36mm wide
FIGURE 1.5
These images give you a feel for the relative sizes of the common digital camera formats.
APS-C
Four Thirds
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36mm wide
FIGURE 1.6
The same focal length is seen differently by different formats.
APS-C
Four Thirds
CHAPTER 1: EQUIPMENT
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CHOOSING GEAR
You now have a lot of information about megapixels, sensor size, focal length equivalents, and more. What do you do with this information when youre looking at camera gear for landscape photography? You dont have to be overwhelmed by all that information. Im going to give you some ideas on things to look for when youre choosing gear for your landscape photography. Ill also give you some ideas of gear that I use and why I made the choices that I did. First, I think its really important that you handle gear and you try it out before you purchase it. Even cameras from the same manufacturer will handle differently, and you may like one over another. Never feel that you have to buy a certain camera because of its priceeither high or lowor because someone else says thats the camera you have to have. Buy a camera based on how it feels to you. I hear stories from friends in the camera retail business that they see business professionals such as doctors and lawyers who have money to afford a more expensive camera turning up their noses at lower-priced cameras just because of the price. Unfortunately, they end up with cameras that arent as well suited to their needs. When someone buys a camera just because he feels it reects his status, he isnt buying the camera as a tool to use for better photography. In addition to how a camera ts your way of photography, I think there are four important things to consider as youre looking at a camera for landscape photography: Size and portability Availability of lenses and focal lengths Price High ISO settings Finally, there are some special features that you may want to consider based on unique needs you may have as a photographer.
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FIGURE 1.7
The size of your sensor has a big impact on the gear youll need to carry for photographing landscapes.
That can be a very big issue when youre out in the eld shooting landscapes. If youre always shooting landscapes from locations that are easily reached by car, then this may be much less of an issue. But if youre traveling a lot by plane or hiking any distance from your car, the size and weight of your gear can make a big difference. Look at both the size of the camera that youre thinking of getting, as well as how big the lenses have to be for equivalent focal lengths.
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the focal lengths you need, then see if you can get them from a reputable independent lens manufacturer such as Sigma, Tamron, or Tokina.
PRICE
Price is a tricky criteria for looking at cameras and lenses. Price isnt a simple measurement of quality. Some cameras are more expensive because they have certain features that increase the price of the camera but dont necessarily change the image quality. An example of that would be a camera that shoots more frames per second (which is not something you need for landscape photography). So-called pro cameras are more expensive partly because theyre built for abuse. They can handle extreme conditions that pros have to shoot in. Most landscape photographers never shoot in the extreme conditions that a pro sports photographer does, for example, so they dont necessarily need the camera to handle that abuse. Some pro lenses also have additional expense from this type of construction. Full-frame cameras are more expensive than smaller-sensor cameras, but full-frame cameras arent necessarily higher quality. Its much more expensive to manufacture a full-frame sensor, and that cost is reected in the cost of the camera. For example, a camera with a full-frame sensor typically will cost at least 50 percent more than the same camera with an APS-C size sensor. You also have to be very careful when looking at lenses and price. Many things factor into the price of a lens. One is the maximum aperture. If you have two lenses that have the same basic specs, but one has a maximum aperture of f/2.8 and the other has a maximum aperture of f/4, the f/2.8 lens can be 50 percent to 200 percent more expensive, even though both have the same quality. With landscape photography, you rarely need fast lenses with big maximum apertures.
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FIGURE 1.8
I was hiking toward dusk on a very cloudy day, so light was low. I had only a compact digital camera, a Canon PowerShot G11, and no tripod, so I had to shoot with a high ISO. Noise is high at ISO 1600 when used with a small sensor.
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Most of the time, noise isnt such a big issue for landscape photography because you usually dont need high ISO settings. However, some photographers are experimenting with very low-light landscape photography, including landscape photography at night. These conditions can make a large sensor with very low noise at high ISO settings an important tool. Another area where low noise can be very important is in shooting black-and-white photography, where youre interested in high-contrast interpretations of scenes. This tends to really bring out any noise thats in an image, so it can be helpful to have a minimum amount of noise from the start. One answer to the noise issue is to use noise-reduction software with your photos when needed. Because I dont have or use a full-frame camera, I do use the noisereduction feature of Lightroom (from Lightroom 3 on, its very capable of reducing average amounts of noise). For high amounts of noise, I like using Nik Software Dne.
SPECIAL FEATURES
There are a couple of special features that you may want to consider. These arent things that every photographer will be thinking about, but if you need these features, theyre worth considering as you look at cameras. With cameras that have a lot of megapixels and a big sensor, you can do more extensive cropping to the image; plus, you can make prints that measure 3 x 4 feet and more. With almost any DSLR camera that has at least 10 megapixels, you can make high-quality prints 16 x 24 inches in size. Of course, with landscape photography, you shouldnt need to do a lot of cropping. The landscape isnt running all over the place as you shoot, so you should be paying attention to composition so that you arent doing a lot of cropping to the nal image. Many cameras today have tilting or swivel LCDs (Figure 1.9), which can be extremely useful for certain types of landscape photography. These special LCDs include live view and allow you to place the camera both high and low and still see what the lens is seeing. This can allow you to take a picture from a higher angle then you might otherwise be able to do because you can tilt the LCD back and still see how the camera is framing. They also allow you to take a picture very close to the ground for a unique angle. In addition, they make it much more comfortable to use the camera on a tripod at heights other than eye level. A unique benet of live view is the ability to magnify the screen to help with focus. If you nd focus difcult with standard viewnders, then this feature can be really helpful. You can magnify what the lens is actually seeing and projecting on the sensor so that you can clearly see when something is going in and out of focus.
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FIGURE 1.9
Live view and swivel LCDs give your camera more exibiliity for landscape photography.
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THE TRIPOD
A good tripod is absolutely critical for landscape photography. You need it for two reasons: A tripod helps stabilize your camera when youre shooting at slow shutter speeds. The number-one cause of unsharpness in landscape photos is camera movement or shake during exposure. A tripod greatly reduces the possibility of that problem (Figure 1.10). If you want to get the maximum quality from any lens, use a tripod. A tripod helps you lock in your composition and rene it as needed. Since your landscape isnt moving while youre photographing, you can take your time getting the best composition of the scene. By having your camera on a tripod, you can more readily study and adjust your composition.
FIGURE 1.10
A good tripod is an important investment for a landscape photographer because it means youll get the maximum quality from your lenses.
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Even though tripods are really important for landscape photography, they arent as sexy as other gear. Many photographers have a tendency to skimp on a tripod and put all their money into the camera and lens. I can guarantee that Ill get consistently higher-quality pictures with an inexpensive DSLR and lens on a solid, sturdy tripod than I will with the most expensive pro DSLR on a cheap tripod or no tripod at all. Ive been to amazing landscape locations such as Yosemite National Park and been amazed by something away from the landscape: photographers with expensive cameras on cheap tripods. A poor-quality tripod just isnt going to give you the image quality your camera is capable of. Consider a good tripod an investmentit will last a long time and it isnt going to go out of date. Dont skimp on your tripod and head. To pick a good tripod, follow these tips: Look for a tripod that is easy to set up and easy to carry. You simply wont use a tripod that is hard to use and too heavy. Get a tripod from a camera store. The best tripods are at camera stores, not at discount stores. Consider a carbon-ber tripod. Theyre expensiveno question about it. But theyre extremely lightweight for their strength. Plus, theyre strong and rigid to keep your camera stable and still. In addition, when the temperature drops, they arent as cold on your ngers as metal tripods are. When checking out tripods, extend the tripod to its full height, and then lean on it and add a slight twisting movement. A sturdy tripod wont wobble as you do that. Check whether the legs change their angle of spread so that the tripod can be adjusted more easily on uneven ground (Figure 1.11). If the tripod legs only have a set angle for their spread, youll nd the tripod harder to use when youre at locations with irregular ground (as you often are when shooting landscapes). Look at the number of sections for the tripod legs. Most tripod legs come in three sections. Some tripods designed for travel come in four sections. Three-section legs tend to be sturdiest. If youre considering a tripod with four-section legs, make sure its sturdy enough. (There are good four-section leg tripods out there.) Avoid tripods with more than four sections.
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FIGURE 1.11
A tripod is much easier to use on uneven surfaces when the leg angle can be changed.
The tripod head is also an important part of your tripod decision. Some tripods come with a head; with other tripods, you need to buy a separate head. A sturdy yet lightweight head is important to match a lightweight tripod. There are two types of tripod heads: ball heads and pan-and-tilt heads. Both work for landscape photography and some photographers prefer one over the other. A ball head (Figure 1.12) uses a ball and socket to attach your camera to the tripod. Because its a ball and socket, this head allows innite variation of movement to adjust your camera position. You need to get a ball head that has a large enough ball to rmly lock your camera in place when youre done adjusting it. Many landscape photographers really like this type of head for its quick and easy positioning of the camera. A pan-and-tilt head (Figure 1.13) uses levers that allow you to tilt the camera left and right separately from tilting it up and down. Some photographers prefer this type of head because it allows you to adjust different planes of the camera separately, whereas the ball head is always adjusting every direction it wants. This means, for example, that you can tilt the camera up and down to frame your overall scene and then tilt left and right to correct for crooked horizons.
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FIGURE 1.12
A ball head is popular with landscape photographers because it can be quickly positioned for the shot.
FIGURE 1.13
A pan-and-tilt head offers separate controls for adjusting the angle of the shot as well as leveling the camera.
WHATS IN MY BAG
My gear is a little tricky because Ive changed some of my equipment. Right now I work with two systems: Canon and Sony. Ive shot with Canon for a long time, and I have a system that works for me. A couple years ago I used an Olympus system mainly for the small size. I went back to Canon because I started doing a lot of video in addition to still photography and the cameras Im using have great video. I just started using the Sony NEX system for its size and video. Heres what the Canon and Sony systems include: Canon system (Figure 1.14): Camera: I work with the APS-C size format. I dont like full-frame sensors because the gear is just too big and heavy for my work; plus, for equal quality, it costs me more. I have Canon EOS 7D and 60D cameras. These cameras use the same sensor and basic internal processing, so image quality is the same. Even though the 7D is a more expensive camera and a better-built camera body, I rarely use it. I mostly use the 60D because of the tilting LCD, which is important for my way of working.
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Lenses: My lenses for landscape work include three zooms: a wide-angle Canon EFS 1022mm f/3.54.5 (equivalent to 1635mm), a Tamron 18270mm f/3.56.3 (equivalent to 29430mm), and a Sigma 120400mm f/4.55.6 APO (equivalent to 190640mm). I do shoot with all these focal lengths, but I would say that most of my landscapes are done with the wider focal lengths and the telephoto focal lengths.
FIGURE 1.14
My Canon EOS 60D camera and lenses for landscape work.
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Sony system (Figure 1.15): Camera: I also work with the APS-C size format in my Sony system. I have a SonyNEX 5n camera, which is extremely compact and lightweight but still has an absolutely superb sensor. It also has an excellent tilting LCD that was part of its appeal for me. Lenses: My lenses for landscape work include the Sony 16mm f/2.8 (equivalent to 24mm), Sony sheye conversion lens (15mm full-frame sheye equivalent), Sony 1855mm f/3.55.6 (equivalent to 2782mm), and 55200mm f/3.56.3 (equivalent to 82300mm). The difference between 16mm and 18mm may not seem like a lot, but wide-angle focal lengths actually work differently from telephotos, and even 2mm can make a big difference in angle of view. Ive always loved the 24mm focal length for landscapes compared to 28mm, which is the same difference as between 16mm and 18mm in APS-C.
FIGURE 1.15
My Sony NEX 5n camera and lenses for landscape work.
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You may wonder about the math for the equivalents for the lenses of these two cameras because they arent exactly equal. The reason for this is that the two cameras have slightly different sensor sizes. Canon APS-C format uses 1.6x as a multiplication factor for focal-length equivalence, while Sony APS-C format uses a 1.5x multiplication factor. In addition to my Canon and Sony systems, I have some special gear. Ive long been a fan of compact digital cameras (including but not limited to point-and-shoot cameras). My rst digital camera was a Canon PowerShot G2, and Ive had a number of cameras in the G series. Right now I have a little Sony HX9V (Figure 1.16). This is an outstanding little camera that at ISO 100 is very close to my other cameras (if it had raw les, it might match them, and even at higher ISOs, its quite good). I love to keep a camera with me. And there are many situations where I dont care to carry my full set of gear (or I cant), so these little cameras have allowed me to get landscapes that I otherwise would have missed.
FIGURE 1.16
My handy Sony HX9V compact digital camera.
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Chapter 1 Assignments
Know Your Gear
No matter what the gear you have, sit down with it and shoot some unimportant scenes just so you get to know the gear. If the subjects really arent that important to you, youll pay more attention to the gear. Its very frustrating to be fumbling with controls or even searching for them when youre in front of a beautiful landscape and the sun is going down.
Do an ISO Test
Go out and shoot a landscape with sky at a variety of ISO settings. Shoot with ISO 100, 200, 400, 800, and 1600 to see what your camera does at these particular settings. (If your camera has higher ISO settings, try them, too.) Compare the shots to see what these ISO settings do to noise, tonality, and color. This will give you a better idea of what your camera is capable of. The reason that sky is important for this test is that it will very often reveal noise before other parts of the picture do.
Do a Tripod Test
Find a large-scale subject with a lot of detail in it at a distance from you and your camera. A busy street scene works well for this, especially if it has a lot of signs and other detail. Set your camera to a moderate focal length and ISO 100. Handhold your camera and shoot a series of pictures as you change your shutter speed from at least 1/125 sec. down to 1/30 sec. or slower. Then shoot the same scene with the camera mounted on a tripod so that you know that there is movement. Now enlarge the images and compare them, looking at small detail. This will give you an idea of how important your tripod is for slow shutter speeds. Share your results with the books Flickr group! Join the group here: www.ickr.com/groups/LandscapesfromSnapshotstoGreatShots
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ISO 100 1/60 sec. f/16 10mm (APS-C)
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An important set of visual relationships exists among the foreground owers, the lower-right owers, and the sky. They all have bright tones.
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I waited until one cloud was in just the right position above the mountain rocks.
The chaparral is a unique landscape in California. It is as distinctive as the redwoods, but it doesnt get the attention it deserves. It has no dramatic large trees; in fact, its an ecosystem based on shrubs. I photographed this chaparral scene in the Santa Monica Mountains of Southern California one spring when the California lilac (Ceonothus) were in bloom. The combination of owers, mountain, chaparral texture, and clouds in the sky created a special image.
The textures of the chaparral below the rocks creates an interesting juxtaposition of texture with the tree at the left.
By getting in close to the foreground owers with a wide-angle lens, I created a feeling of depth and space in the image.
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s
Sometimes you stand in front of a dramatic landscape and just stare in awe. This place has to be a great photo! So, you set up the camera and take the picture. You have a good camera, so you gure you cant miss with such a stunning scene. Then you get home and open the photo on your computer. Youre disappointed. This has happened to all of us. The problem comes from focusing so much on the subject that you lose sight of what youre really doing: creating a photograph. No landscape will t inside a photograph. Landscapes are too big, and the experience of actually being at the location can never be part of an image (Figure 2.1).
FIGURE 2.1
A beautiful scene stretches out in front of you. The photo will be just as greator maybe not! This image just doesnt give this scene justice. You cant t a real landscape in your camera.
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FIGURE 2.2
Many photographers have taken pictures of this section of Gooseberry Falls. But only by controlling how the camera captures this scene can you truly get the most from your image.
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HOW WE SEE
Our view of the world is affected by many things. First, as photographers, we have a tendency to see the subject. Our eyes are so capable of discerning a subject that the subject will stand out for us even amongst the most confusing of light and conditions. One of the reasons for this is because of movement. Now, that might seem to be a strange thing for a book about landscape photography, but it actually applies here. When we look at any scene, we dont hold our heads or eyes perfectly still. Because we have binocular vision with our eyes, that subtle movement of our heads means that things within a scene shift their relationships along their edges enough that our brains use that information to help dene the edge of an object. Another thing that happens is that we have a great ability to see a range of tonality and color from dark areas to bright areas. Researchers have found that the human eye can handle a brightness or dynamic range of approximately 1 million to 1, which translates to about 20 stops photographically. Thats a huge range, from night black to noon sun. It does take the eye time to adjust to these extremes, so that isnt what you see when you rst look at a scene. This instant range is considered to be something between 1,000 to 1 and 16,000 to 1, or about 10 to 14 stops photographically. Still, as you examine a scene, things become more revealed to you, increasing the dynamic range of your eyes (Figure 2.3).
FIGURE 2.3
Our eyes have the ability to see detail in bright sunlit areas and shadows at the same time. This is an HDR shot in Californias Los Osos Oaks State Park. Youll learn more about HDR in Chapter 9.
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Because we have the ability to readily see into dark and bright areas, we have a tendency to minimize their differences visually and, once again, focus on the subject. A related issue is that our eyes are highly capable of separating tones and colors in dark areas and bright areas at the same time. A strong color will still look strong whether its in bright sun or dark shade. Finally, our brains play a big part in how we interpret what we see. This is important because our brains actually have the ability to ll in gaps in what the eyes are sensing from a scene. For example, we ll in details in dark areas that arent fully revealed by what our eyes see. Even if something is obstructed, our brains will predict what should be there, and this inuences how we perceive whats in front of us.
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Regardless of the actual dynamic range of a camera and sensor, there is no question that it is considerably less than what were capable of seeing (Figures 2.4 and 2.5). This is why the camera has a tendency to emphasize the light and its contrast. You can look at a landscape that includes a waterfall in the sun and tree trunks in the shade and see everything just ne. The landscape looks great! Unfortunately, the camera cant see that way and will overemphasize the contrast in the light. If the scene is exposed properly to hold detail in the waterfall, the tree trunks will disappear into black.
FIGURE 2.4
A sunny day in Californias redwoods brings high contrast to the woods. To the eye, this is a bright and inviting scene. HDR was used to control the contrast of the scene.
FIGURE 2.5
The camera sees the same scene differently, emphasizing the strong difference between the sun and shade.
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Finally, the camera cant ll in gaps in the landscape in front of us the way our brains can. Another thing that the camera has a tendency to do is emphasize everything equally within the area seen by its lens. We dont work that way. Our eye-brain connection helps us focus in on something and minimize distractions around it. The camera cant do that (Figure 2.6).
ISO 200 2 sec. f/16 8mm (Four Thirds)
FIGURE 2.6
Our eyes and brains focus in on the waterfall of this scene, but the camera shows the bright rocks at the sides and the bright sky just as equally. The camera makes the photo a confusing mess.
t
As landscape photographers, our challenge is to be able to look at a landscape and think about how the camera is going to translate that into a photograph. Its very important that we go beyond the beginning photographers idea that the camera is a good way to capture reality. If that were true, you wouldnt need a book on landscape photographyyou would just need a better camera! After all, a better camera would capture reality better, right? Not so much. Camera manufacturers love that photographers are always looking for the Holy Grail of a better camera. It keeps them in business and keeps their prots high. And they know that theyre always going to sell cameras in this way, because
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they also know that the camera doesnt capture reality any better simply by having more megapixels or the newest sensor. But a photographer who thinks this way is never going to be satisedand that means more camera sales. Your goal is to think about how to focus on that photographthe image that your camera capturesnot simply the subject. Of course, just being aware that your camera is capturing something different from the way you see the world is a big start.
FIGURE 2.7
Your LCD helps you see the photograph the camera is actually taking.
Look at that image on your LCD (Figure 2.8). Do you like it? Is this something that you would put on your wall? Do you think that someone who had never visited this location would understand it? Youll get a lot of other ideas throughout this book on what you should look for in this image on your LCD.
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FIGURE 2.8
Look at the image on your LCD. Is that a picture you would want to put on your wall? Or use as wallpaper on your computer? In other words, does it look like a photograph you would like?
The LCD can be hard to see, especially in bright light. This isnt as big a problem for landscape photography as it is for some other types of photography because a lot of landscape photography is done earlier or later in the day when the light levels are lower. You can learn to use your LCD more effectively so that you can truly look at it as a little picture and decide if you like that picture or not: Change your default display time. After you take a picture, the image will pop up on your LCD for a brief time. For most cameras, the default length of time that the image displays is way too short to get even a quick look at your image. Go into your cameras menus and nd where you change the Review Time. Set it to 8 seconds or longer. This is long enough that youll get an idea of what your picture actually looks so you can decide whether you need to do more. Shade your LCD. If the light is bright, use your hand or a hat to shade the LCD so that you can see it better. Magnify your image. LCDs have gotten bigger and better, but they still arent as big as most photographs will be seen. Your camera will be able to enlarge what youre seeing on the LCD so that you can look at smaller details in the landscape. Get a magnier. You can nd a number of magniers on the market that will help you better see your LCD. These magniers block extraneous light from your LCD, as well as magnify the view so that you can more easily see the details.
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Chapter 2 Assignments
Practice Using Your LCD
Find a sunlit landscape. You dont have to have some fancy, elaborate landscape that can be reached only by a lot of travel. Just look for something nearby thats a big enough scene to have a foreground, middle ground, background, and sky. Take a picture of that scene, and then look at it on your LCD. Press your playback button to make sure that your LCD stays on. Compare what youre seeing on that LCD with whats actually in front of you in the landscape.
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ISO 400 1/60 sec. f/11 10mm (APS-C)
Light
LEARNING TO SEE THE LIGHT FOR BETTER LANDSCAPE PHOTOS
Photography is obviously about light. Without light, you cant photograph. Light has a huge affect on how a landscape is translated into a photograph. It can make the difference between a dramatic photo that grabs peoples attention and a boring photo that they pass on by. And this can be with the same landscape! Light is why many photographers are disappointed with their landscape photos. Theyre at a dramatic and stunning landscape, but the images dont do it justice. A big reason for this is simply that theyre at the landscape at the wrong time, with the landscape in the wrong light. You cant move easily around a large landscape to nd better light, so if youre there when the light is bad, youre stuck. If you want more than a snapshot, you need to be discerning about the light and how you deal with it in your landscape. As I mentioned in Chapter 2, sometimes you have to say, No, to a scene in order to nd a photograph to which you can say, Yes. In this chapter, we explore light. Youll learn to see light and its effects on landscapes. Youll discover a bit about different types of light, from dramatic to gentle, and how they can help you get better photos. Youll learn to go beyond simply seeing enough light to nding light that will make your scene come alive.
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I had to increase the exposure from what the cameras meter was telling me, because the light of the sky was so bright.
This particular framing allowed me to contrast the rocks at the left with the shrubs of the chaparral at the right.
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To capture the rich color of the sunrise, I set the white balance to Cloudy.
The telephoto lens allowed me to compress the distance, making the ridges stronger in the composition.
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Because I was at a distance from the subject and I didnt need the mountains to be as sharp as the trees, I could shoot at f/8, which also helped me choose a faster shutter speed.
I selected ISO 400 to allow for a faster shutter speed because I was shooting with a telephoto lens and there was a slight wind that could have caused vibration during the exposure.
Cloudy white balance allowed me to capture the colors with better rendition and saturation.
The best color for this scene began about ten minutes after sunset.
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FIGURE 3.1
Dramatic light uses strong contrasts and bold shadows as the scene for this view of Double Arch in Utahs Arches National Park.
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Generally you wont nd much drama to the light in the middle of the day. The most dramatic light comes early and late in the day. This is why the pros will often photograph a landscape from sunrise through early morning, and then leave and do other things until they return in the late afternoon and stay through sunset. Notice how the low, dramatic light just before sunset gives the rock cliffs along the Colorado River in Utah very strong shadows and texture (Figure 3.2).
FIGURE 3.2
A strong light just before sunset gives this scene along the Colorado River in Utah dramatic shadows.
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I know, sometimes youre only at a location in the middle of the day, and that landscape just looks so great! Well, that may be so, but it often wont photograph great. No matter what you do, no matter what techniques you try from this book, you just wont get a satisfactory image. So, enjoy the view and keep it in your memory! Then look for something that will make a better photograph.
EXPOSURE CHALLENGES
Dramatic light often means big contrasts between dark and bright areas, and that can cause exposure problems. Youll quickly lose the drama and the feeling of light with the wrong exposure. Too much exposure will make the shadows too bright and wash out the sunlit areas. Too little exposure will make the bright areas look dingy and the dark areas murky and muddy; plus, it can increase noise. To help get the best exposure, watch your highlights, even enlarging them in the LCD to better see them. Important highlights should have some detail, but they still need to be bright. You also can check your histogram; be sure that there is no large gap at the right and no dramatic cliff where the histogram has been cut off. If youre unclear about adjusting exposure, check out Jeff Revells book Exposure: From Snapshots to Great Shots (Peachpit).
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FIGURE 3.3
The soft, gentle light of a cloud forest in Costa Rica envelopes the scene and gives it a quiet mood.
When you have a scene with strong color, such as bold greens of a spring forest from the Great Smoky Mountain National Park (Figure 3.4) or colorful owers in the landscape, a gentle light can help emphasize those colors. Sometimes a dramatic light will overpower such colors so they become less important than the drama of light and shadow. Because a gentle light can be very revealing, it helps reveal colors. When the weather is changing, you can get some very interesting light on a landscape because there is varied brightness in the sky. What that means is that the light is stronger, even if only a little, from one direction, which can add some interest to the way the light affects the scene. It can give some dimension to even a soft light. Gentle light does present some challenges. First, it can make a landscape look gray and not very attractive (Figure 3.5). This is especially true if the scene is devoid of strong colors or strong, dening tonalities. You need to have something to help dene the composition in gentle light, and if there are no shadows to help, you need something like color or strong contrasts. Another challenge of gentle light is the very heavy light you get when the clouds are especially thick, such as just before a storm. This light has no form to it, and the landscape seems to want to reect its heaviness. You may be able to nd a scene where such a heavy look works for a mood, but it makes most landscapes look dull.
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FIGURE 3.4
The soft greens of spring trees in Tennessees Great Smoky Mountains National Park look good with a soft light.
FIGURE 3.5
Dull, gray days can make dull, gray landscape photos anywhere.
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A dull gray sky is a nal challenge with gentle light (Figure 3.5). Since this light usually comes from a cloudy day, those clouds can make a sky unattractive in a photograph. Dramatic, stormy clouds are great, but often a cloudy day just offers a gray mass that doesnt record well in a photo. The easiest way to deal with that is just to avoid itdont even include it in the composition, or at most, include only a thin sliver of clouds to dene the top of your scene. Once you start noticing dramatic and gentle light on the landscape, youll start seeing all types of light.
DIRECTIONAL LIGHT
Landscapes have depth, form, and dimension, but a photograph has none of that. Its at and two-dimensional. In order to get a better landscape photo, you need to recognize that limitation and work to create an impression of depth, form, and dimension in the photo. One good way to do this is to recognize and use directional light. Directional light is simply light that is brighter in one direction than another. The easiest way to think of this is to consider a low sun just after sunrise, as shown in my image of dunes along the Florida Atlantic Coast (Figure 3.6). The light has a very strong directional aspect because of the low sun that creates streaks of light across the land, along with good shadows.
FIGURE 3.6
Directional light brings out the form and texture of these dunes beside the Atlantic Ocean in Florida.
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The best directional light comes from early and late in the day, which is another reason that pros typically photograph early and late and avoid midday. When the light is high in the sky, shadows shrink and the light grows dull. You quickly lose the impression of direction, and you start to lose the feeling of form and depth that directional light gives. Notice where the light is coming from and what that is doing to your scene. This will help you size up how best to take advantage of it. Directional light can do the following for a scene: Dene three-dimensional form. With light on one side of a hill, for example, shadows appear on the other side, and the combination of light and shadow creates form. Add highlights to the scene. Bright areas attract the viewers eye in a photo, so the right highlights can help. Create long shadows. Long shadows can be very useful in a composition because they can help dene the landscape. Put highlights on water. This can be both good and bad. Sparkling water can be very attractive (Figure 3.7), but if the light is too strong, that can quickly become a distracting glare of light.
FIGURE 3.7
The light from this Minnesota sunrise on Lake Superior puts sparkle and shine on the water.
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SIDE LIGHT
Side light is light that comes from one side of the scene or the other so that the light is directly to your side at your camera position. Side light is a very important directional light for a landscape. Look at any collection of landscapes and youll see it used frequently. Side light does the following for a landscape: Offers the most three-dimensional of any light. Sidelight really pulls out the dimensional qualities of a scene. It gives depth and form to any landscape. Brings out texture. A landscape can have many textures throughout the scene, and often these contrasts in texture will help dene your composition (Figure 3.8). A side light, especially a very low side light, will enhance and show off those textures. Makes objects look very solid. When objects gain form from being lit on one side and in shadow on the other, they also give an impression of being very solid. Trees, for example, start looking very solid and robust with side light. Diminishes the impression of color. Because there is so much contrast from side light, colors cant record consistently from light to shade. This doesnt mean that color is lost, just that color becomes less important than the light itself.
FIGURE 3.8
Side light shows off the shadows and textures of these dunes in White Sands National Monument in New Mexico.
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BACK LIGHT
Back light is light that is coming right at you when youre behind the camera. Its the most dramatic of lights, glancing off everything in front of you as it hits the backside of your subject. Back light scares many photographers because it can cause some problems, including are and exposure issues. Be bold and try it anyway! Sure, sometimes youll get some are, and not every exposure will be perfect, but youll also get dynamic and interesting landscapes that other photographers wont have. Back light does the following for a landscape: Creates separation. Back light helps you dene different parts of your scene by separating them visually. Tops of ridges, trees, and so forth pick up light that contrasts with the shadows in front of them, which creates visual separation. Changes its effect on shape and form. If the light is low, your landscape will have silhouettes that emphasize two-dimensional shapes. If the light is high, your landscape will gain highlights and shadows to feature three-dimensional forms. Brings out texture or minimizes it. When the backlight is high and skimming across the scene, texture will show up along the tops of the elements of your landscape. When its low and creating silhouettes, textures disappear. Makes translucent colors glow. The light shines through owers (Figure 3.9), spring leaves, and other colorful, translucent objects, giving the impression that theyre glowing when dark shadows are around them. Diminishes the impression of other colors. Solid colors dont always fare so well with back light. They may become hidden by texture or silhouette.
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FIGURE 3.9
Back light in Californias Montana de Oro State Park makes these owers glow and brings out their texture.
FRONT LIGHT
Front light (light that heads over your shoulder and hits the front of the subject as it lies in front of you) is the problem child for light on the landscape. It can be beautiful, but it can also be very ugly. Because it is hitting the front of the subject, shadows fall behind the subject, resulting in few distinctive shadows for your photograph. Texture and form may disappear. In the wrong front light, this just looks at and dull. The key to good front light is low, low, low (Figure 3.10). That means sunrise to midmorning at the latest, and then late afternoon to sunset. Midday front light is the worst sort of light you can use for a landscape. Because the sun is low in winter, you have the chance to photograph with low light through much of the day; conversely, the high light of summer really limits how long the light stays low.
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FIGURE 3.10
A low front light just before sunset shows off a landscape of saw grass, bald cypress, and slash pine in Floridas Everglades National Park.
Front light does the following for a landscape: Shows off shapes. Because shadows are less important with front light, shapes become more important, especially when you can show them off against a contrasting background, such as trees against the sky. Brings out color. Solid colors look their best with front light because the light is fully revealing them. One challenge is that very low light at sunrise or sunset will be so colored that the subject colors will be obscured. Makes objects look very solid. Even translucent objects look solid with front light.
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On most landscapes, top light is simply ugly (Figure 3.11). In addition, it tends to add an unwelcome bluish cast to the scene that makes the situation even worse. Summer is when most people are on vacation, out at midday at great locations, hoping to get a great shot. Unfortunately, they usually dont because of top lights problems. Most of the time the answer is to look for something other than a landscape to shoot. However, there are a few things you can do to work with top light: Look for something that catches the light and casts shadows. Cliffs being raked with a top light create a pattern of light that brings out texture and makes it act like a side light. Also, pay attention to shadow patterns under trees. Use a polarizing lter and emphasize a beautiful sky. A polarizing lter will cut down some of the blue haze of midday; plus, you can use it to bring out the clouds. Shoot in black and white. You can sometimes create contrasts in black and white that wont work in color. (You can nd more on black and white in Chapter 8.)
FIGURE 3.11
A midday top light is distinctly unattractive in this big Utah landscape.
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BEYOND SUNLIGHT
The color of daylight changes constantly from morning to night. Its affected both by the time of day (which relates to how high the sun is in the sky) and by the weather and atmosphere conditions. These color changes can be important aspects of your landscape photos because they offer uniquely photographic interpretations of mood and atmosphere for a landscape. In addition, they can give a strong feeling of time of day for the scene.
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Heres a look how the color of light changes throughout the day: Sunrise light is usually crisp and yellow to somewhat pink, with much less atmospheric color than a sunset (Figure 3.12). With more atmospheric haze or moisture in the air, the color can be more orange. Early morning light tends to be crisp and yellowish. Shadows have a distinctly blue cast to them all through the morning. This blue cast is strongest with a cloudless blue sky. As the sky gains clouds, some warmer sunlight is reected into the shadows. Midmorning light becomes less colored and more neutral. Then it starts to get bluish. Midday light tends to range from rather colorless to bluish. Afternoon light starts gaining color, usually shifting to a softer, warmer light than morning. A lot of this color is affected by how much haze or moisture is in the air. Late afternoon light tends to be softer-edged and orange. Shadows have a distinctly blue cast to them through the evening, but they tend to be less blue than morning shadows. Sunset light is usually soft-edged and more orange than sunrise light (Figure 3.13). Remember: Clouds will change the light, usually making it bluer, but the time of day and the thickness of the clouds will affect the color as well. Colors are affected more by time-of-day light with thin clouds than they are with thick clouds.
FIGURE 3.12
Sunrise in the Santa Monica Mountains of California gives a crisp light without the strong color of sunset.
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FIGURE 3.13
Sunset in Californias San Gabriel Mountains provides a strongly colored light that lls the entire image with color.
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FIGURE 3.14
This sunset was shot with white balance set to Cloudy, which tends to render sunsets with better color and with a warmth that we expect from a sunset shot.
FIGURE 3.15
The same sunset was shot with AWB, which removed much of the color and added a bluish cast.
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Second, AWB is inconsistent. Its designed to constantly change depending on the conditions. Unfortunately, when youre outside, AWB will recognize a change in the conditions when all you did was change focal length or shoot with a composition that includes more or less sky. That creates a problem because your photos will change in color even though the landscape hasnt changed. Finally, AWB on most cameras tends to give a bluish cast to outdoor scenes, especially in shade and under cloudy conditions. You can see it in the AWB sunset shot here, too (Figure 3.15). (It does make the sky look more like blue sky, but the sky doesnt really look like that during an intense sunset.) This bluish cast is really odd because, long ago, lm manufacturers discovered that people prefer slightly warmer renditions of a scene. We would have expected the camera manufacturers to work for a warm bias, if anything, rather than a bluish bias, but alas, that is not the case. This blue cast can wreak havoc with colors in a landscape because it gives them less saturation.
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Here are some ways to control the color of light with white balance: Match the conditions. Simply choose a white balance that ts the conditions, such as Daylight for daylight sun (Figure 3.16), Cloudy for cloudy conditions, or Shade for shade. Warm up the scene. Choose a white balance that creates a warmer feel than the condition match would do. For example, use Cloudy for daylight or Shade for cloudy. You may need to test this approachthe effect may look good at certain times of day but not others. Cool down the scene. Use Daylight for shade or Tungsten for sun. This approach can be effective with a moody scene, adding more mood. It can also make a winter landscape look even colder. Play with white balance. Try different settings in different conditions and see what you get. Dont be afraid to try something crazy, such as Fluorescent for sunset.
FIGURE 3.16
The easiest way to handle white balance is simply to match the conditions with the white balance choice, such as Daylight for daylight sun on this Eastern Sierra fall scene in California.
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TIP
Never use AWB for sunrise and sunset if you want the best colors. Were conditioned to expect a certain color for sunrise and sunset based on published photos that used a certain lm that gave a specic color. (Listen to Paul Simons Kodachrome if youre looking for proof.) Youll nd you get more dramatic, expected sunrise and sunset colors from Cloudy white balance.
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FIGURE 3.17
When the camera sees a dark scene like this shadowed small landscape in the redwoods, it doesnt see the scene as dark. Instead, it sees it as having too little light, so it overexposes the image, which washes out bright areas.
FIGURE 3.18
A camera wont see a bright morning fog like this one over Casco Bay in Maine as a bright fog; instead, it sees it as too-bright light, so it underexposes the image and makes it look gray and dingy.
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EXPOSURE MODES
Your camera comes with a number of choices for exposure called exposure modes. Each mode tells the camera to handle exposure in a different way. The exposure modes can be divided into two main categories: Manual and Auto. Manual exposure (M) is controlled by the photographer. In this mode, you examine the scene, look at what the camera or other meter is suggesting for exposure, and choose the aperture and shutter speed that you think are appropriate. Auto exposure is exposure that is controlled by the camera. The cameras metering system examines the scene and sets the camera for an appropriate exposure. There will be multiple modes of auto exposure on your camera: Program mode (P) has the camera choosing both shutter speed and aperture. Program mode is very limiting for landscape photography. Many cameras have special variations of Program modes for things like sports, close-ups, night, and even landscape. The challenge with these settings is that the camera is controlling all parts of the exposure, so you may not be getting the choices you really need for a scene. Shutter Priority mode (S or Tv) has the camera choosing the aperture after you select a shutter speed. This mode has limited use for landscape photography because youll rarely need a specic shutter speed (youre not trying to stop motion). Aperture Priority mode (A or Av) has the camera choosing the shutter speed after you select an aperture. This mode is the most useful autoexposure mode for landscape photography.
When your camera is challenged by exposure, there are two simple rules to follow: Never underexpose your scene. Never overexpose important bright areas. Heres a simple exposure technique to try when youre shooting: 1. Set your camera on Aperture Priority mode and choose an appropriate aperture. You can choose the right aperture based on what you need from depth of eld (see Chapter 5). Then you can change your exposure with the exposure compensation control on your camera. Give less (or minus) exposure immediately for dark scenes and more (or plus) for bright scenes. Start with a full step of exposure compensation for these scenes and increase it as needed based on what you nd from how your rst exposure affects highlights as shown on your LCD.
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2. Take a picture. Are the highlight warnings blinking on your LCD screen in Review mode? Change your exposure until they just disappear from the image, but no further. (Important: Bright sun and other bright spots in a photo will always have highlight warnings, so ignore them.) 3. Learn to read your histogram. It doesnt have to be hard. A histogram is a visual representation of the brightness values of all the pixels in your image. There is no right or wrong shape to the hills that make up this graphtheyll vary depending on the scene. What is important is that the histogram should have no large gaps at the right side (which indicates underexposure) and no chopped off hill at the right side (which indicates overexposure and lost detail). Adjust your exposure accordingly. 4. If you arent sure, just take the picture and check your LCD. You cant completely judge exposure by the look of a photo on the LCD, but you can check for highlight warnings and the right side of the histogram. n
Chapter 3 Assignments
Find the Direction of Light
For this rst assignment, you need to nd a small landscape that is well exposed to the sky and sun. Shoot early or late in the day. Avoid midday light. Shoot a series of ve to ten photos as you walk around that landscape, experiencing the light on the scene, as well as capturing images of it. Now compare those photos to see how the direction of light has affected your photos of the location.
Photograph Light
A great exercise that I guarantee will help you see the light is to go out and photograph the light. Take your camera outside and start looking for light as your subject! You dont need to care what the actual subject is. You dont even have to have a landscape. Youre just looking for and photographing light. This might mean a streak of light across a grassy eld, or maybe the glow of light that appears when the sun is behind a translucent tree.
Capture Shadows
Shadows are extremely important for dramatic light. The shadows themselves can create interesting shapes and forms or provide a background for the sunlit parts of the scene. Try photographing shadows without trying to capture anything else. Try a scene that has a spot of light on a key part of the landscape, while the rest of the scene is dark in shadow.
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Composition
STRUCTURING YOUR IMAGE TO COMMUNICATE ABOUT A LANDSCAPE
A lot of things have been written and discussed about composition for as long as people have made pictures, way before photography. Composition is simply about the organization of an image within the image frame, from edge to edge, but exactly how you organize a photo is not so simple. Ultimately, composition is about communication. What you include in your photo, what you exclude, and how you arrange whats in the frame tell a viewer what you think is important about a landscape. In this chapter, I cover many possibilities for composition. Youll learn why its so important to get things out of the middle, as well as when the rule of thirds helps (and when it doesnt). Youll learn about foregrounds and backgrounds, the importance of edges, and what to watch out for in distractions.
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The composition has some abstract qualities from the way the textures on the left and right create shapes that contrast with the water in the tidepool.
Because the tide had gone out, small tidepools formed in the sand. That, combined with patterns in the sand from wave action, is what makes the scene interesting.
This is a photograph about light, pattern, and texture on Floridas Atlantic Coast. It was shot before dawn, when there can be some beautiful light. (You never know what youll get until youre on-site, of course.) If I had waited until the sun rose in the sky, I wouldve missed this beautiful beach scene. The clear sky and slight clouds at the horizon resulted in a much less interesting sunrise than the time just before it.
The color of the sky balances the color of the water in the tidepool.
I used a wide-angle lens, but I didnt step back to show the whole falls. I got in close to emphasize its drama.
I shot with a fast shutter speed to reveal the pattern in the water and add that to the composition.
The sky was blank blue, so I minimized it in the image, showing only enough to outline the trees.
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FIGURE 4.1
A glorious sunrise over Utahs LaSalle Mountains doesnt need a big chunk of black mountains covering the bottom half of the photo. The photograph is about the sky, and its connection to the mountains needs only a sliver of mountains across the bottom of the photo.
FIGURE 4.2
The rule of thirds starts by dividing the picture horizontally into thirds.
FIGURE 4.3
In this image of sunrise over Californias Santa Monica Mountains, strong horizontal elements of the picture line up closely with the rule of thirds.
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The rule of thirds goes further by dividing the picture into thirds from left to right (Figure 4.4). This results in two vertical lines at the divisions, which become useful places to put strong verticals in a landscape. Which side you put your photographic element on will depend a lot on the scene, but because we look at things from left to right in the Western culture, there is a difference in the way that a composition looks when the strong element is on the left versus the right. In Figure 4.5, there is a strong visual element on the right which creates a dynamic image that goes against our Western way of looking.
FIGURE 4.4
The rule of thirds then divides the picture vertically into thirds.
FIGURE 4.5
Here the strong vertical of Balanced Rock in Arches National Park lines up closely with the rule of thirds.
Next, put the two horizontal lines and two vertical lines together over the picture (Figure 4.6). They intersect at four points and are very strong positions for composition (Figure 4.7). Landscapes often have things that are larger than these points, such as a horizon or Balanced Rock, but when there is something that has a strong presence in the picture that can work at one of these points, this can create an attractive composition.
FIGURE 4.6
Now the horizontal and vertical lines come together to help with placement of a strong visual element in the landscape.
FIGURE 4.7
In this small-scale landscape, the yellow maple leaf contrasts strongly with the late fall landscape and is placed at one of the intersections of the horizontal and vertical lines.
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A lot of the ideas about composition come from the art world where theyve been rened for centuries. The rule of thirds has been taught to painters and other artists for a very long time because it works. However, there are two challenges that come from the rule of thirds: You lose the subject. If you start paying too much attention to the rules, you can lose sight of the actual subject. The rules become more important than whats being painted or photographed. Photography is not painting. Art forms like painting and sketching are very different from photography. They start with a blank canvas where everything is added to the composition as appropriate. Lets look at those two ideas in a little more detail because they have a strong effect on composition. I once had a student in one of my workshops show an interesting landscape photograph for a critique. This image had about one-third sky, one-third trees, and one-third ground with grass and garbage. Thats rightthe bottom part of the picture actually had trash in it that didnt seem to t the rest of the picture at all. So, I asked the student why she had included the trash in the composition. She said she had to because of the rule of thirds! That little story points out how the subject can be lost when distractions take away from the subject. Sometimes people try so hard to nd a rule of thirds for their landscape that they dont fully see the subject itself. Its easy to miss important things that should be in the photograph simply because they dont t the rule of thirds. Its also important to understand that photography is not like painting or sketching. As landscape photographers, we have to deal with whats in front of our lenses (Figure 4.8). We cant simply place rocks, owers, and trees where we want, as we could if we were working with a blank canvas. Sure, some photographers use Photoshop to change a scene, but even that is difcult to do compared to what the painter does in creating his or her work. Sometimes a scene just needs a different composition. The sky might be so fabulous and so outstanding that all you need is the barest sliver of landscape with it (Figure 4.9). On the other hand, the sky might be awful, so youll need to show only the top edge of the landscape so that the viewer can understand something about the place. I like to look at a scene and try to understand whats truly important about the scene, not whats important about my art technique. Then I compose the image to show off whats important about the scene, making sure Im using my composition to clearly communicate this for a viewer.
FIGURE 4.8
Storm clouds breaking over the Columbia River between Washington and Oregon makes a dramatic landscape that isnt easily put into the rule of thirds. The contrasts of land, clouds, and light are what matters.
FIGURE 4.9
The landscape here at Cades Cove in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park would be pure black against the sunset, so there is little need to include more land than needed because that would mean loss of the sky.
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FIGURE 4.10
This photograph is about tall trees in the redwood forests of Northern California, and the composition is designed to reect that.
Too many photographers try to throw everything into their compositions of the landscape. They see this beautiful scene in front of them and try to capture the entire scene in the photo. The image is often disappointing because you cant put an entire scene into a small picture. You have to decide whats truly important about that scene and then make sure that your photograph reects that. Whats your photograph about? With experience, youll answer this question very quickly and intuitively. But if youve never asked yourself this question before, you should stop, pause, and really think about it. Your landscape wont be moving so if you take a moment to gure out what your picture is really about and what you want to emphasize about it, youll nd that your composition will come together much more readily.
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Relationships are important, whether youre talking about life or landscape composition! As soon as you start thinking about things like the rule of thirds, youre thinking about visual relationships within the image frame. But visual relationships go beyond simply getting things out of the middle of your picture. How picture elements within your composition relate to each other affects how clear your composition is and how well it will communicate to your viewer. Painters learn all sorts of ways that these relationships can help structure and dene the composition, and these techniques apply to photography as well. For example, leading lines are strong visual lines that lead the eye through the photograph. Diagonals and S-curves are other ways of dening a composition with lines that help the viewer understand the relationships in a picture. Balance is something that you hear a lot about with composition. Balance is about the relationships of visual elements within your landscape photograph. The rule of thirds uses a very simple sort of balance, where two-thirds of the image visually balance one-third of the image or a subject at an intersection of the thirds balances the space around it. Balance is much more than simply the rule of thirds. Images will look in balance or out of balance based on how the objects within your composition relate to each other. This concept can be hard to explain because its so visual. One thing that can really help you with balance is to look at your image on your LCD as a photograph. Do strong visual elements of your image overpower the rest of the picture? That can put the composition out of balance. Do strong visual elements seem to have something balancing them in another part of the picture? That can help put the composition into balance.
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All this comes down to how you structure and dene a composition to control the viewers eye (Figure 4.11). In Figure 4.11, there is a strong relationship between the simple bottom of the photo and the highly detailed top part of trees. Then, as you look closer, notice the relationship of the background trees to the larger, more dened leaves, which also create a visual relationship to the falls. In addition, there is a strong relationship to the rocks on the right, both to the falls and to the trees. Remember: As soon as you get key parts of your picture out of the center, youre encouraging your viewer to look over the entire photograph. How you create visual relationships within that photograph affects the way that people look at your image.
FIGURE 4.11
The falls in Tennessees Frozen Head State Park have a strong relationship with their surroundings in this image.
FIGURE 4.12
This image is totally about the relationship of foreground to background with a strong middle ground in between.
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Landscapes dont always look their best at our eye level. Changing your height to the landscape changes relationships in the composition. Sometimes even a slight change in height, whether thats lower or higher, will make a huge difference in how much shows up in the foreground, middle ground, and background of the picture. Getting a higher view like Ansel Adams did might help you get better foregroundto-background relationship (Figure 4.13). Sometimes that, indeed, does give you the most interesting view of your landscape. Look aroundyou dont need a platform on top of your car. Sometimes a rise of only a couple feet can change what appears in your foreground. That can help you get rid of something thats distracting in the foreground or create more of a visual distance between foreground, middle ground, and background. If conditions are right, you can even do a neat little trick with your camera and tripod to get a higher angle. Turn your self-timer on, and then hold your camera and tripod over your head to gain some height. This works pretty well with digital because you can quickly look at what you shot and decide if you need to change the positioning of the camera and tripod head to get a better photograph. It does require shooting with a fast enough shutter speed that you dont have problems with camera movement during exposure, though.
FIGURE 4.13
Climbing to the top of some rockcovered hills gave a great perspective on the Buttermilk Area near Bishop, California.
Getting a higher view is not necessarily the only way to change these relationships. Sometimes its more interesting to get a lower view, especially if you want to emphasize something unique in the foreground (Figure 4.14). So often, youll see groups of photographers at a scenic location with their cameras all set up on tripods at eye level. Thats convenient, but it isnt necessarily the best way to compose the scene. Sometimes the camera needs to be as low to the ground as possible. You also can do another neat little trick with your camera in some locations where you think a low angle might be really great, but you cant actually get there. Instead of raising the camera and tripod up high, try it down low. Ive put my camera on selftimer and then held my tripod over the edge of a bridge to get a lower angle. The point is that you need to look for angles as a way of affecting your foreground, middle ground, and background relationships. And go beyond height. Often it helps to move left or right, either avoiding certain things in the foreground or adding other interesting foreground elements to your composition.
FIGURE 4.14
A low angle emphasizes the penstemon owers in the foreground of this stark Yosemite National Park granite dome.
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FIGURE 4.15
In this desert scene in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area outside of Las Vegas, the cacti are separated from the edge of the frame to create a distinct visual group that then relates to the background.
FIGURE 4.16
For this image, the cacti are deliberately cut by the edge of the composition, creating a dramatic and bold look at this stark landscape.
FIGURE 4.17
This is the same photo as Figure 4.15, but now its cropped to show an awkward relationship of the cacti to the edge.
FIGURE 4.18
Is this landscape lled with California poppies? By using the edges to cut into the patch of poppies, the photo gives that impression.
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FIGURE 4.19
A bit of out-of-focus branch along the edge of the photo is a big distraction for this scene.
Long ago, I had an instructor who was very tough about looking at edges. I had to learn to always scan the edges of my image as I took the picture or I would denitely hear about it. Edges are frequently where those distractions come in, but as you read earlier, edges also are important for the way they interact with the overall composition. You can teach yourself to quickly scan the edges of your photograph and make this a habit. Distractions for your composition dont just come from the edges. Any really bright or contrasty area, for example, is going to attract attention from your viewer. If you dont want the viewers attention in that part of the picture, thats a problem. Another distraction for composition is a sign. Sometimes photographers will deliberately include signs from a location in the picture to identify the location, or a sign creeps into the composition because the photographer wanted to show a big area. Signs are a problem because theyre designed to attract attention. And anytime you have a sign in a photograph, viewers will try to read it. If you need a sign for a location, focus on the sign and dont try to include it with the landscape.
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Ive watched photographers come to a beautiful landscape in a national park and simply set up their cameras and tripods in the most direct view of the scene. Simply setting up in the most obvious spot is why so much landscape photography looks the same. You have a unique view of the worldI believe that everybody does. Yes, I understand that some photographers like to go out and trophy-hunt landscapes. They just want to go to famous landscapes and take their own pictures of that landscape. I dont have a problem with that basic idea. I love to go to beautiful locations that Ive seen in other photographs, too. But I have a unique way of looking at the landscape and so do you. There are things that impress us about a particular landscape that may or may not impress someone else. I think this unique point of view is important. Think about this: Not everyone will go to the landscapes that you photograph. As a landscape photographer, youre showing off the world that excites you. You and I are the eyes of so many other people. If all we do is duplicate images that other photographers have taken, our eyes and our points of view are diminished. The world has lost the opportunity to see something special that you and I can offer. I know, you might be thinking, But Im just a simple photographerIm not a pro. What difference does it make? I think it makes all the difference in the world. You see the world differently from the way I see it, differently from the way anyone else
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sees it. And your point of view is valid and important because it enriches all of us when we have a diversity of views of our landscapes. It makes you and the landscapes more important. So, just being aware that you have the potential of seeing this landscape with fresh eyes will help you start seeing your compositions better. Your choices about composition dene both how you see the landscape for your photograph and how any viewers of your photograph will see that landscape. Youre inuencing other peoples views of the world.
Chapter 4 Assignments
Get Out of the Middle
A great way to help you avoid middle compositions is to go out and spend some time photographing a scene where every picture keeps important stuff out of the middle of the photograph. Work at it. Consciously place things in your composition that are away from the center of the frame. As you do this, watch your background, too. Be sure that you dont have a horizon going through the middle when youve worked so hard to put a tree on one side of the image or the other.
Big Foreground
One way to help you explore the relationships of foreground to the rest of the picture is to nd a location with a very interesting foreground. Take a series of pictures of this scene as you move closer to or farther away from that foreground. What youre trying to do is change the relationship of that foreground to the background because of the size of the foreground in your photo. You may need to use a wide-angle lens when you get very close to your foreground.
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The sun stays at the horizon very briey as it rises, so you have to shoot quickly as the colors change.
The nearly black foreground ridge helps give a three-dimensional quality to the image.
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The color is intensied by the telephoto lens because it visually compresses the distance and isolates the color.
The telephoto compresses the appearance of distance and makes the ridges look closer to the bushes on the rst ridge.
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This is another photo from the same area of the Santa Monica Mountains to offer a distinctly different view of the place. Here, I used a very wide-angle lens to expand my view of the landscape and to give this wonderful feeling of space. In this image, the distant ridge is half a mile away, at the most. In the previous photo, the distant ridges truly are distant, many miles away. These two images show the expressive power of lens choice.
The lower part of the scene, the more distant part of the landscape, is kept deliberately very low in the image to give a more expansive feeling to the space.
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The sky is not simply sky in this image. Its also an expansive space and color that contrasts with the land elements of the image.
The early light helps dene the textures and forms of the landscape.
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PERSPECTIVE
Perspective has long been an important part of landscape painting and other art. Its well understood in the art world, but its less often discussed in photography. And yet perspective is a very important part of landscape photography. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, perspective is the art of representing things in the picture so that they seem to have height, width, depth, and relative distance. Basically, this means that objects in a picture have a feeling of dimension and appear to be in some sort of spatial arrangement, which is a challenge for any two-dimensional medium. You can quickly see perspective when you look at size relationships of things in a landscape. If two rocks are the same size and theyre right next to each other, theyll look to be the same size. If you move one of those rocks away from you, the closer rock will now appear bigger than the more distant rock. The farther you move the rock away, the smaller it appears. The relationship between sizes is an important way that we discern distance when were at a landscape, and its something that helps us dene distance within the photograph. The classic example of this comes from telephone poles alongside a road heading off into the distance. We know that these telephone poles are the same size, but we also know that theyre heading off into the distance because they appear to get smaller. Another aspect of perspective is something called receding lines. Imagine youre standing in the middle of some railroad tracks and looking toward the distance. The tracks where youre standing will have a certain width, but they quickly narrow to a point as they extend toward the distance. Of course, the tracks are always the same distance apart, but they appear to narrow to a point because of the way they recede into the distance. Perspective goes beyond receding lines and relative size for the photographer. If you get closer to a foreground object, such as owers (Figure 5.1), that foreground object will appear much larger. It also will look like that object is closer to you relative to the rest of the scene (because, of course, it is), but whats important about this is that it makes more distant things look farther away.
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FIGURE 5.1
In this image of Black-eyed Susans in a Minnesota prairie, the owers appear to change in size from foreground to background because of perspective.
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That creates a at perspective because you dont see things changing in depth. For example, if you photograph a cliff that crosses left to right in front of you at the same distance, there is no feeling of perspective with that cliff because it doesnt go off into the distance (Figure 5.2). On the other hand, if you change your camera position so that you can see the landscape going off into the distance (Figure 5.3), you get a distinct perspective change. The same thing would happen with a stand of trees, a river, a band of owers, and so forth.
FIGURE 5.2
This cliff along Lake Superiors North Shore in Minnesota has a at perspective because its all at a similar distance from the camera position.
FIGURE 5.3
Heres a different view showing rocks at dawns rst light along Lake Superiors North Shore. This landscape has a deep perspective because there is a strong change from foreground to background as the rocks go off into the distance.
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There is no right or wrong for dealing with this aspect of perspective. What do you want from your photograph and your scene? You create a atter-looking, sometimes abstract-looking composition when youre at on to your subject so that there is no feeling of going off into the distance. On the other hand, you gain that feeling of depth and space when you change your position so that you can see something from foreground to background thats changing as it goes into the distance.
FIGURE 5.4
By showing the close parts of this scene with a wide-angle lens, I was able to give a strong feeling of depth going back to the photographer at Kelso Dunes in the Mojave National Preserve in California.
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FIGURE 5.5
In this image, I used a telephoto lens to work with a foregroundbackground relationship that was farther away from me. The distance makes a difference, as does the use of a telephoto lens.
It is important to understand that this perspective change doesnt mean simply using a wide-angle or telephoto lens. There must be a relative change in camera position in order for you to gain the change of perspective that occurs from getting closer to or farther away from your foreground. From one camera position, for example, you may be able to use a telephoto lens to create a atter perspective on a distance scene. A wide-angle lens from that same position wont show you the same scene in your camera so you dont get a change in perspective on that scene.
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Ive seen so many photographers at great landscape locations simply set up their cameras in one place and then zoom until they get the pictures they like. Theyre missing such a great opportunity to control the perspective and depth of the image! To get started in thinking differently about your use of focal length, think of it this way: Use a wide-angle lens up close. Use a wide-angle lens when youre up close to a foreground thats important to your composition (Figure 5.6). Use a telephoto lens from a distance. Use a telephoto lens when youre far away (Figure 5.7). Look for perspective changes. If you start looking for perspective changes because of your camera position and focal length, youll nd that youll have a very different look with even a single zoom lens by simply getting in close with the wide-angle setting and then backing up with the telephoto setting.
FIGURE 5.6
I was within feet of the rocks of the shoreline of this Maine ocean bay. I used a wide-angle lens to help capture a deep perspective.
FIGURE 5.7
For this photo, I used a telephoto lens, but I was miles from the closest part of this dawn scene in Utahs Canyonlands National Park. Even though the ridges are much farther apart than the shorelines from Maine, the perspective is attened, making them visually closer.
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So often, photographers simply use a wide-angle lens to show a lot of the scene and a telephoto lens to show just a little piece of the scene. Theres nothing wrong with that, but thats about cropping your scene for compositionyou can get the same effect if you crop your image in the computer. It isnt a perspective change because you arent actually changing any perspective in the picture. The perspective stays the same whether the image is cropped or not. (Of course, I dont recommend that you simply crop instead of zooming because youll have a quality loss the more you crop.)
FIGURE 5.8
The foreground dominates this desert landscape in the Mojave National Preserve because of my use of a very wide-angle lens and because I put the camera down low to the foreground.
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When youre using a wide-angle lens, make sure that you dont inadvertently pick up too much sky. Big, spacious skies can be very interesting if the skies deserve the attention. But often, its that dramatic relationship of foreground to background that makes a wide-angle lens so effective with landscapes. Telephoto lenses tend to deemphasize foreground (Figure 5.9). They strongly emphasize distance relationships, compressing them so that distances dont seem as great. Its possible to have foreground in a shot with a telephoto, but there are some challenges, including depth of eld. One effective way of using a foreground with a telephoto lens is to use that foreground as a frame for the rest of the scene.
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FIGURE 5.9
In this image of Utahs Bryce Canyon National Park, there is no real foreground. Everything looks to be at about the same distance from the camera even though it actually isnt. The telephoto lens creates this type of relationship from foreground to background.
As you change focal length from wide angle to telephoto, watch how the emphasis on the foreground starts to decline, no matter what you do. Be aware of that and use it as a way of controlling your composition.
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Briey, it works like this: Wide-angles shrink backgrounds. Telephotos magnify backgrounds. Of course, you can gure that out intuitively. Put on a wide-angle lens, and the whole scene gets smaller so that more of it ts into your image area. Change to a telephoto focal length and the whole scene gets bigger so that less of it ts into your image area. Now add in the idea of perspectivethe idea that foreground and background relationships change and matter. When you decide that you like a foreground, change your camera position to affect the relative size of the background. Put on a wide-angle lens and get close to that foreground. The foreground can stay the same size, but the background will shrink dramatically. On the other hand, if you put on a telephoto lens and back up so that the foreground is about the same size as it was to start, your background will look dramatically larger and youll see less of that background. This is why I nd results like what you see in Figures 5.10 and 5.11 so fascinating. You can see from Figure 5.10 that this is at the edge of a big drop into a canyon. You cant get physically closer to the rock formations in the background. But in Figure 5.11, you still see the foreground (the rocks at the lower left are an extension of the same rocks as in Figure 5.10), but the background looks like its much closer because it has been magnied so much in relation to the foreground.
FIGURE 5.10
You can see that its impossible to get any closer to the background in this image of Canyonlands National Park.
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FIGURE 5.11
Yet, in this image taken just to the right of Figure 5.10, the background is magnied as if I were much closer to it. These two images clearly show how lenses change the visual size of the background.
Simply showing the background of both shots without foreground wouldnt give you this impression. By including the foreground in both images, the distance relationshipsthe perspectivechange because of the change in focal length.
DEPTH OF FIELD
Another important control for landscape photography is depth of eld, the amount of sharpness in a scene, from close to the camera into the distance away from the camera (Figure 5.12). Its sharpness in depth. (It isnt called depth of sharpness because depth of sharpness is a technical term used in optics that means something different.) Many photographers know that more depth of eld comes from a smaller aperture. Using a smaller aperture is one way of getting depth of eld, but it isnt always the best choice for the landscape photographer. Automatically setting something like f/16 or f/22 wont necessarily give you the best results. Depth of eld is affected by three main things: Aperture (f-stop) Distance to the subject Focal length
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FIGURE 5.12
The deep depth of eld in this scene from Nevadas Valley of Fire State Park holds sharpness from foreground to background.
APERTURE
Your choice of aperture has a big inuence on depth of eld in the picture. However, its important to keep in mind that there are times when changing your f-stop will have no effect on the depth of eld of the landscape. (Ill explain this concept in the sections on distance and focal length.) An f-stop represents an opening inside the lens that allows light to pass through the lens. Technically, aperture is the actual opening inside the lens, whereas f-stop is the label for that aperture. However, in common usage, the terms aperture and f-stop are used interchangeably. On all but a few specialized lenses, you can change f-stops to control how much light is allowed to go through the lens. The sharpness of a lens is affected by how it controls the light going through the lens and is inuenced by the f-stop.
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Exposure is based on the relationship between f-stop and shutter speed. The relationship is direct: If you add more light through the lens (with a larger aperture), you have to shorten the time the light hits the sensor or lm (shutter speed) to keep exposure consistent. If you limit the light coming through the lens with a smaller aperture, you have to increase the time the light hits the sensor or lm. Shutter speed is fairly intuitive. You choose it based on using a setting thats fast enough to stop action, slow enough to blur action, or to balance an f-stop that you want. Unfortunately, aperture isnt quite so intuitive. Because f-stop seems to have a strange set of numbers, many photographers, understandably, get confused by them. Small numbers are used for large apertures and large numbers are used for small apertures. A big aperture (small number) lets through more light and gives less depth of eld. A small aperture (big number) gives less light and more depth of eld. Heres a set of f-stops from f/2 to f/22: f/2 f/2.8 f/4 f/5.6 f/8 f/11 f/16 f/22
Each of those is a full stop difference. The largest aperture is f/2, and the smallest is f/22. As you move from f/2 to f/22, you halve the light coming through the lens with each step. Move from f/22 to f/2 and you double the light coming through the lens with each step.
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FIGURE 5.13
Nothing in this scene of Washingtons Olympic Mountains is close to the camera, so any midrange f-stop gives the same results as a smaller f-stop.
FOCAL LENGTH
Depth of eld is strongly affected by focal length. You can even see it on your lens if your lens has distance markings. With a wide-angle lens, for example, youll nd that there are no distance markings beyond 10 feet or so. Thats because once you go beyond such distances, focus and depth of eld dont change much, regardless of the aperture used. On the other hand, with a telephoto lens, youll nd distance markings that go out to as far as 50 feet because now you have to focus much further out to reach this point of little change for focus and depth of eld. Remember: Telephoto focal lengths have less depth of eld at any given setting, while wider focal lengths have more depth of eld. This is true even if youre using a zoom lens. Your zoom at its wide-angle settings will have more apparent depth of eld than the same lens at its telephoto settings. You can use that information to control depth of eld in combination with the setting of f-stops and your distance to the subject (Figure 5.14). The important thing to keep in mind is that small apertures will give you more depth of eld. But wide-angle focal lengths have inherently more depth of eld for an image regardless of aperture, compared to a telephoto. You often can get away with a wider aperture with a wide-angle lens than you can with a telephoto and still get a lot of depth of eld.
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FIGURE 5.14
This spring landscape of skunk cabbage in Maine was shot with a very wide-angle lens, which gave an interesting perspective and deep depth of eld.
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for f-stops less than f/8. This doesnt mean that you wont get deep depth of eld. The very small, compact cameras use a very small lens, with a very short focal length, and the shorter the focal length, the more depth of eld that you get. In addition, the lenses on these cameras are so small that f-stops get really tiny for settings such as f/16so tiny that they diffract (bend) the light and cause unsharp images. Thats why you rarely see f/16 on these cameras.
FIGURE 5.15
Deep depth of eld is important for this summer landscape of yellow lupine in Northern California. It allows you to see the foreground plant, as well as location details equally.
In fact, diffraction effects have always caused problems with lens designers. Over the years, 35mm-camera lenses often have been made with very small apertures, yet those apertures often are more marketing gimmicks then usable controls. The lenses simply arent sharp at something like f/32. This isnt to say that it isnt possible to make a lens with such an f-stop and have it be sharp; its just not easy to do that with focal lengths used for formats of 35mm size and smaller. Dont assume that your lenses work well at very small apertures even though you can set them to such apertures. Ive had lenses that were sharp up to f/16 and then signicantly lost sharpness when smaller apertures were used. I have a Sony lens for my NEX camera that is excellent to f/16. Even though it has a setting of f/32, that f-stop looks bad and is unusable. The only way of knowing how this applies to your gear is to test your lenses and see what they can do (Figures 5.16 and 5.17).
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FIGURE 5.16
At the small size these images are reproduced here, you dont see much difference between them. The image on the left was shot at f/16; the one on the right at f/32.
FIGURE 5.17
These images dont have to be enlarged by much in order to see the difference. The f/32 image on the right is signicantly softer than the f/16 image on the left.
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FIGURE 5.18
I shot this image of a Maine stream in twilight 20 minutes after sunset with a shutter speed of 30 seconds. That gave an interesting and attractive look to the water.
Higher ISO settings are important, but they also come with the challenge of adding noise to your photograph. Still, if you really have to have depth of eld and stop a moving subject, you may have no choice other than to use a higher ISO setting.
WHERE TO FOCUS
Depth of eld starts one-third in front of your focus point and extends two-thirds behind. If you simply allow your camera to focus all by itself, it may focus on something inappropriate in your scene. I usually try to decide whats the most important part of the scenethats what I want to be absolutely sure is in focus (Figure 5.19). This becomes more critical the closer you are to your focus point. Sometimes I try focusing on a point and then use the Depth of Field Preview button on the camera to see where depth of eld is working in the image. I know some people have trouble with the Depth of Field Preview, so you also can take a picture and look at the playback of that image to see if the depth of eld covers the important parts of the subject.
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FIGURE 5.19
The most important part of this landscape is the large boulder in the foreground, so I focused on it. I then used a wide focal length and a small aperture to ensure that the background also would be in focus.
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HYPERFOCAL DISTANCE
You may hear the term hyperfocal distance. This is a distance that you can set your focus to that will give you the maximum depth of eld going to innity at a given aperture with a particular focal length. You used to be able to use the idea of hyperfocal distance with all lenses that had a depth-of-eld scale engraved in the barrel of the lens, but lenses arent built that way anymore. The only way that you can get a hyperfocal distance is to use a chart. This chart is even available as an app for an iPhone. Hyperfocal distance may be a little too techie for most photographers (I nd it a nuisance to work with), but its a way of dealing with focus and deep depth of eld.
Chapter 5 Assignments
Do the Perspective Shufe
Find a landscape with a prominent foreground and background. Now take a series of photographs of this scene where you alternate between a wide focal length and a telephoto focal length for each shot. But dont stop by simply zooming from wide to telephoto and back. Instead, change your camera position. Get closer to the foreground with your wide-angle lens and then move back with your telephoto. Try to keep the same foreground even though the background changes. Then look at how much the background is changing in your photos.
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Sky
WORKING TO BRING OUT THE BEST IN THE SKY
Landscapes are rarely just about the land. Often, the sky is as important as the rocks, mountains, trees, water, or whatever else is below the horizon. This isnt simply having something interesting in the sky, though that can help. Its also about a feeling of place. The sky interacts visually with the ground, affecting shadows and colors. The sky doesnt exist in isolation from the ground. Thats why when people add a sky to a photo in Photoshop, it often doesnt look right. In addition, weather isnt the same across the country, so skies vary dramatically over landscapes in different locations, giving those landscapes their unique visual nature. The sky over North Dakota will be different from the sky along the coast of California, which will be different from the sky over the Everglades in Florida, and so on. In this chapter, Ill explore skies and landscapes so you can get better skies with your photos. Ill ll you in on how to bring out the best in skies, how to work with them in your composition, and when a sky just isnt worth the effort.
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Sometimes landscape photography is like shooting sports. In this scene, the clouds changed constantly, requiring me to be alert and constantly taking pictures. One shot isnt enough when the scene is changing.
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The image here is about a mood created by weather and clouds as much as its about the trees and rocky mountain.
Because everything is at a considerable distance from the camera, I could shoot at f/11. This allowed a faster shutter speed to ensure no camera movement during exposure, even though there was some wind causing vibration of the camera and lens on the tripod.
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The light also gives dimension and form to the clouds in the sky.
The shapes and textures of the trees are similar to the shapes and textures of many of the clouds, which also ties the top and bottom parts of the photo together.
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The light makes the yellow leaves almost glow because of their contrast with the shadows around them.
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FIGURE 6.1
A breaking storm offered great clouds for this evening scene in Floridas Everglades National Park.
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Bright areas along edges: One thing to remember is that very bright and highcontrast areas will always attract the viewers eye away from other parts of the picture (Figure 6.3). If bright clouds are along the edges of the composition but nowhere else, theyll be a distraction and keep the viewer from experiencing the landscape the way you composed it. Dull clouds: Dramatic clouds can be a great addition to a landscape photograph. But dull, ill-dened clouds create an unappealing backdrop for your landscape. Days with such clouds also give poor landscape light.
FIGURE 6.2
A blank sky takes away from this oak-tree landscape in Central California.
FIGURE 6.3
The bright cloud at the lower left is distracting when compared to the rest of the photograph of a mountain in Utahs Zion National Park.
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FIGURE 6.4
This pastoral landscape in southern England needs no sky, which is a good thing since the original scene had a dull, gray, formless sky.
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FIGURE 6.5
A cypress swamp in southern Florida at sunrise looks good with most of the image, a glorious sky.
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You can even totally remove sky from a landscape photograph. Sometimes the landscape just looks better that way. However, youll often nd that having even just a little sliver of sky, especially if its toward one corner or the other of the composition, will give the composition a greater feeling of depth (Figure 6.6). The great color landscape photographer of the mid-twentieth century Eliot Porter often shot intimate landscapes on cloudy days where the sky was not attractive, but he often would include a little piece of sky somewhere near the top of the image because that gave the composition a feeling of depth. Of course, there are all sorts of compositions in between these two extremes. The important thing is to look at your scene and get a feel for how the sky relates to the landscape for your particular photograph. Digital photography is great in this situation because you can look at a playback of your shot on your LCD to decide if the sky is right for your composition.
FIGURE 6.6
A small sliver of sky gives this ower landscape at Point Dume, California, more depth.
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FIGURE 6.7
Camera meters will underexpose a scene like this one of sky over Tennessees Great Smoky Mountains National Park. You have to be sure to add enough exposure to make the clouds truly bright but not so much that subtle colors are lost.
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If your camera has exposure highlight warnings, look for them to appear in clouds in the sky, and then give slightly less exposure until they disappear. However, it can be misleading if your LCD shows no highlight warnings at all because that may mean that you dont have enough exposure. Both a severely underexposed image and an image almost at the right exposure, for example, will not show highlight warnings, yet only one of these will give a good exposure for the landscape. Unfortunately, there are scenes that are impossible to photograph with the right exposure. There is no right exposure because the range of brightness is beyond what the camera is capable of. Sometimes you can use high-dynamic range (HDR) photography to handle these conditions (see Chapter 9), but that doesnt always work. Sometimes you just have to look for a different composition. One reason pros shoot early and late in the day is to deal with this challenge. Early and late times include moments when the sky and ground balance out in certain directions, but you have to be aware of this and look for it. Still, sunrise and sunset bring unique challenges for exposure. When youre shooting toward the sun in these conditions, its impossible to expose for both the sky and the ground at the same time (unless youre shooting HDR). Your best bet is to expose for the sky to be sure that it looks good, and then nd something in the landscape that can be used as a silhouette against the sky (Figure 6.8). This doesnt mean that your landscape has to ll the image with the silhouette. You can emphasize the sunrise or sunset sky and just use a little bit of the landscape to give the photograph a sense of place. Having the sun in the sky can be dramatic and interesting, but the bright light of the sun can overinuence your cameras metering system so that you dont get the right exposure. You need to increase the exposure from what the meter wants to give to the sky with sun in itbut exactly how much will depend entirely on the sky and the conditions. You can try metering the sky without the sun and using that exposure with a manual setting. Sometimes the best thing is just to take a series of photographs, changing your exposure each time so that you have a variety of images to select from when you get back to the computer.
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FIGURE 6.8
The palm trees are not a large part of this sunset landscape, but they denitely tell you this is a Florida location.
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FIGURE 6.9
Courthouse Rock in Arches National Park is a dramatic and well-photographed landscape feature. The clouds in this image allowed me to capture a different look for this place.
FIGURE 6.10
The clouds in this sky over the Pacic Ocean near Los Angeles, California, had great potential, and it was the polarizing lter that really helped them stand out.
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A polarizing lter offers another benet for landscape photographers besides affecting skies. It can remove glare. By removing glare from leaves, for example, a landscape featuring a forest can have a richer green. You also can remove glare from wateralthough you need to be careful (otherwise, very clear water can seem to disappear). An important way of dealing with clouds is to work on your image in the computer. This isnt about Photoshop or digital manipulationits exactly what Ansel Adams did when he worked on his beautiful images in the darkroom. This is a traditional darkroom technique for photography, and its very important because the camera simply doesnt always capture clouds the way we see them.
FIGURE 6.11
The clouds for the opening shot in this chapter were processed in Vivesa 2 with the Structure slider.
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Chapter 6 Assignments
Silhouettes at Sunset
Silhouettes at sunset are such an important part of landscape photography with skies. This is something that you really should experiment with before there is an outstanding sunset in front of you. Find a landscape with some trees that can be clearly seen against a sunset sky. Shoot a series of compositions of those trees against the sunset. Use your zoom lens to make the trees big in the frame in some pictures and then just a small part of the scene at the bottom of the composition. Try all sorts of positions for those trees against the sunset.
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The dark grasses in the foreground are important in the composition because they help add depth to the scene.
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I used a telephoto lens to compress the distance and get a larger sun for this picture.
I started shooting as the sun started coming up and continued shooting as it began to rise. You dont always know where the best spot for the sun is going to be in the composition, so you have to keep shooting.
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Prairies once covered most of the middle part of the United States. There are still remnants there, but often you have to look for them. I think prairies are an important landscape to consider because theyve traditionally been such a large part of our country. This is Schaefer Prairie in central Minnesota.
Because the light was right, I could use a moderately fast shutter speed to ensure that there wasnt a sharpness problem from blowing grass.
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The sky is important to the picture so I used a graduated lter to darken it so that the exposure would hold detail in both the top and bottom parts of the picture.
The prairie grass is fairly undifferentiated visually, so I needed something to dene the foreground. I used the Monarda owers to create a strong foreground.
I used a full-frame sheye lens for an extreme wide-angle perspective. ISO 100 1/90 sec. f/16 8mm (Four Thirds)
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Here are some possibilities to consider: Key subject details: In some landscapes, youll see certain details that just jump out at you as being key to understanding the landscape (Figure 7.1). For example, there might be a unique grouping of rocks that shows up strongly in the light that can be used to dene the image. What is unique to the location: Many landscapes have certain aspects to them that clearly identify the landscape as something unique and special (Figure 7.2). This might mean a certain type of tree, such as an evergreen in a northern landscape that would never show up in a southern landscape. Or it may be a certain type of ower thats typical of this landscape that needs to be shown in order to feature the landscape as what it is. Light: Light itself can be an interesting aspect of a landscape. Ansel Adams was known for photographing the light, as well as the landscape, in many of his images. Often, photographers get hung up on the subject and dont always see the light as well as we should. Yet that light may be exactly what gives the image a special quality.
ISO 100 1/60 sec. f/8 18mm (APS-C)
FIGURE 7.1
This landscape image is clearly about early light on a rocky ridge in Californias Santa Monica Mountains. The key subject details are the rocks and the ridge.
FIGURE 7.2
This Maine scene is unique because of its abandoned home and eld of wild lupine.
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Form: The form and shape of objects in a landscape can take on particular signicance in certain scenes and light (Figure 7.3). Edward Weston was known for his ability to see and capture very strongly dimensional images that showed off forms in the landscape. Unique moments: If you spend any amount of time outdoors, sooner or later, youll come across a very unique moment in the life of a landscape. This could be light breaking through a rainy landscape (Figure 7.3), a fresh snow in a desert scene, still water that offers reections, and so forth. When these moments occur, focus your camera and mind in on them and dont try to capture everything else. Emotion: Some landscapes stimulate a certain emotion or feeling about the setting (Figure 7.4). Such emotion can be as simple as the place being dramatic. Other emotions that can be invoked from a landscape include things like relaxation, power, calm, and so forth. Each one of these emotions is highlighted when you keep your images emphasis on that concept.
FIGURE 7.3
Breaking and swirling clouds allow light to dene this Zion National Park landscape and show off its forms. ISO 100 1/80 sec. f/8 180mm (APS-C)
FIGURE 7.4
Can a landscape of brightly colored California poppies offer anything except an emotion of joy? When they bloom like this, you can almost feel the color!
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FIGURE 7.5
By working the landscape at Bryce Canyon National Park, I was able to nd a unique morning view.
Working a landscape can be done in many ways (Figure 7.6). Here are some changes you can do that are worth thinking about: Position: Move around as much as you can and take pictures from different angles to your landscape. On some landscapes, this might not make a big change to things that are at a distance, but it can make a huge change in whats in the foreground. Height: Go to any location where there are a lot of photographers photographing landscape and youll see that they all have their cameras on tripods that are at eye level or close to it. Try some different heights. This can also have a big effect on whats happening in the foreground. And remember that you dont have to stand on a ladder to get a high angle with a digital camera. Set your camera on a tripod, use the self-timer, and then hoist the camera up high as the self-timer counts down. Check your shot after its done to see if you need to retake it. Focal length: Almost everybody has zoom lenses today, and many photographers have multiple focal lengths. Yet, often, they choose one focal length and continue to use that as they shoot a particular landscape. Make a dramatic change in your focal length, and see what you nd. For example, zoom in to a strong telephoto focal length, and then start looking around to see what that does to the landscape.
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Light: Okay, I know you cant actually change the light on the landscape very easilyor can you? Sometimes its worth waiting for the light to change. As the sun comes up, youll see many changes in color, light, and shadow. Keep shooting. At any time of day, waiting for the shadows to change as the sun moves across the sky can be a great way of experiencing the location. If there are clouds in the sky, you also can wait until cloud shadows change positions in the scene. Composition: Changing composition might seem obvious, but Ive seen many photographers locked into one composition for a particular location and vary little from it. Try both vertical and horizontal. See what happens when sky lls most of the composition, and see what happens when it doesnt. Compose with the mountain on the left, and then compose with it on the right.
FIGURE 7.6
Here is a whole series of images from the same Acadia National Park location and morning, all shot within a half-hour after sunrise. The shots use different focal lengths, compositions, light (from timing), and angles to the shoreline, but my location didnt change much.
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Finally, here are two important things to keep in mind about working the subject: When you get back to the computer with all the great shots that youve taken at a location, the only shots youll have are the shots on your memory card. If you havent taken those extra shots, obviously you dont have them. Working the scene gives you more options back at the computer. By working the subject and going after multiple views of a landscape, youll often discover shots that you never wouldve found any other way. If you keep asking yourself, What other pictures are here? Youll nd additional photographs often more interesting and better ones.
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this location largely look the same with most variation from weather and season. How many pictures of Schwabachers Landing do we really need? Im not suggesting you or I wont want to visitits a great place to go. What Im talking about is photographing there and not seeing and sharing the rest of nature in the area (Figure 7.8). Is Grand Teton National Park restricted to Schwabachers Landing (or a limited number of other iconic, but limiting views of the park)?
FIGURE 7.7
Scwabachers Landing and the Grand Teton National Park. Most photos from this location look pretty much like this.
FIGURE 7.8
A ways down the road revealed a totally different, dramatic landscape that adds to our perception of the location.
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A few years ago, environmentalist and author Bill McKibbon wrote an article that annoyed many wildlife photographers. He said that there was a lot of photography available for certain species and asked whether we really need more pictures of those same species? I think his position was a little extreme and he couched his piece too much as a challenge. After all, the same thing could be said about writingthere is plenty of writing on those subjects, too, so do we need more of that? But the question is a good one to think about. Do we need more and more pictures of the same old locations that weve seen time and time again? Or can we add more photos of the variety of life that is nature? What Im suggesting is that we need to go beyond the obvious and the over-photographed in nature. There is such a huge wealth of nature available that needs our attention, deserves our attention, and needs to have the public see it. And the public will see it when we photograph it. Im suggesting a possibility for photography that is not simply of nature, but in service of nature. There is no question that photography can affect people and move them to change the way they see the world. When nature is unseen, people tend not to care about it. I think that the health of our planet is important and that starts with seeing what our planet is made up of: nature. Without a living planet, without a healthy and varied nature, nothing else exists. Nature is important. We are important. We are part of nature. And one thing that can help us stay connected is when we can use our skills as photographers to help people understand and appreciate the true and amazing extent of the natural world.
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Before going to any new location, I search the Internet to see what might be interesting in the area. I look for things like parks and refuges to see what might be there. Then I check out the websites of those locations to see what types of landscapes are present. This can start to give me an idea of what I might be seeing. Big parks, especially national parks, often have well-crafted websites that will give you a great deal of information about the location, maps, and important landmarks. Whenever I go to a location for more than a few days, I try to nd local bookstores. I almost always nd local guides there that give an idea as to places and times to go, types of landscapes to look for, and sometimes full information about the geology, biology, and history of the location. I try not to buy too many books because my library gets a little full anyway, but I always seem to leave with at least a couple. Visitor centers are another great source of information about landscapes (Figure 7.9). They usually have specic maps to the area that can be extremely helpful, as well as gift and book shops with more resources. Youll also be able to talk to rangers and naturalists who can point you to some very specic locations. Ive found the staff at nature centers to be consistently helpfulthey love their location and sharing it with visitors. They can point you to all sorts of great places for landscape photography. Sometimes Ive totally changed my plans based on talking with these people because they give me such great ideas.
FIGURE 7.9
Visitor centers offer a wealth of information about any location that can help you nd better landscape photo opportunities.
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Chapter 7 Assignments
Its All in the Emphasis
Ask yourself, Whats my photograph about? What you emphasize has a huge effect on how you answer that question. Find a landscape thats easy for you to access. It doesnt have to be anything fancy, but it should have some variation of features in it. Photograph it early or late so that the light creates nice shadows. Now take a series of pictures where each one changes the emphasis as to whats most important for your photo. Dont move to a different location change how you frame your image to change the emphasis in whats seen in your photograph.
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Black-and-White Images
EXAMINING THE RICH TRADITION AND TODAYS POTENTIAL OF BLACK-AND-WHITE LANDSCAPES
Black-and-white photography has a long and important tradition because its where photography beganthere was no other option. Black-and-white images were the standard, something everyone shot. When color appeared, the black-and-white medium became the special way of shooting and gradually became the poor relation to color. Today, color is the standard and usual way of shooting, and black-and-white photos are special. Black-and-white photography has experienced a resurgence as an elegant and rich way of interpreting a subject, and thats especially true for landscape photography. But it isnt simply about removing color. In fact, just removing color can give you a blah, unappealing black-and-white landscape. In this chapter, I show you what black-and-white photography really means beyond the removal of color, how you can get better blackand-white images as you photograph, and how to translate color to black and white in the computer. Black-and-white photos start when you rst take the picture, not when you go to the computer.
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These sunset clouds didnt have a lot of color, but I did feel they were interesting, so I composed to keep them an important part of the image.
I really liked the reection in the water, and the low angle also helped emphasize it.
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Ive always loved the rocks that appear at low tide at Crystal Cove State Park in Southern California. I went for the low angle to put the rocks against the sky and to keep the landscape visually based on the rocks, not the ocean behind them. I shot the image near sunset, but the clouds were keeping the sun from being very strong, so the light is somewhat gentle.
Since the rocks didnt have dramatic shadows from the light, I could still get some drama in black and white by putting them against the sky.
I shot from another rock but didnt include it in the foreground to better emphasize the rocks and water in front of me.
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I used a telephoto lens to compress distance and create an almost abstract pattern of the mountains tonalities.
There is a very interesting progression of dark foreground to lighter middle ground to darker distant hills.
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Early morning in Californias Santa Monica Mountains may include a morning marine layer at certain times of the year. Thats what is creating the unique pattern of light and dark in this image. The marine layer is fully visible in the background in front of the distant mountains. Its also creating the haze on the nearby hills. It was this pattern of light that attracted me to the scene.
Exposure is really critical for a scene like this because you need to hold detail in the clouds of the marine layer in the distance, yet keep them bright.
The lower hill in the foreground helps create a sense of scale and perspective for the composition.
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FIGURE 8.1
This image is one of William Henry Jacksons blackand-white photos from his trip to Yellowstone in the early 1870s. This is a mud geyser erupting.
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There were many challenges to landscape photography at the time, not the least of which was that photographers had to use very large cameras and glass plates for lm. I cant imagine what photographers of the time wouldve thought about my little NEX camera. My whole system is smaller than their camera alone. Timothy OSullivan photographed throughout the West in the late 1800s and needed a covered wagon for all his gear and glass plates. One important challenge that these early photographers faced is that their lm had a very different sensitivity to color than either lm or sensors do today. One result of this was that blue skies were rendered white, and it was difcult to get skies that actually looked like dark blue skies or to get clouds to show up in them. This is one reason why a lot of the old photography shows very little sky. Landscape photography took a strange turn in the early 1900s when photographers thought they had to be like painters and make pictures that didnt look so real. This movement was called pictorialism, but by the 1930s, photographers like Ansel Adams, Paul Strand, and Edward Weston were taking black-and-white images that deliberately used the sharpness and attention to detail that photography was capable of in their landscapes. If you become more interested in black-and-white landscape photography, you may nd it very instructive to look at the photography of Adams and Weston. Both men shot black-and-white imagery in similar locations in California, but their landscapes are very different. Weston photographed form in the landscape; Adams photographed light in the landscape. As you look at their images, youll see this very clearly.
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You can open a photograph in almost any image-processing software and remove its color. The result is a black-and-white sort of image, but this approach really isnt the best way to get a black-and-white image. We see color very differently from black and white because we dont actually see the world in black, white, and shades of gray (Figure 8.2). Okay, that may seem obvious, but in color, were looking at and discerning things in a scene based on the actual colors. In a black-and-white image, we have to look at other ways of separating pictorial elements in the photograph, such as a subject and the background. You can photograph a eld of red owers in green foliage and youll instantly be able to discern the owers among the foliage in color. Unfortunately, in a black-and-white photo, the
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owers often blend in with the foliage because the brightness of red and green are often the same. This is demonstrated in Figure 8.3, where the only difference between the two photos is that the color has been removed for the black-and-white image.
FIGURE 8.2
We respond to color and black-andwhite images quite differently. These two photos are identical except for the color, though the black-and-white shot has been converted carefully, not just desaturated to remove the color.
FIGURE 8.3
The pink Prickly Phlox owers show up very well in the color photo, but they start to blend in when the photo is desaturated to remove color.
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There is no question that color is about color. Seeing the world in black, white, and shades of gray forces you, as the photographer, to look for something else. That can be hard because were so used to looking at color. Yet as you learn to make better black-and-white landscape photographs, you may discover that your color photography gets better as well. Thats because you no longer rely just on color and will start to see other things more clearly in your images. A good way to start seeing in a black-and-white way is to set your camera to record images in Black-and-White mode. However, if you simply record everything in this mode, you may end up with only one version of your black-and-white images and you wont be able to try anything else by converting them from color. There is an answer to this: Shoot both black-and-white and color images at the same time by setting your camera to shoot Raw + JPEG. Then, when you set your camera to shoot in Black-and-White mode, youre affecting only how it deals with JPEG images; raw les are always in color. Youll see only black-and-white images displayed on your LCD, but when you download the images to your computer, youll have the blackand-white JPEGs and the color raw les. You cant capture an image to a Raw le and have it only be black and white. If you open a JPEG le that has been shot in Black-and-White mode, it will show up as a black-and-white image. If you open a raw le that has been shot the same way, it will show up in color unless youre using the raw-conversion software from the manufacturer. In the latter case, the le is still in color, but the manufacturer is using some metadata with the raw le to tell the software to look at it as a black-and-white photo. By shooting Raw + JPEG, you gain the benet of actually seeing how a scene in front of you is translated into shades of gray when it shows up on your LCD. But you also gain the benet of having a color le that you can work with later to get the best translation of color to black-and-white tones.
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Good black-and-white imagery starts when you take the picture. This doesnt mean that you have to previsualize every image in shades of gray in order to nd some interesting black-and-white photos when youre back at the computer. Sometimes youll discover images that look great translated to shades of gray that you may not have been thinking about when you took the picture in the rst place. What it does mean is that youll start to get better black-and-white pictures when you look for some of the things that make good black-and-white images as you photograph. In fact, as you start looking for things that make black-and-white images look better, you may discover your color images improve. The rst thing that you really have to keep in mind is that, as discussed earlier, blackand-white landscape photography cannot be about color. Black-and-white work is totally about shades of gray or the tonalities of an image. This requires a different mindset when youre looking at a scene. One thing that I nd very interesting about black-and-white photography is that it expands the range of times that you can get good images of a landscape. Often a color landscape simply doesnt look very good in the middle of the day. The colors look washed out or have an ugly blue cast to them. In a sense, black-and-white photography removes those problems with color so that you can focus on other aspects of the scene. Although midday light still can be harsh and unattractive even in tones of gray, there are times that you can get excellent black-and-white images throughout the entire day (Figure 8.4). Black-and-white compositions are largely dened and structured by contrast. One reason that many photographers black-and-white images fail when they rst start shooting this way is because of lack of contrast. There are three key types of contrast to look for when shooting a black-and-white image: Tonal contrast: Tonal contrast is contrast in tones or brightness of pictorial elements throughout the composition. Any time that you can have one part of the landscape brighter than another, you get a tonal contrast. Textural and pattern contrast: Textures and patterns are related because they both show up as distinct and dened designs of light and dark in an image. When you can show off one texture as distinctly different from another, you have a contrast. Sharpness contrast: Sharpness contrast occurs when part of the image is sharp and part of the image is out of focus. This type of contrast is not as common a way of dealing with landscapes as it is with other types of photography.
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FIGURE 8.4
A juniper tree in a Capitol Reef National Park landscape gains a dramatic look as a black-and-white image even though it was photographed midday.
In looking for contrasts based on tonal differences, look for a change that is dramatic (Figure 8.5). Just having something a little bit brighter gray then something else wont give much strength to your contrast. These contrasts will become very important in structuring your composition, so they need to be obvious. On the other hand, you dont always need a pure white and black contrast because that can be too harsh for some scenesplus, it may not even be possible. Simply look for change in brightness in your scene and use any changes in brightness as part of your composition (Figure 8.6). This change can be due to the natural brightness of the subject matter or it can be due to light. Ive taught many photographers to create better color and black-and-white images, and Im always interested in how many of them strongly focus on color and dont see brightness changes in an image. The color just overwhelms their way of seeing. Simply becoming aware of brightness changes in a scene will start you on a totally different path. Youll discover things about your landscape imagesboth color and black-and-white photosthat you might never have noticed before.
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FIGURE 8.5
It isnt just the clouds that make this landscape in Kenai Fjords National Park near Seward, Alaska, look dramatic. Its the contrast between the sky and the ground that gives the image its bold look.
FIGURE 8.6
Tonal contrasts can be more subtle, too. Here, a breaking fog and backlight in the Tennessee side of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park creates all sorts of contrasts that give the image its energy.
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Textural and pattern contrast is a very useful way of looking for contrast in the landscape. Landscape scenes very often have changes in texture and patterns. Those changes can create structure and denition for your composition. This contrast has to be signicant (Figure 8.7). There are lots of things that can have changes in texture, but if those changes are only slight, they might not help your black-and-white landscape. You need to look for a strong contrast in order for this to work. You might think of textures in terms of smooth, ne, and coarse textures. Any time you can put one of those textures against the others (for example, smooth against ne, ne against coarse, or smooth against coarse), youll typically have a strong enough contrast to help separate things in your picture. Sometimes texture itself can make a landscape photograph interesting (Figure 8.8).
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FIGURE 8.7
There are a number of distinct textures in this image to help dene this landscape of Arches National Park.
FIGURE 8.8
This winter landscape near Bishop, California, is totally about texture.
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Can sharpness contrast ever be used in landscape photography, let alone black-andwhite shots? It isnt a usual sort of landscape work, but it does offer some creative possibilities if youre willing to explore it. One type of shot that can be fun is a close-up or intimate landscape where part is in focus and part is not (Figure 8.9). This technique also works for moody sorts of images with a foreground of the landscape in focus and the background out of focus. Try it, too, with out-of-focus, really close objects in the foreground that provide a contrast and sense of depth for a sharp background.
FIGURE 8.9
A miniature blackand-white landscape gets a unique feel by using sharpness contrast.
VARIATIONS IN LIGHT
Light is such an important part of photography that it keeps coming back into the discussion! Much of what you learned in Chapter 3 about light certainly applies to blackand-white photography. There are some renements to some of those ideas, though, that can help you better capture black-and-white images. To start, light can denitely affect tonalities in a black-and-white image; plus, it has a huge effect on texture.
SEPARATION LIGHT
A separation light is any light that brightens part of your scene and keeps other parts dark so that it separates and denes the visual elements of the image. This type of light is very useful for black-and-white landscape photography because it can help you dene your composition through the use of tonal contrast.
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A separation light can really open up your landscape and highlight different elements in it (Figure 8.10). Its great for illuminating ridges of mountains, tops of rocks, edges of trees, and other things that allow you to create some denition in areas that might otherwise be a large blob of one tone.
FIGURE 8.10
The light on this White Sands National Monument scene separates and denes the visual elements of the composition.
Separation light often is a light coming from behind the subject and toward the camera, although behind the subject and to one side also work (Figure 8.10). Light coming from behind the subject and toward the camera can cause are. Flare is never just one thingit varies based on the lens you use (zoom lenses can be especially susceptible to it) and the angle you are to the light. A lens shade can helpI always use one on my lenses (it also helps protect them from stray ngers or other things that might touch the lens). In addition, you can hold your hand or hat out to block the sun from hitting your lens.
DRAMATIC LIGHT
In Chapter 3, you learned that dramatic light is useful for any landscape photography. It can be especially important for black-and-white images, where you have only the tonalities of the scene to dene it. Dramatic light gives you dramatic changes in the tonalities from bright areas to dark areas. It especially gives strong shadows that can offer strength to the tonalities of your photo.
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Shadows help dene shapes into forms and make textures show up (Figure 8.11). Side light is an important light for many black-and-white photos because it does such a good job of both. Start looking for shadows and what theyre doing in your blackand-white landscape, but also remember that although shadows can help, they also can hurt. Shadows in the wrong places across your scene can be distracting at any time, and this will be especially true with black-and-white imagery. Now a caution: As soon as I say dramatic light is great, I know many people reading this will just start shooting dramatic light. But this isnt a cure-all that always works. It can be very effective for a black-and-white photo, but on the wrong subject, it can be terrible. Dramatic light coming from one direction may make a landscape look great, but from another direction at a different time of day, the light can look terrible because of shadows being in the wrong places, for example. Also, dramatic light can be a challenge for exposure, especially if you have large areas of dark from shadows (this can be a large shadow or lots of shadow in texture). Your camera will see those dark areas and often overcompensate and cause important sunlit areas of the scene to be overexposed. Dramatic light can lose its effect when this happens. You may have to underexpose such scenes in order to hold the drama. However, this doesnt mean automatically shooting with a lot of underexposure, eitherthat can make for very murky, muddy-looking black-and-white photos.
FIGURE 8.11
The dramatic light on this landscape from Californias Alabama Hills gives the image an abstract design of light and shadow.
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BACKLIGHT
Backlight is something to make friends with if you want to succeed with black-andwhite landscape photography. This does not mean that backlight is the only light to use for this type of work. It does mean that it offers so many benets for blackand-white images that it has long been used for effective black-and-white landscape photography. Many of the aspects of dramatic light also apply to backlight. When the sun is bright, backlight can be very dramatic (Figure 8.12). It creates bold shadows, sparkle on water, and strong texture. But backlight also helps when the light is more subtle as well. Subtle light can be challenging to use for black-and-white photography. By looking for backlight in those conditions, you often can gain some needed contrast. Again, be very careful of your backgrounds with backlight. Avoid big, blank areas of sky. Avoid any large overexposed area. And watch out for glare and are. Sometimes no matter what you do, you cant avoid are. And sometimes you can use that are to good effect. Try moving around slightly to see if you can get the are to fall in parts of the image that arent hurt by it and where it might even add a cool look!
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FIGURE 8.12
A strong and obvious backlight adds drama to this image of towering redwoods in Californias Humboldt State Park.
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SILHOUETTES
Silhouettes are especially effective in black-and-white photography. A silhouette denes the composition by putting a dark foreground object against a bright background. There are two things you really have to be careful of with a silhouette: the foreground object and exposure. You cant simply silhouette your objectpay attention to what it looks like and what angle will make that silhouette look its best. Exposure is always an issue with silhouettes. You need to be careful not to give too much or too little exposure. Too much exposure will make the subject and background too bright, and youll lose the silhouette effect. Too little exposure, and the background gets dark instead of light, and youll also lose the effect. Your camera reacts to the brightness of the scene. If you have a lot of shadow, the camera will tend to give too much exposure, so you need to force it to give less (you can use minus exposure compensation with autoexposure). If you have a large bright area behind the subject, the camera will tend to expose to make the bright area dark instead of bright. In that case, you need to force it to give more exposure (you can use plus exposure compensation with autoexposure). Also, you really need a lot of contrast between your subject and the background for a silhouette to work well (Figure 8.13). Just underexposing a subject in front of a background wont give you a silhouette. The image should start with high contrast between the subject and the background.
FIGURE 8.13
A silhouette is one of the strongest forms of tonal contrast that you can get. I chose both a specic Joshua tree and angle to it for its unique form and the relationship to the background.
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Working from a color image that you translate to a black-and-white image in the computer is the best way of getting a black-and-white photo. The big reason for this is that you gain so much more control over how colors are translated into shades of gray than you had when you took the original photograph. Image-processing software offers the potential of using an almost innite variety of lter effects that better separate colors into shades of gray than any lter you could ever use on your camera. Another advantage of translating a color image to a black-and-white image is that you can make this translation differently in different parts of the image. Thats something thats nearly impossible to do in the eld. For example, you could translate the way that the sky and clouds are dened by one set of adjustments, and then use a different set of adjustments to help separate important pictorial elements of the ground. In this book, I can give you only an overview of how you might do this conversion work in the computer, to get you started. Black and White: From Snapshots to Great Shots, by John Batdorff (Peachpit Press), goes into much more detail and is worth a look. Photoshop, Photoshop Elements, Camera Raw, Lightroom, and Aperture all have good black-and-white conversion controls, but there are some variations in their approach. The key to using any of these black-and-white tools is to understand that youre trying to separate parts of your picture into contrasting tones of gray. Never simply accept the default translation of color to black, white, and gray without at least trying some variations. On all these programs, you can adjust some sort of color sliders to change how bright or dark the grays appear from colors in the image. Find the black-and-white controls (use the programs Help menu to locate them), and experiment a bit. I dont have the space to go into all these programs in detail, but Ill give you an idea of how these controls work in Photoshop and Lightroom. Lightroom uses a section in Develop labeled B&W as a part of the Color and HSL panel. Click on B&W on that panel head, and the picture is instantly changed into shades of gray. The rst translation of your color image often doesnt do it justice (Figure 8.14). If you rst look at that image, its hard to believe that there are brightly colored cactus owers in the foreground. With a little adjustment, the cactus owers become bold and interesting in the photograph (Figure 8.15). You can see the original color and then the good black-and-white translation in Figure 8.16.
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FIGURE 8.14
This Mojave Desert landscape looks a bit at in the default Lightroom translation of the original color image. The foreground cactus owers have disappeared.
FIGURE 8.15
Now the landscape is transformed with livelier tonalities and the foreground cactus owers have become quite obvious.
FIGURE 8.16
Here you can see the original color image and a good black-and-white translation of this desert landscape.
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This adjustment in Lightroom is truly drag-anddrop easy. When you rst try it, you may think that there has to be something else that youre missing, but there usually isnt. Once youve clicked on B&W, you need to click on the little target button in the upper-left corner of this adjustment panel (Figure 8.17). This activates your cursor so that when you move it over the picture, Lightroom automatically nds the right color for you. Then if you click and drag up and down on that spot, Lightroom makes that color a lighter or darker shade of gray. Press Esc to get out of this activated cursor. Dont panic when you click on the picture and the cursor disappearsits supposed to do that. Keep your mouse button pressed down, and just drag up and down and watch the gray tone get brighter or darker. Then click and drag on other parts of your picture to make them brighter or darker. Its that simple. The hard part is deciding what you want to be lighter and what you want to be darker. You always can adjust individual sliders as needed. All these adjustments are global adjustments, meaning they affect every instance of that color in the photo. Photoshop has a similar control called Black & White in the Image menu under Adjustments; its also one of the Adjustment Layer options. I recommend using the Adjustment Layer version because it offers a click-and-drag control similar to that used in Lightroom. And you can see that the default black-and-white translation is equally poor for the same image shown in Lightroom (Figure 8.18). Remember: This isnt a poor translation just because its the default; its a poor translation because the default conversion of color simply doesnt work well for this particular black-andwhite image. If you look carefully at the Black & White adjustment panel, youll see a funky little icon of a hand with the pointing nger over a double-headed arrow (Figure 8.19). Click this arrow to get the same direct adjustment capabilities that are in Lightroom. One weird thing about this is that now you make the adjustments by clicking on something in the picture and dragging left and right to change the brightness of the tone rather than dragging up and down. And the cursor stays visible! This activated cursor is not available from the Black & White window from Image > Adjustments.
FIGURE 8.17
Click on the target button at the upperleft corner of B&W in Lightroom. This activates your cursor to make it work on your image by clicking and dragging up and down.
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FIGURE 8.18
This Mojave Desert landscape looks at in the default Photoshop translation of the original color image, too.
FIGURE 8.19
Click on the hand icon at the upper-left corner of the B&W window in Photoshop. This activates your cursor to make it work on your image by clicking and dragging left and right.
You dont have the full range of color conversion in Photoshop that you have in Lightroom. This doesnt necessarily mean that you cant get equally good translations of your image, but it may mean that you have to spend a bit more time tweaking the color sliders (Figure 8.20). Also, you always can adjust individual sliders as needed, just as you can in Lightroom.
In both Lightroom and Photoshop, you often need to do some additional contrast and brightness adjustments like those described in Chapter 10 to bring out the best in your black-and-white image.
FIGURE 8.20
Now the landscape is transformed with livelier tonalities and the foreground cactus owers have become quite obvious.
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FIGURE 8.21
Silver Efex Pro includes a very helpful set of presets that you can click on to start your black-and-white processing.
FIGURE 8.22
The Color Filter panel on the right is a quick and easy way of separating tones in your photograph based on the original colors.
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The right side of Silver Efex Pro also includes global adjustments that allow you to make very effective changes in your brightness, contrast, and structure of your image (Figure 8.23). Structure in Nik Software products is something that changes the contrast of midtone tonalities and can really enrich a landscape photograph. A very important and useful part of Silver Efex Pro (and, in fact, most Nik Software products) is the ability to use Control Points (Figure 8.24). Control Points allow you to target a very specic part of the image for adjusting and nothing else. Theyre far easier to use than Layer Masks in Photoshop, and you have much more control than using the Adjustment Brush in Lightroom.
FIGURE 8.23
Most photos need some overall adjustments, and the right panel gives you many controls to do just that.
FIGURE 8.24
Control Points are a unique feature of Nik Software products that allow you to adjust part of a picture without affecting anything else.
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Chapter 8 Assignments
Search for Tonal Contrast
Set your camera to shoot in Black-and-White mode. Then go out and try to nd at least 20 images that are based on tonal or brightness contrast within your scene. Look for changes in brightness that you can exploit as you take pictures. Use these tonal contrasts to help you dene and structure a composition based purely on these changes in brightness.
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HDR
CAPTURING MORE OF YOUR LANDSCAPE
Lets acknowledge the elephant in the room right away. Many people think that high-dynamic-range (HDR) photography is gimmicky and not appropriate for traditional landscape photography. I acknowledge that HDR can be gimmicky, but it doesnt have to be. Its possible to do HDR landscapes that are totally real and accurate. I believe HDR can be a very important tool for all landscape photographers. And whether or not you know what HDR is all about, this chapter will help you understand and use it. Personally, Im not that interested in the gimmicky aspects of HDR photography. What HDR does do, however, is enable you to capture a wider range of tonality from a landscape than your camera can handle. Cameras simply cant see the world the way that we do, and HDR allows us to capture images that potentially come much closer to the way that we see the world. In many ways, HDR photography is a lot like Ansel Adamss Zone System. Adams would expose carefully for the conditions and then process the image to get the widest range of tonality appropriate to that landscape. With HDR photography, you expose carefully for the conditions and then process the image to get the widest range of tonality appropriate to that landscape as well!
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Californias Yosemite National Park is one of the most popular places for photographers. Most of the scenes there have been photographed again and again and again. So, how do you nd a fresh view of the landscape? I saw all these trees and Yosemite Falls in the background, and at rst I thought this would be an interesting photograph but impossible to do. The contrast range was way beyond what the camera was capable of. But then I thought of HDR, and that gave me an image that truly was unique.
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Shutter speed is meaningless because this image comes from ve original photos, but I kept the f/stop constant.
The contrast of the trees with the falls gave a unique composition that would have been impossible in color before HDR.
The contrast range from sunlit falls to forest shade is huge and cant be mastered in a single shot. ISO 100 f/16 12mm (Four Thirds)
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The textures of the shadowed part of the rock add a strong visual element to the foreground.
The sunlight on the rock and on the ridges in the background is still important for shaping the landscape.
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This is a small arch (the opening is about 12 inches wide) in the rocks at Castro Crest in the Santa Monica Mountains of California. I wanted to give a feeling of the setting, but the light made the contrast great between the shadows of the arch and the bright sky. No exposure could hold detail in both the shadowed parts of the arch and the blue of the sky. HDR let me capture an image much closer to what I originally saw.
I used a small aperture with a wide-angle focal length to maximize sharpness from foreground to background.
This bold composition wouldnt be as interesting or as effective if the background were washed out.
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The Redwoods State and National Parks in Northern California offer amazing sights of towering trees like no where else in the United States. They do present a problem for photographers when the sun is outextremely high contrast where shadows are black and highlights too bright. But sometimes a bright sunny day is just too beautiful to miss. The light on this scene of rhododendron and redwoods is way beyond the capability of any camera sensor. HDR made it possible, my interpretation makes it look real.
Look closely and you will see some double leaves at the top of the rhododendron. This happened because of a slight breeze shifting their position during the multiple exposures. I dont think it takes away from the overall image.
The resulting scene gives a feeling of a bright, sunny day in the redwoods, not a gloomy, harshly lit landscape.
HDR also allowed me to capture detail in the bright leaves and owers of the rhododendron. ISO 100 f/11 10mm (APS-C)
HDR BASICS
High-dynamic-range photography is exactly that: photography that offers a higher dynamic range (range of tones) than your camera and sensor can capture on their own. It allows you to photograph scenes that used to be very difcult to get because the brightness from highlights to shadows were considered extreme. You can see such scenes just ne, but your camera cant, so HDR photography has the potential to give you photographs closer to what you can see. HDR photography starts with multiple exposures of a scene to cover the range of brightness in the landscape. Each exposure varies by one to two steps of exposure change (a full f-stop is one step). These photos are best taken from a locked-down camera position on a tripod. Then theyre brought into the computer in order to combine the best tonality and color from the multiple shots into one.
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5. Check your images on your LCD. Check the brightest exposure and the darkest exposure. Look to see that your brightest exposure is giving reasonable detail in the dark areas of the picture. Then check the darkest exposure to be sure that your bright areas are being exposed well. 6. If you nd that all the pictures are too dark, shift your base exposure to give the image more exposure. If all the pictures are too light, shift your base exposure to give less exposure. 7. If you nd that your exposure range doesnt fully capture the brightest and darkest parts of your scene, do more than one set of auto bracketing, changing your base exposure appropriately so that you do get a range of exposures that cover the brightness range of the scene. n This procedure is exactly what I did in photographing Fern Canyon in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park in California. If the sun is out, this location is practically impossible to photograph and show off what the canyon actually looks like. In the past, photographers would always shoot it in foggy conditions, which are not unusual along the northern coast of California, in order to get light that better matched the capabilities of the camera. However, if you always have to wait for a foggy day, youre going to miss opportunities to portray landscapes the way that they appear on other days. You can see from the three images that were shot using different exposures that none of them handle the bright areas and dark areas well at the same time (Figure 9.1). The contrast is simply too great. The nal image offers a bright view of this scene that is much closer to what you would see if you were there (Figure 9.2).
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FIGURE 9.1
Three different exposures were used to capture the brightness range of Fern Canyon. The f-stop stayed the same while the shutter speed varied (1/8 sec. top, 1/20 sec. middle, and 1/3 sec. bottom).
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FIGURE 9.2
I combined the photos in the computer, and now the scene has a tonal range closer to what I actually saw.
Here are some pointers to keep in mind as you practice shooting for HDR: Pay attention to the range of auto bracketing your camera allows. You need at least a full step difference in exposure for each shot; 1.5 or 2 steps is better. If your camera doesnt allow AEB of at least a full step, youll need to change the exposure manually. For example, my Sony NEX camera brackets only up to a +/ 0.7 step, which isnt enough. When I use this camera, I dont use AEB; instead, I set each exposure manually. Make sure youve done everything you can to minimize camera movement before you shoot. All your shots have to line up with one another in order for HDR to work. Modern HDR software does try to deal with variations in the images, but any strong movement will be difcult to work with. One way to minimize movement is to shoot with the cameras drive mode set to Continuous; this allows you to hold down the shutter and get a series of exposures without doing anything that might move the position of the camera. If you have to set your exposures manually (as I have to do with my NEX camera), be sure to really lock down your camera on the tripod; set an f-stop for needed depth of eld and then vary only the shutter speeds. If you cant minimize movement (for example, under windy conditions), you may not be able to take the picture with HDR or you may just have to wait until the wind calms down. Running water may or may not be a problemthats something that I nd hard to predict so I shoot it anyway (Figure 9.3).
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FIGURE 9.3
There is so much in this image that could move and spoil this HDR shot along Oak Creek in Sedona, Arizona. The streams movement isnt a problem, but any wind would cause issues with the owers in the foreground and other plants.
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Although HDR programs have become easier to use, using them to create naturallooking images takes some practice. Photoshop has had an HDR capability for a while, but I wasnt too impressed with it until the CS5 version. Most of my HDR work is done with Nik Software HDR Efex Pro (Figure 9.4), a plug-in that works with Lightroom and Photoshop. Many photographers have had success with Photomatix HDR software, which works both as a plug-in and as a standalone program.
FIGURE 9.4
Nik Software HDR Efex Pro offers a great deal of exibility in how you adjust your HDR image.
IN-CAMERA HDR
Many cameras today have HDR capabilities built into the cameras themselves. Surprisingly, point-and-shoot cameras were the rst to have these capabilities. I think manufacturers thought it was more of a gimmick until photographers really started to look for this feature. Now HDR capabilities are available in most types of cameras. In-camera HDR usually works by having the camera shoot three images of different exposures and then process them inside the camera. You get a nal image that combines the best of the three exposures. This is a great way to try out HDR. The downside is that you dont have as much exibility as you do when you process HDR images in the computer.
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FIGURE 9.5
You would hardly know this scene in Californias Santa Monica Mountains is an HDR image unless you thought about how difcult it would be to hold detail in the sky and sun and still see all the rocks, shadows and all.
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I do want to point out something in this photograph of spring along the Apalachicola River (Figure 9.6). The image has a very open feeling to it from the HDR. For me, this was much closer to my experience of spring there than the heaviness that I got from any exposure that would hold detail in the bright areas. Now, if you look closely, you may notice that there is a slight bit of added brightness in the sky along the top edges of the trees. This is an artifact of the HDR process. Its possible to process your image so that you dont get that artifact, but I happen to like the way that the sky appears in this image, so I left it. Some people say that HDR isnt real and is manipulating the landscape image. I say that a scene with a strong contrast that I just describedpart of it in nice light, but the rest of it very darkusually doesnt make for a very realistic image. If the bright areas look good, the rest of the image will be very dark. We dont generally see scenes like that. The camera does, but that doesnt make it real just because thats what the camera captures.
FIGURE 9.6
With HDR, this landscape along the Apalachicola River in northern Florida has the feeling of a bright and airy spring.
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I think that the HDR image of such a scene can be closer to reality. HDR gives us a new tool to show off the world in better ways (Figures 9.7 and 9.8). I think its funny that some publications wont use HDR images because they arent real, yet they would print a distorted reality based on the limitations of the camera and call that real. When processing your image, you can do some things to get a nal result thats more natural looking. One reason I like HDR Efex Pro is that it gives you a set of presets with previews on the left side of the screen that you can use to decide which method of tone mapping looks best for the scene youre working with. Once you have an image processed in your HDR program, do the following in order to give your image a more natural look: Check your blacks. One thing that will make an HDR image look very unnatural is if the darkest parts of your photo are gray and not black. Watch the saturation. It isnt unusual to have an HDR image gain too much saturation when its processed. That can make the scene look very unrealistic. Look carefully at the midtones. The midtones of any image are always important, but sometimes in HDR images they become too contrasty and separated. That isnt a normal look, and you may need to adjust the image to avoid it. Do more than one HDR conversion. Sometimes getting everything in the picture looking its best with one conversion is really difcult. Try doing one conversion that makes the ground look good and then another conversion thats optimum for the sky. Then put these two images together in Photoshop. Dont consider your nal conversion nal! Theres only so much that you can do to an image in the HDR program itself. Bring your image back to Lightroom or Photoshop and do some tweaking there to be sure that the image is looking its best.
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FIGURE 9.7
The stormy sky over these cliffs near Sedona, Arizona, has a great deal of subtle tonalities that are lost in a single exposure. In addition, the color and texture of the rock shows up better in this HDR shot.
FIGURE 9.8
In order to hold detail in the brightest parts of the sky in one shot, I had to expose everything else to a dark tone. This makes the image heavy and perhaps moody, but it loses the more realistic feeling of the HDR shot. We dont normally see the rocks as so dark and muddy looking.
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HDR
If you really like to play with your photography, you might enjoy doing more specialeffects type of HDR work. This can give you some very interesting looks that arent based on what either you or the camera actually saw (Figure 9.9). Not everyone likes this look, but you may love it. Personally, Im not fond of using it much, but I know some photographers, including Dan Burkholder, who have done some absolutely stunning work with the wilder edges of HDR. (Check out the Color of Loss on Burkholders website, www.danburkholder.com.) There are no real rules when you start moving into this type of photography because youre leaving the bounds of reality.
FIGURE 9.9
The conditions this morning along the coast of Northern California were hazy sun, not at all what this HDR image shows.
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Chapter 9 Assignments
Just Try It!
If youve never tried HDR photography, the best assignment I can offer for you is to just go out and try it. Find a location that has an extreme range of brightness from shadow to highlight areas. Take a look at it and notice what you can see with your eyes. You should be able to see detail in the dark and bright areas at the same time. Now take a picture with exposure based on the bright area so the bright area isnt too bright. Notice how dark the rest of the picture becomes. Take an exposure based on the dark areas and notice how washed out the bright areas become. Take a couple pictures in between, and then bring this sequence of images to your computer and try processing them in HDR. Most HDR programs offer a free trial version for a couple weeks to a month, so you can try them out for no cost.
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The Pacic Coast from California to Washington offers many great locations for landscape photography. This image was taken in Northern California not far from Crescent City. I started shooting from before the sun went below the horizon until well after sunset. The cloud didnt stay the whole time.
The beach and rocks at the lower right were too dark in the original shot, so I opened them up with a traditional darkroom technique of local brightness control.
What really makes this seascape come alive is the pinkish cloud at the top of the frame. Without that, the sky is a blank bluenot necessarily bad, but not as interesting.
The hillside at the right has little detail in it, and in Lightroom, I made sure it stayed black so it would display correctly.
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The textures of these early spring trees and their contrasts were revealed by setting blacks and whites in Lightroom.
Midtone adjustments ensured that the image had the proper overall brightness.
A traditional Ansel Adams technique of edge darkening gave the image more depth and strengthened the composition.
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The big rocks of the Alabama Hills are always dramatic, and they looked quite interesting next to the trees. I toned down the big rocks on both the right and left of the trees to give a bolder framing.
I added a slight darkening to the sky with some of the original color to balance it better with the main landscape.
I loved the feeling of light coming down from the mountains from the original capture. Here the spring trees now look backlit and almost glow in the light.
The LIFE magazine photographer Andreas Feininger once said that the uncontrolled photo is a lie because of the way it arbitrarily and supercially records reality. In the darkroom, the photographer continues the control over the image that started when the photo was shot. That control can make the photograph lie worse, but it also can make the photograph more truthfully and accurately show off the landscape and better express how the photographer felt about the landscape in the rst place. This is why the computer and its controls for processing your landscape photograph are so important to effective landscape photography. This book is not a guide to using the computer for better image processing. But this chapter will give you some important things to keep in mind when youre working on a landscape photograph in the computer.
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I believe that one of the best references for working on landscape photos in the computer is Ansel Adamss book The Print, originally published in the 1950s and still in print today. Youll also need some instruction on how to use whatever software youre using, but the Adams book has outstanding information on how you look at an image and adjust it to get the most from it. One of the challenges that I think many photographers face is trying to master software rather than mastering their photographs. There is no question that a lot of the instruction and books that are available on image-processing software is about the software, not about the photography. I think the key to better landscape images is remembering to keep the image the star. As you read this book, youve probably noticed that I think its a big deal that photographers and our cameras dont see the world in the same way. Sometimes the limitations of the camera can cause us problems and make it difcult to get the photographs that we believe are possible. Working on your image in the computer often will reveal the true photograph that you envisioned when you rst took the picture. You can really see this in Figures 10.1 and 10.2. This scene of a small stream in Yosemite National Park had its contrast overemphasized by the camera (Figure 10.1). This wasnt at all how the image really appeared, but the camera had trouble dealing with the range of brightness from the white water to the dark rock. Working mostly in Lightroom, I was able to balance out the tonalities in the picture to show off the scene much better (Figure 10.2).
FIGURE 10.1
The camera had trouble dealing with the contrast range of the tonalities of this stream and rocks. I had to expose to hold detail in the brightest areas, which made the rocks very dark.
FIGURE 10.2
Midtone adjustment and local adjustments were very important to bringing out the original qualities of this scene.
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too early if it was getting too darkbut that wouldnt ensure the proper blacks and whites. By the way, the terms blacks and whites are used, even though there really is only one black tone and one white tone. The reason for this is that the terms refer to all the areas of black or white within the picturehence, the use of the plural. Most images need at least something that is pure black and something that is pure white in the image. This was true in Adamss day (he talks about it in The Print) and its true today. Now, I dont want to give the impression that this is an absolute rule for every photograph. A foggy day, for example, has no blacks and whites in it, and it will never look right if you try to put them there. However, most images need pure black and pure white in order to use the full range of the tonality of the media, whether thats a print, a computer monitor, or the printed page (Figure 10.3). Blacks can look good with a range of adjustments as long as there is something black that should be black. This makes adjusting blacks more subjective than adjusting whites. How strongly you adjust the blacks will affect the contrast and mood of a landscape.
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FIGURE 10.3
The rst image in this pair has not had its blacks and whites adjusted. It almost looks like it was shot with a gray dulling lter. The only difference with the second image is that its blacks and whites have been adjusted.
Whites are extremely sensitive to over-adjustment. If blacks lose detail, they just look black. If whites lose detail, they look washed out and empty. A bright sun and bright highlights on water can be pure white without a problem. But most other parts of the picture generally should not be.
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FIGURE 10.4
Blacks are adjusted with the Blacks slider and a threshold screen. This is the image shown in Figure 10.3.
FIGURE 10.5
Whites are adjusted with the Whites slider and a threshold screen.
FIGURE 10.6
Blacks and whites are adjusted in Photoshop and Photoshop Elements with Levels and a threshold screen.
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ADJUSTMENT ATTITUDE
You have a lot of exibility in how you adjust blacks and, to a lesser degree, whites in an image. But you have to pay attention to whats happening to your landscape and not simply adjust based on some arbitrary rule or standard, including following something that worked for you once before. Every landscape image deserves a unique approach in order to get the most out of it. This doesnt mean spending a lot more time on the photo. Its more of an attitude that inuences how you look at the image. One thing to be very careful of as you change blacks and whites is a buildup of contrast that creates a harshness and intensies colors inappropriate to the scene and its mood.
MIDTONES
I like to put the midtones of a photograph into one group. Techniques for adjusting them are the same as they are for blacks and whites, although you could split them apart into dark, middle, and light tones and talk about them separately in a book that was more about the software than this book is. How bright your midtones are affects how bright your picture looks. It also affects how clean and clear colors look or how muddy and dingy they appear. A big challenge that every photographer faces is that digital cameras are more challenged by the dark tones of an mage than they are by the brighter areas. If your midtones are not bright enough, these dark areas will look muddy and less dened.
FIGURE 10.7
Midtones are best adjusted with the Tone Curve in Lightroom. The Darks slider can be especially important.
FIGURE 10.8
A simple way of adjusting midtones in Photoshop and Photoshop Elements is to use the middle slider below the histogram in Levels.
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You also can use Curves in Photoshop or Color Curves in Photoshop Elements. You can gain a lot of control over midtones in Curves, but it takes a bit of time to learn this control. There are some presets that you can use without having to understand much about Curves, however. Color Curves is easier to work with because it uses sliders instead of clicking and dragging on the curve itself. The sliders are pretty intuitive; plus, some presets are available.
COLOR
Color adjustment was not a common part of the traditional darkroom. Color in the darkroom was difcult to work with for the average photographer. Thats no longer true. Before Adams died, he stated in an interview that he saw a lot of potential in working on photos in the computer, especially with color. Color is typically adjusted in two different ways for landscapes: 1. Color correction: The color is wrong because of the way white balance is seeing the light on the landscape. 2. Color enhancement: The camera doesnt capture colors equally or necessarily the way we see them, so often we need to enhance colors from the way the camera recorded them. n If youre setting your camera to a specic white balance, youll rarely have to colorcorrect your image. If you use Auto White Balance, youll have to do color correction quite often, if you really want the best colors from your landscapes. Thats why I cant recommend the use of Auto White Balance for landscape photography. Color enhancement is a different story. Colors vary depending on how a particular sensor deals with the colors in a scene and based on exposure. One of the challenges that we all face with a landscape is that the light can cause problems with consistent exposure across the scene. That also can mean problems with some of the colors so that you need to do some adjustments.
until you get something that looks good. In addition, you can use the Temperature slider in the Basic panel to make the image cooler or warmer, and the Tint slider below that to correct any green or magenta color casts. The HSL panel in Develop in Lightroom is a wonderful feature for correcting or enhancing specic colors that arent recorded properly by the sensor; Camera Raw has something similar. This panel has three sets of color adjustments: Hue: Hue affects the color of a color. This can be very important if you nd that a specic color is a little off. Saturation: Saturation affects the intensity of a color. Sometimes both over-and underexposure will reduce the intensity of the color, and it needs to be corrected. Luminance: Luminance changes the brightness of a color. This can be a very effective way of darkening the sky without darkening anything else. There are eight different colors that can be varied in each of these categories (Figure 10.10). Lightroom does an extremely good job of keeping these colors separate so as you adjust one color, youre adjusting only that color in the whole picture. There is also a very important part of this panel, a targeted adjustment button at the upper left. Click this little target and your cursor becomes activated. Now you simply move your cursor out into the picture and click and drag up and down on any color that you want to adjust. Lightroom nds the colors for you automatically.
FIGURE 10.9
Color balance can be corrected quickly by using the white balance eyedropper in Lightroom.
FIGURE 10.10
The HSL panel is the place to go in Lightroom for correcting and enhancing specic colors.
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FIGURE 10.11
Color balance can be corrected quickly with the middle eyedropper in Levels in Photoshop.
FIGURE 10.12
Colors in Photoshop can be controlled by Hue Saturation. Use the controls ability to adjust individual colors, which is set to Reds in this screenshot.
amount. Click Master and youll get a drop-down menu that allows you to select specic colors that you can adjust. When youve selected the color, you also can move your cursor out onto your picture and click that color. Photoshop or Photoshop Elements will then rene how it looks at that specic color. Now you can limit your adjustments of Hue and Saturation to that color. Thats the best way of dealing with these adjustments in your landscape.
LOCAL CONTROLS
Once you start using local controls on your landscape images, youll rediscover the capabilities that Ansel Adams and other darkroom workers like him had in creating their marvelous images. Much of what they did to create their stunning black-andwhite landscape photography was to use local controls in very effective ways. Once again, the Adams book The Print gives many ideas on how to do just that. There is no question that this is a craft and not something that youre going to learn by reading a few paragraphs in a book. You have to practice, experiment, and see what happens to your images as you do. Youll be looking for small areas in your picture that need to be adjusted separately from the rest of the picture. It may be that the entire picture needs to be brightened, but that makes one area look too bright, so you need to bring that area back to its original brightness. Or you may nd that when you adjust an image globally, there are areas that are bright enough to take your attention away from key parts of the composition. Or perhaps there are areas that are too dark and create black blobs without good detail in your image. The photo of a Joshua tree at sunset in the Red Rock Canyon Conservation Area outside Las Vegas is a good example of how local adjustments can bring out and enhance the original image. The original shot has had global adjustments made to it (Figure 10.13). The photo was shot using a ash to start to balance the tree against the sky, but the ash wasnt strong enough to make the effect work as well as it could. When the image was processed overall, this made the background too bright and gave less of the drama of this plant than I wanted. In the image with local adjustments (Figure 10.14), Ive done a number of things to bring out important details in the original image. The strengthening of the light on the Joshua tree is pretty obvious. If you look closely, youll see that some parts of the tree had to be brightened more than others. In addition, I darkened the nearly black background of the mountain so that the detail there wasnt a muddy distraction. Finally, I did a little work to the sky to better highlight its texture and color.
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FIGURE 10.13
Global adjustment has been made to this image, but its difcult to make it any brighter to show off the tree without washing out the sky.
FIGURE 10.14
Local adjustments have been made to this image in order to enhance the tree and the mood of the photograph.
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FIGURE 10.15
Play with the Graduated Filter to see how it can help you. Set it to a high minus Exposure to quickly make changes you can see. Readjust Exposure to a more appropriate amount when youve completed the basic adjustment.
For the adjustment brush, try something similar (Figure 10.16). The difference here is that you literally paint on the adjustment by clicking and dragging on the image. Change your brush size as appropriate to the subject matter. For most pictures, leave Feather at 100 because that keeps the edges of the adjustment very soft and blended.
FIGURE 10.16
Play with the Adjustment Brush in the same way. Paint on the effect wherever its needed or, to start, anywhere so you can see what it does.
VIVEZA
Nik Software offers an outstanding plug-in called Viveza that makes local controls a lot easier to do in Photoshop and Photoshop Elements; it works for Lightroom as well. In Chapter 6, I mentioned the importance of the Structure slider, but a key use of Viveza is its local control through the use of control points. I admit that I quite like Viveza and its ability to selectively adjust parts of the picture much more easily than anything you can do in Photoshop or Photoshop Elements with adjustment layers and layer masks. Lightroom is a little different because of the way it uses its local controls, so, for me, Viveza complements Lightroom but doesnt replace it. Control points are used by choosing Add Control Point and clicking on something in the image where you need a change to occur (Figure 10.17). Viveza very smartly looks at whatever is around that point and looks for similarities in color, tone, texture, and a number of other things. Then when you make an adjustment based on that control point, everything that is nearby and similar also will be adjusted automatically. Its harder to describe how to do this in words than it is to actually do it. Nik Software has free webinars on its website (www.niksoftware.com) to help you understand and use the software; plus, you can get a free trial version and try it out.
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FIGURE 10.17
Viveza uses control points to allow you to locally adjust specic parts of a photo, such as the clouds in this image.
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How you use local controls will vary tremendously from photograph to photograph. You may nd that in one image you hardly use any local controls, but for another image, you use them all over the picture. The point is not how much you use local controls, but how you use them to help dene, reveal, and enhance your composition. Compositions are strongly affected by what is bright in a photograph, so as you adjust local areas in brightness, for example, youll affect the composition. In the landscape from White Sands National Monument (Figure 10.18), I did a number of things in Viveza because of uneven brightness in the photograph. First, I did my initial processing of blacks, whites, midtones, and color in Lightroom. Then I increased structure overall when I sent the image over to Viveza. That gave more strength to the patterns in the sand.
FIGURE 10.18
Local controls helped me dene and rene the composition of this landscape from White Sands National Monument in New Mexico, especially in the sky.
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Next, I used control points to affect specic parts of the image. I added a control point in the clouds to add structure and brightness to bring them out more. I added several control points across the sky to darken the blue. I used several so that I could use a smaller area of control for each point and, therefore, more carefully limit the adjustments to the sky. I felt there was a little bit too much brightness where the sun was directly hitting the sand on the foreground dunes, so I used control points to darken the sand. I also added a control point to the bushes and increased structure there in order to enhance the denition of the plants. Finally, I added some control points across the sand in the bottom of the picture to make a couple adjustments to further bring out the patterns in the sand. I did all my adjustments for the intimate rainforest landscape in Lightroom. One thing youll notice right away is how the emphasis of the composition changes (Figure 10.19). The original image shows off the entire scene just ne, but it doesnt give the emphasis on the tree that I felt the scene deserved. Thats how we would be looking at this scene with our eyes, not seeing the whole scene without any emphasis. I used Post-Crop Vignetting to darken the outside parts of the picture. Then I used the Adjustment Brush to brighten the tree trunk and darken areas throughout the picture that were too bright. This gave a better balance to the tonality of the image and help reveal the forestscape that I originally saw.
FIGURE 10.19
Local controls affected the emphasis within the composition of this rainforest landscape in Costa Rica.
235
Chapter 10 Assignments
See the Graduated Filter
To learn to use local controls in Lightroom or Camera Raw, you need to be able to see them and get an idea of how they work. This will help you get a feeling for what they can do. Find a picture with a large area of bright, but not washed out, sky. Click the Graduated Filter in the toolbar above Basic in the Develop module. Set Exposure to a high minus amount. Click and drag in the sky. Remove the adjustment by pressing Delete. Click and drag again, this time changing the direction of your drag and the distance. Youll quickly see how this control works.
237
INDEX
35mm photography, 12
B
B&W panel (Lightroom), 178180 backgrounds image composition and, 87 magnifying and shrinking, 109111 backlight, 5758, 175 balance, visual, 85 Balanced Rock, Arches National Park, 80 ball heads for tripods, 22, 23 Basic panel (Lightroom), 224225 Batdorff, John, 178 black skies, 136 Black & White adjustment panel (Photoshop), 180181 Black and White: From Snapshots to Great Shots (Batdorff), 178 Black-and-White camera mode, 167, 184 black-and-white photography, 159184 annotated examples of, 160163 assignments on, 184 backlight used in, 175 color photography compared to, 165167 composition issues in, 168172 contrast types in, 168172 dramatic light in, 173174, 184 history of landscapes in, 164165 image-processing software for, 178183 light variations in, 172176 looking at color for, 177 minimizing noise in, 18 misused terminology for, 167 Raw + JPEG mode for, 167 separation light in, 172173 silhouettes in, 176 top light and, 60 translating color to, 178183, 184 Black-eyed Susans, 103 blacks checking in HDR images, 202 darkroom adjustments for, 216222 Blacks slider (Lightroom), 219 blank skies, 128, 139 bookstore research, 155 bracketing exposures, 194 bright scenes, 67, 68
A
Adams, Ansel darkroom work, 138, 207, 212, 214, 227, 229 landscape photography, viii, 1, 142, 147, 154, 165 top-of-car shooting technique, 87 Zone System, 187 Adjustment Brush, 229, 230, 234, 236 adjustment layers, 180, 226, 231 Adobe Camera Raw. See Camera Raw Adobe Photoshop. See Photoshop Adobe Photoshop Elements. See Photoshop Elements Adobe Photoshop Lightroom. See Lightroom afternoon light, 62 Alabama Hills, California, 174, 212213 Alaska, Kenai Fjords National Park, 170 angles high vs. low, 8889 perspective related to, 103104 Apalachicola River, Florida, 201 Aperture Priority mode, 67, 69, 194 aperture settings depth of eld and, 111, 112113, 115117 diffraction effects and, 116 distance to subjects and, 113114 experimenting with, 121 explanation of f-stops and, 113 exposure related to, 113 APS-C sensors, 12, 13, 16 Arches National Park, 49, 80, 137, 171 Arizona landscapes Oak Creek, Sedona, 198 Sedona sky over cliffs, 203 Atlantic Ocean Coast, 54, 7475 Auto Exposure Bracketing (AEB), 194, 197 Auto exposure modes, 6768 Auto White Balance (AWB), 6365, 224
INDEX
239
Bryce Canyon National Park, 109, 149150 Burkholder, Dan, 204 Buttermilk Area, California, 88
C
Cades Cove, Tennessee, 83 California landscapes Alabama Hills, 174, 212213 Buttermilk Area, 88 Castro Crest, 9899, 190191 Crystal Cove State Park, 160161 Death Valley, 152 Eastern Sierras, 66 Fern Canyon, 195197 Humboldt State Park, 175 Los Osos Oaks State Park, 34 Mojave National Preserve, 4647, 105, 108 Montana de Oro State Park, 58 Northern California redwoods, 84, 92193 Pacic Coast, 137, 208209 Point Dume, 132 Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, 195 San Gabriel Mountains, 63 Santa Monica Mountains, 3031, 4445, 98101, 162163, 190191 Yosemite National Park, 89, 188189, 214, 215 California lilac, 31 California poppies, 148 Camera Raw blacks/whites adjustments in, 219220 color adjustments in, 224225 local adjustments in, 229230 midtone adjustments in, 222223 cameras, 619 advantages of digital, ix, 6 authors use of, 23, 25, 26 Black-and-White mode, 167, 184 brand considerations, 67 cost considerations, 16 factors in choosing, 1419 HDR capabilities in, 199 high ISO settings, 1618 lens availability, 1516
megapixels in, 89 sensor size in, 913 size and weight of, 14 special features in, 1819 visual limitations of, 33, 3537 Canon cameras/lenses, 2324 Canyonlands National Park, 107, 110 Capitol Reef National Park, 169 carbon-ber tripods, 21 Casco Bay, Maine, 68 case studies on using Lightroom, 234235 on using Viveza 2 plug-in, 232234 Castle Valley, Utah, 126127 Castro Crest, 4445, 98101, 190191 Central California, 129 chaparral landscape, 3031 circular polarizer, 136 clouds color of light and, 62, 63 dull or ill-dened, 129 enhancing in skies, 136138 examples of shooting, 124127 exposure challenges of, 133134, 136 HDR photos with, 205 polarizing lter for, 60, 136138 programs for working with, 138 See also skies cloudy weather, 52, 54, 66 Cloudy white balance, 64, 66, 67 color adjusting in images, 224227 back light and, 57 front light and, 59 gentle light and, 52 side light and, 56, 57 translating to black and white, 178183, 184 color adjustments, 224227 in Lightroom and Camera Raw, 224225 in Photoshop and Elements, 226227 color correction, 224225 Color Curves (Photoshop Elements), 224 color enhancement adjustments, 224 Color Filter panel (Silver Efex Pro), 182 color of light, 6167 clouds and, 62
240
L A N D S C A P E P H O T O G R A P H Y : F R O M S N A P S H O T S T O G R E AT S H O T S
dealing with, 61 time of day and, 61, 62, 71 weather conditions and, 61 white balance and, 6367 Colorado River, Utah, 50 Columbia River, Washington/Oregon, 83 compact digital cameras, 12, 13, 26 composition, 7395 annotated examples of, 7477 assignments about, 9495 balance related to, 85 black-and-white image, 168172 determining the subject of, 8485 distracting elements in, 9293 effective use of edges in, 9091, 95 foreground, middle ground, and background in, 8789 height changes used for, 8889, 150 LCD used for, 3839, 85 point of view in, 9394 problem with centered, 78 rule of thirds for, 7983 skies used in, 94, 131132 visual relationships in, 8593 working the landscape using, 151 computer processing. See darkroom techniques; image-processing software connecting with landscapes, 141156 assignments related to, 156 nding out about locations, 154155 going beyond the common landscape, 152154 understanding whats important, 146148 working the landscape, 149152 Continuous drive mode, 197 contrast, 168172 pattern, 168, 171 sharpness, 168, 172 textural, 168, 171, 184 tonal, 168, 169, 176, 184 Control Points (Nik Software), 183, 231 cost/price considerations, 16 Costa Rica rainforest, 235 Courthouse Rock, Arches National Park, 80 cropped sensor reference, 9
cropping changing perspective vs., 108 landscape composition vs., 18 Crystal Cove State Park, 160161 Curves (Photoshop), 224
D
dark scenes, 67, 68 darkroom techniques, 207236 annotated examples of, 208213 assignments on using, 236 B&W image translations, 178183, 184 blacks/whites adjustments, 216222 case studies about, 232235 color adjustments, 224227 global adjustments, 216, 227, 228 HDR image creation, 198199 local adjustments, 216, 227235 midtone adjustments, 222224 workow of photo needs, 216232 See also image-processing software daylight, colors of, 6163 Daylight white balance, 66 Death Valley, California, 152 deep depth of eld, 115119 aperture setting and, 115117 focusing the camera for, 118119 shutter-speed problem and, 117118 depth of eld, 111120 aperture setting and, 112113, 115117, 121 deep depth of eld, 115119 distance to the subject and, 113114 focusing the camera for, 118119 hyperfocal distance and, 120 image sharpness and, 111 ISO settings and, 118 lens focal length and, 114115 shutter speed and, 117118 Depth of Field Preview button, 118 depth of sharpness, 111 desert landscapes, 4647, 91, 108, 179, 181 diagonal lines, 85 diffraction effects, 116 digital cameras. See cameras digital darkroom. See darkroom techniques
INDEX
241
directional light, 5460 assignment on, 70 back light as, 5758 front light as, 5859 recognizing and using, 5455 side light as, 5657 top light as, 5960 distance depth of eld and, 113114 hyperfocal, 120 perspective related to, 105106 telephoto compression of, 109 distractions composition and, 9293 skies in landscapes as, 129 Double Arch, Arches National Park, 49 dramatic light, 4851 black-and-white photography and, 173174, 184 exposure challenges with, 51, 71 searching for, 4851 dull clouds, 129 dynamic range of cameras, 3536 of HDR photos, 194 of human eyes, 34
camera features, 819 examples of working with, 25 factors in choosing, 1419 lens availability, 1516 price considerations, 16 size and weight of, 1415 tripods, 2023 two philosophies of, 19 See also cameras; lenses Essick, Peter, 19 EV (exposure value), 194 Everglades National Park, 45, 128 exposure, 6770 aperture related to, 113 automatic modes for, 6769 dramatic light and, 51, 71 manual mode for, 67, 69 shutter speed related to, 113 silhouette effect and, 176 sky-related challenges for, 133134 technique for choosing, 6970 Exposure: From Snapshots to Great Shots (Revell), 51, 67 exposure compensation, 67, 69, 133 exposure modes, 69 exposure value, 194 eyes and human vision, 3435
E
early morning light, 62 Eastern Sierra, 66 edge darkening effect, 229 edges of a composition distractions around, 9293, 129 effective use of, 9091 exercise on working, 95 editing, photo, 217 Elements program. See Photoshop Elements emotions, stimulating, 148 emphasis in landscape photos, 156 England pastoral landscape, 130 enveloping light, 51 equipment, 127 assignments on, 27 authors bag of, 2326 brand considerations, 67
F
Feininger, Andreas, 33, 214 Fern Canyon, California, 195197 lm cameras, 6 lters Graduated Filter tool, 229, 230, 236 graduated neutral-density, 135 polarizing, 60, 136138 are, 57, 173, 175 at perspective, 104 Flickr group for book, ix, 27 Florida landscapes Apalachicola River, 201 Atlantic Coast, 54, 7475 Everglades National Park, 45, 128 Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, 142143
242
L A N D S C A P E P H O T O G R A P H Y : F R O M S N A P S H O T S T O G R E AT S H O T S
ower photography back light and, 57, 58 black-and-white, 165166 composition edges and, 90, 91 depth of eld and, 116 perspective and, 103 Fluorescent white balance, 66 focal length depth of eld and, 114115 lens availability by, 1516 sensor size and, 10, 1213 working landscapes using, 150 See also lenses focusing depth of eld, 118119 hyperfocal distance, 120 foregrounds assignment on working with, 120 composition related to, 87, 95 emphasizing in photos, 108109 forms in the landscape, 148 Four Thirds sensors, 12, 13 front light, 5859 Frozen Head State Park, 86 f-stops depth of eld and, 112113, 115117 diffraction effects and, 116 distance to subjects and, 113114 explanation of aperture and, 113 exposure related to, 113 full-frame sensors, 12, 13, 16
H
Haas, Ernst, 95 HDR (high-dynamic-range) photography, 187205 annotated examples of, 188193 assignments on, 205 basics of creating, 194199 combining the shots for, 198199 image processing tips, 202 in-camera features for, 199 minimizing movement for, 197, 205 natural effects using, 200203 pointers on shooting, 197198 software programs for, 198199 steps for shooting, 194197 wild effects using, 204 HDR Efex Pro software, 199, 202 heads, tripod, 2223 height changes, 8889, 150 high ISO settings, 1618 high-angle shots, 88 highlight warnings, 70, 134 highlights directional light and, 55 seeing shadows and, 40 histograms, 51, 70 horizon line, 79 HSL panel (Lightroom), 225 hue adjustments, 225, 226 Humboldt State Park, 175 hyperfocal distance, 120
G
gear. See equipment gentle light, 5154 glare, removing, 138 global adjustments, 216, 227, 228 Gooseberry Falls, Minnesota, 33, 7677 Graduated Filter, 229, 230, 236 graduated neutral-density lter, 135 Grand Teton National Park, 152153 grayscale images, 167 Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 53, 83, 133, 170
I
image-processing software black-and-white translations with, 178183, 184 case studies on using, 232235 global vs. local adjustments with, 216 HDR image creation with, 198199 landscape photography and, 138, 212 traditional darkroom techniques and, 214215 workow of photo needs, 216232 See also darkroom techniques information on locations, 154155
INDEX
243
Internet research, 155 ISO settings assignment on testing, 27 depth of eld and, 118 high ISO capability and, 1618
J
Jackson, William Henry, viii, 164 Joshua tree photos, 4647, 176, 228 JPEG images, black-and-white, 167
K
Kelso Dunes, Mojave National Preserve, 105 Kenai Fjords National Park, 170 Kloskowski, Matt, 231 Kodachrome (Simon), 67 Kolob Canyon, Utah, 23, 124
L
Lake Mead National Recreation Area, 91 Lake Superior, Minnesota, 55, 76, 104 landscape photography black-and-white, 159184 composition in, 7395 connecting with landscapes in, 141156 depth of eld in, 111120 digital darkroom work for, 207236 early history of, 164165 equipment used in, 127 HDR images of, 187205 perspective in, 102111 philosophies of gear for, 19 seeing the light in, 4371 skies included in, 123139 Lanting, Frans, 19 LaSalle Mountains, 78 late afternoon light, 62 layers and layer masks, 231 Layers: The Complete Guide to Photoshops Most Powerful Feature (Kloskowski), 231 LCDs assignment on using, 41 live view feature for, 1819 reviewing images on, 39, 70
seeing photos through, 3839, 85 tilting/swivel, 18, 19 tips for using, 39 Le Gray, Gustave, 164 leading lines, 85 lens shades, 173 lenses aperture of, 112113 authors use of, 24, 2526 availability of, 1516 cost considerations for, 16 depth of eld for, 114115 diffraction effects of, 116 focal lengths of, 1516, 114115 perspective changes and, 105106 sensor size related to, 10 telephoto, 9899, 105106, 109, 110 wide-angle, 100101, 105106, 108109, 110 zoom, 97, 106107 Levels adjustment (Photoshop) for blacks/whites, 221 for colors, 226 for midtones, 223224 LIFE magazine, 33, 214 light, 4371 assignments on, 41, 7071 back, 5758, 175 changes in, 151 color of, 6167 directional, 5460 dramatic, 4851, 173174 exposure and, 6770 front, 5859 gentle, 5154 HDR images and, 200 photographing, 70 seasonal, 58, 5960 seeing, 40, 4854 separation, 172173 side, 5657, 174 special quality, 147 sunrise, 4445, 50 sunset, 4647, 50 top, 5960 Lightroom, 138
244
L A N D S C A P E P H O T O G R A P H Y : F R O M S N A P S H O T S T O G R E AT S H O T S
B&W translations in, 178180, 181 blacks/whites adjustments in, 219220 case study on using, 234235 color adjustments in, 224225 editing HDR images in, 202 local adjustments in, 229230, 234235, 236 midtone adjustments in, 222223 Silver Efex Pro plug-in for, 182183 Virtual Copy feature in, 236 lines horizontal, 79 leading, 85 receding, 102 vertical, 80 live view feature, 1819 local adjustments, 216, 227235 in Lightroom and Camera Raw, 229230, 234235, 236 in Photoshop and Elements, 231 in Viveza plug-in, 231, 232234 location information, 154155 Los Osos Oaks State Park, 34 low-angle shots, 89 low-light photography, 18 luminance adjustments, 225
Mojave National Preserve, 4647, 105, 108 monochrome images, 167 Montana de Oro State Park, 58 movement HDR photography and, 197, 205 human vision related to, 34, 35 shutter-speed problem and, 117 tripod for minimizing, 20 multiple exposures, 194195
N
National Geographic, 19 national parks, 155 natural HDR effects, 200203 nature centers, 155 Nevada landscapes Lake Mead National Recreation Area, 91 Red Rock Canyon Conservation Area, 227 Valley of Fire State Park, 112 New Mexico landscapes, 56, 173, 233 Newfoundland landscape, 8 Nik Software HDR Efex Pro, 199, 202 Silver Efex Pro, 138, 182183 Viveza 2 plug-in, 138, 231232 webinars offered by, 231 noise issues high ISO settings and, 1618 megapixels related to, 9 sensor size and, 10, 1618 noise-reduction software, 18 Northern California landscapes, 116, 204 Pacic Ocean Coast, 208209 redwood forests, 84, 175, 192193
M
magnifying LCD images, 39 Maine landscapes, 68, 107, 115, 118, 147 Manual exposure mode, 67, 69 McKibbon, Bill, 154 megapixels, 89 Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, 142143 midday light, 50, 51, 62 middle compositions, 78, 94 middle ground of photos, 87 midmorning light, 62 midtones checking in HDR images, 202 darkroom adjustments for, 222224 Minnesota landscapes, viii, 103 Gooseberry Falls, 33, 7677 Lake Superior, 55, 76, 104 Schaefer Prairie, 144145
O
Oak Creek, Sedona, Arizona, 198 Olympic Mountains, 114 Olympic National Park, 210211 Oregon, Columbia River, 83 OSullivan, Timothy, 165 Outdoor Photographer, 6, 8, 152 overexposed images, 67, 68 Oxford English Dictionary, 102
INDEX
245
P
Pacic Ocean Coast, 137, 208209 painting vs. photography, 82 pan-and-tilt tripod heads, 22, 23 pattern contrast, 168, 171 perspective, 102111 angle changes and, 103105 assignments on working with, 120 background size and, 109111 cropping scenes vs. changing, 108 denition and explanation of, 102 distance changes and, 105106 foreground emphasis and, 108109 telephoto lenses and, 105106, 107, 110 wide-angle lenses and, 105106, 107, 110 zoom lenses and, 106107 photo editing vs. processing, 217 photography equipment used for, 127 painting or sketching vs., 82 philosophies of gear for, 19 random acts of, 156 Photomatix HDR software, 199 Photoshop B&W translations in, 180181 blacks/whites adjustments in, 221 color adjustments in, 226227 HDR image creation in, 199, 202 local adjustments in, 231 midtone adjustments in, 223224 Silver Efex Pro plug-in for, 182183 Photoshop Elements blacks/whites adjustments in, 221 color adjustments in, 226227 local adjustments in, 231 midtone adjustments in, 223224 Photoshop Lightroom. See Lightroom pictorialism movement, 165 pixels and megapixels, 89 Point Dume, California, 132 point of view, 9394
polarizing lter removing glare with, 138 shooting skies with, 60, 136137 Polaroid cameras, 38 portability of gear, 1415 Porter, Eliot, 132 positioning yourself, 150 Post-Crop Vignetting, 229, 234 post-processing photos. See darkroom techniques Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, 195 prairie photography, 103, 144145 price/cost considerations, 16 Prickly Phlox owers, 166 print size, 89, 18 Print, The (Adams), 207, 214, 227 pro cameras/lenses, 16 processing photos. See darkroom techniques Program mode, 69
R
random acts of photography, 156 Raw + JPEG setting, 167 raw photos black-and-white JPEGs with, 167 white balance settings for, 65 reality assignment on perceiving, 41 human vs. camera view of, 33 receding lines, 102 Red Rock Canyon Conservation Area, 227 redwood forests, 68, 84, 175, 192193 relationships. See visual relationships relative size, 102 revealing colors, 52 Revell, Jeff, 51, 67 Review Time setting, 39 rule of thirds, 7983 horizon line and, 79 problems related to, 82 vertical elements and, 80 visual balance and, 85
246
L A N D S C A P E P H O T O G R A P H Y : F R O M S N A P S H O T S T O G R E AT S H O T S
S
San Gabriel Mountains, 63 Santa Monica Mountains Castro Crest, 4445, 98101, 190191 chaparral landscape photo, 3031 early morning photos, 62, 79, 9899, 147, 162163 rocky landscape photos, 147, 200 saturation checking in HDR images, 202 darkroom adjustments for, 225, 226 Schaefer Prairie, Minnesota, 144145 Schwabachers Landing, 152153 S-curves, 85 seasonal light summer light, 58, 5960 winter light, 58 Sedona, Arizona Oak Creek, 198 sky over cliffs, 203 seeing the light, 40, 4854 self-timer, 88 sensor size, 913 explanation of, 910 focal length and, 10, 1213 high ISO settings and, 1618 price considerations, 16 visual examples of, 11 separation light, 172173 Shade white balance, 66 shading your LCD, 39 shadows assignment on capturing, 70 directional light and, 55 dramatic light and, 51, 173174 front light and, 58 gentle light and, 51, 52 seeing in images, 40, 48 top light and, 59, 60 waiting for changes in, 151 shapes front light for showing off, 59 shadows for dening, 174
sharpness contrast related to, 168, 172 depth of eld and, 111112 f-stops related to, 112 sharpness contrast, 168, 172 Shutter Priority mode, 69 shutter speed deep depth of eld and, 117118 exposure related to, 113 side light, 5657, 174 sight camera, 3537 human, 3435 signs in photos, 93 silhouettes back light and, 57 black-and-white images as, 176 sunset photos and, 139 Silver Efex Pro black-and-white translations with, 182183 sky and cloud adjustments with, 138 Simon, Paul, 67 size considerations for backgrounds, 109111 for equipment, 1415 for perspective, 102 for prints, 89, 18 for sensors, 913 sketching vs. photography, 82 skies, 123139 appropriateness of including, 128129 assignments on shooting, 139 capturing with cameras, 130 composing images with, 94, 131132 enhancing clouds in, 136138 examples of shooting, 124127 exposure challenges of, 133135 graduated neutral-density lter for, 135 HDR photos with clouds and, 205 polarizing lter for, 60, 136138 programs for working with, 138 rule of thirds for, 79 See also clouds software. See image-processing software
INDEX
247
solidity of objects, 56, 59 Sony cameras/lenses, 2526 Southern California landscapes Crystal Cove State Park, 160161 Pacic Ocean Coast, 137 Santa Monica Mountains, 3031, 4445, 98101, 162163, 190191 Strand, Paul, 165 subjects determining for compositions, 8485 working landscapes as, 149152, 156 summer light, 58, 5960 sunlight, colors of, 6163 sunrise photos color of light in, 62 directional light in, 54, 55 dramatic light in, 50 examples of, 4445, 54, 55, 63, 142143 exposure challenges of, 134 white balance for, 67 sunset photos color of light in, 62, 63, 64 directional light in, 55 dramatic light in, 50 examples of, 4647, 50, 62 exposure challenges of, 134 silhouettes included in, 139 white balance for, 67 swivel/tilting LCDs, 18, 19
back light and, 57 contrast based on, 168, 171, 184 side light and, 56 top light and, 60 three-dimensional scenes, 55, 56 tilting/swivel LCDs, 18, 19 time-of-day considerations, 61, 62, 71 tonal contrast, 168, 169, 176, 184 Tone Curve (Lightroom), 222223 tone maps, 198 top light, 5960 traditional darkroom techniques. See darkroom techniques translucent colors, 57 tripods, 2023 assignment on using, 27 HDR photography and, 194 head types for, 2223 height changes using, 88 leg angles for, 21, 22 reasons for using, 20 tips for selecting, 21 Tungsten white balance, 66
U
underexposed images, 67, 68 unique features/moments, 147, 148 Utah landscapes Arches National Park, 49, 80, 137, 171 Bryce Canyon National Park, 109, 149150 Canyonlands National Park, 107, 110 Capitol Reef National Park, 169 Castle Valley, 126127 Colorado River, 50 LaSalle Mountains, 78 Zion National Park, 23, 124125, 129, 148
T
Talbot, Henry Fox, 164 telephoto lenses deemphasizing foregrounds with, 109 depth of eld and, 114 distance relationships and, 109 example of using, 9899 magnifying backgrounds with, 110 perspective changes and, 105106, 107 Tennessee landscapes Frozen Head State Park, 86 Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 53, 83, 133, 170 textural contrast, 168, 171, 184 texture
V
Valley of Fire State Park, 112 vertical lines, 80 Virtual Copy feature, 236 vision camera, 3537 human, 3435 visitor centers, 155
248
L A N D S C A P E P H O T O G R A P H Y : F R O M S N A P S H O T S T O G R E AT S H O T S
visual relationships, 8593 distracting details and, 9293 effective use of edges and, 9091 foreground, middle ground, and background, 8789 Viveza 2 plug-in, 138 case study on using, 232234 local adjustments with, 231, 232234
Y
yellow lupine plant, 116 Yellowstone National Park, 164 Yosemite National Park, 89, 188189, 214, 215
Z
Zion National Park, 23, 124125, 129, 148 Zone System, 187 zoom lenses, 97 depth of eld and, 114 perspective changes and, 106107
W
Washington landscapes Columbia River, 83 Olympic Mountains, 114 Olympic National Park, 210211 water highlights added to, 55 removing glare from, 138 weather light affected by, 52, 61 skies affected by, 124125 website research, 155 Weston, Edward, 142, 148, 165 white balance, 6367 auto (AWB) setting, 6365 color correcting, 224225 how to choose, 6566 raw photography and, 65 sunrise/sunset photos and, 67 White Sands National Monument, 56, 173, 233 whites, adjusting, 216222 Whites slider (Lightroom), 219 wide-angle lenses depth of eld and, 114, 115 emphasizing foregrounds with, 108109 example of using, 100101 perspective changes using, 105106, 107 polarizing lter and, 136 shrinking backgrounds with, 110 wild HDR effects, 204 winter light, 58 workow of photo needs, 216232 See also darkroom techniques working a subject, 149152, 156 Wyoming landscape, 152153
V413HAV
INDEX
249
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