Changing Colours

One of the joys of photography is watching the landscape as it transforms through the hour before and after sunset or sunrise. The sequence of photographs here were taken either side of the sun setting at Cape Woolamai in Victoria’s southern coast. The first image has a soft golden light consistent with the “golden hour”. When the sun reaches the horizon, the light is intense and the shadows cooler. Right at sunset, the light’s temperature has warmed further, bathing the landscape in orange and red hues. And once down, all that is left is the deepening blue of the twilight sky reflected in the ocean and the darkening rocks, with only the faintest hint of the sun (now below the horizon) remaining.

All these images were taken using a neutral density and a polarising filter, with exposure times close to or at 30 seconds. The use of long exposure is a technique I enjoy, because it simplifies the scene and creates a sense of tranquility that matches how I feel, even when I’m watching a surging ocean. In this case, the waves were three or more meters high - enough to shatter over the tops of the rock formations you can see here, which reach two or three stories above the ground.

Read More

2017 | A Year of Water

This is a selection of the photographs that are most memorable for me from the year that was (2017). Are they the best I've taken this year? I am probably not well placed to say, but I do know that for each one I felt something profound as I stood where I stood to capture the scene. Maybe excitement, maybe a deep sense of peace, maybe a connectedness, maybe wonder. 

Read More

Lorne Roadtrip

A few days ago, I peeled potatoes...well, actually, I took photographs. So why the quote? Because for me, making photos is a bit like peeling potatoes for a Zen master. I can do it for hours, living in the immediate moment, just being.   

Read More