Nice day for tinny ride

Tinny Ride - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

Tinny Ride – (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/11
Shutter Speed: 0.6 seconds (neutral frame)
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

boating on Gordons Bay
Following on from my previous version of this composition with a long exposure (https://blog.avernus.com.au/muted-maritime-dreams/) I also made a ‘conventional’ style shot, I really wanted the lines of the boat rack to shine through and compliment the little aluminum boat but trying to get enough space around it was difficult and it felt like my lens was never quite wide enough 🙂

The clouds did come to the party in this case and put on a nice show as the sun rose behind them (you can see this in the LE version too), even with the sun being shadowed by the clouds the dynamic range in the scene was still very large and as a result this frame is the culmination of 3 bracketed shots to maintain the the shadow detail, particularly in the foreground below the boat.

I don’t like to present two shots of the same composition, but I think it’s a good example how the mood of a shot can be drastically changed by the shutter speed, plus my pano of this location failed to stitch 🙁 so single vertical composition it is..

Nice day for a little boating adventure too.

Exif/setup data:
3 Bracketed shots manually blended in +Adobe Photoshop
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/11
Shutter Speed: 0.6 seconds (neutral frame)
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

https://blog.avernus.com.au/nice-day-for-tinny-ride/

‘S’ is for Summer

 

S os for Summer - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/13 and Shutter Speed: 1/1.3 s
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

and s-curves of course

Some nicely greenery and rocks on the edge of Lurline Bay bathed in the warm afterglow of a fiery red sunrise.

Exif/setup data:
Single shot
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/13 and Shutter Speed: 1/1.3 s
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

 

Muted Maritime Dreams

Muted Maritime Dreams - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/11
Shutter Speed: 248 seconds
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x, Lee Bigstopper and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

smoothing out the rough seas with a very long exposure.

Exif/setup data:
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/11
Shutter Speed: 248 seconds
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x, Lee Bigstopper and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

 

Siberian Husky

Siberian Husky - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

D750 coupled with 135mm f2.5 @ 105mm Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 1/500s
ISO: 100
Out front: nada, just a puppy dog and a happy owner / feeder.

mans best friend
view this one large, since panos lose their impact here on gplus.

This guy had the right idea, getting the puppy dog out for a walk early in the morning before the heat hit, the two of them sat on the edge of the cliffs for a some time enjoying the beautiful cool morning, which was convenient for me since I had time to swap lens and bash out a few shots for a panorama view of the scene.
I really do like these spontaneous shots of people, however my photographic aversion to crowds means the chance of them happening is slim 😉

Techie love:
3 shot panorama.
have used this lens quite a bit since going to FX format 🙂 lucky, since it was on the sell list until the other week.
D750 coupled with 135mm f2.5 @ 105mm Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 1/500s
ISO: 100
Out front: nada, just a puppy dog and a happy owner / feeder.

Wave Power

Wave Power - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

Wave Power – (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/13
Shutter Speed: 319 seconds
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x, Lee Bigstopper and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

a man born well before his times

After posting my previous version of the Lurline Channel image (https://blog.avernus.com.au/lineup-lurline/) and incorrectly and ignorantly labelling it some sewer channel it got me thinking (as rare as that is) about why the channel was there, so off to mister +Google+ it was for some research, it was very quickly apparent that the channel was anything but a sewer outlet, in fact it was part of a very historic moment in time and also very much about a man, Peter Bates who was well ahead of his time. Peter, designed, built and successfully proved that wave powered electricity generation was possible and potentially feasible at this location – Lurline Bay Power Generation.

It is quoted ‘the Lurline Bay power project was a remarkable story of human perseverance and , ultimately , bitter disappointment’. I don’t entirely agree, disappointment maybe.. but remarkable achievement all the same, especially given the era.

Peter was, in the true sense of the word, a engineer, with no formal training, he was a man with the natural tendency to think like a engineer and harvest scientific information and engineering skills, his feats on the Lurline Bay Power project (and other smaller projects, moving eyes for dolls, rock drilling…) just go to show that simply a university education is not enough to be able to quality yourself as a engineer – that is another whole story in itself btw 🙂

After quite a life of engineering, importing scissors, singing family and kids among other things, and at the ripe age of 51, Peter turned to concentrating on his Wave Generation project. In 1920 he submitted a patent titled “Improvements in and Relating to the Utilisation of Wave Motion”. In 1921 he really got cracking and with a 5 year leave pass from his wife 🙂 , a sidekick to help and also some funding he managed to successfully setup a system consisting of vanes, pumps and turbine / dynamo to produce enough electricity to power a single light 🙂 .. well we gotta start somewhere right!

The project continued to develop past the 5 year leave pass (1929) from his wife (man I am glad i was not there asking for another 5 years!) but successfully managed to refine the design and system to produce a peak power of 5,000 watts.. that’s pretty respectable for that era. This is basically where it ends it would seem…

As part of the design and probably something that took up a large portion of the time was the building of the channel, this was cut from Sydney sandstone, which by stone types is actually quite soft, but I am sure when your cutting it by hand it is still bloody hard. Anyway, the channel is obviously still there today with some of the original brickwork (and pole) and is the main feature that I noticed when doing some research for a sunrise photoshoot here.

So there you have it. This location is part of the renewable energy generation.. nearly 100 years too early 🙂

Here’s to you Peter Bates, h/t.

Onto the image, this is the composition and the position of the sun I have been waiting to capture for some moths, it lines up nicely in the months of November and December, I had taken a few conventional shots prior to this and the sun was just starting to peek over the thick band of cloud on the horizon, to slow things down a bit I used the Lee Bigstopper to really extend the exposure time, however, I made one cardinal sin (in addition to all the others I have made 😉 ) I did not cover my viewer finder with the DK-5 cover, this is the only feature that nikon needs to be beaten over the head for when it comes to the D750. One has to remove the eyecup and place this fiddly little plastic cap on the viewerfinder, what a pita, really nikon, you could have just stretched it to include a viewfinder bind…

Anyway, as a result of not covering the viewfinder, I ended up with a nasty vertical streak in the frame (top to bottom), after swearing profusely to Rodney and wishing a thousand papercuts to the nikon engineer who designed the D750 without a view finder blind I resigned myself to another ruined 4 minute exposure…

Later, when processing a few of the images from the morning I was looking at this streaky frame thinking, ‘can I salvage this?’ I decided to give it a crack.. after about 30 minutes of tweaks, adjustments and voodoo magic I got it to a point where the vertical band was… well .. less noticeable..

So, can you pick where the vertical band was??

 

Exif/setup data:
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/13
Shutter Speed: 319 seconds
ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x, Lee Bigstopper and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

for more info about Lurline bay:
http://lurlinebay.com.au

Gold Door

Gold Door - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

Gold Door – (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock
7 shot panorama, non bracketed, i was feeling lazy and hoped the awesome sensor on the D750 woudl come to my rescue in the highlight department.. which it did 🙂
Techie exif data love..
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 16mm Aperture: f/16 and Shutter Speed: 1/2.5s
Out front: Lee graduated filter (0.9x) adjusted to all kinds of funky angles to bend around the building…. and of course Rodney and his white socks …

sneaky sunday sunrise sessions
Perched upon a sweet looking headland was this rather large residence with a private access door right onto the rocks – with the white fence to prevent potential intoxicated guest from meeting a bad end at the foot of the cliffs..must be a hard life 😉

The fence was not looking much chop by it self however +Rodney Campbell was working hard to bring something to life with it. I opted for a some pano and sky action thinking that the sky and that cool weather worn door could work. Doors never fail, just about any shot of a door works..that said, its gotta be one of my first 🙂

Rodney can be seen here in his trademark white socks photobombing my shot as usual 😉 although he does add a point of interest.

7 shot panorama, non bracketed, i was feeling lazy and hoped the awesome sensor on the D750 woudl come to my rescue in the highlight department.. which it did 🙂
Techie exif data love..
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 16mm Aperture: f/16 and Shutter Speed: 1/2.5s
Out front: Lee graduated filter (0.9x) adjusted to all kinds of funky angles to bend around the building…. and of course Rodney and his white socks …

Lineup Lurline

Channel - (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock

Channel – (c) 2014 Gerard Blacklock
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/11and Shutter Speed: 15s over exposed frame 5, 2 and 1 second for the highlight details shots. All manually blended in +Adobe Photoshop ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

Welcome to the channel of pain
Many months ago after doing a sunrise session at Maroubra I drove around the headland and noticed this little dinky bay tucked away amongst some very expensive property, whilst I am sure its not the first time the place has been photographed it certainly has to be on the lesser known and abused list of spots.
After some reccy on google I noticed this mad channel penetrating the ocean, from the satellite view it look natural, however, as one can see its pretty clearly man made (something not noticed until on site)…. for what? probably a obsolete poo dump pipe 🙂

It has taken a few couple failed attempts to get here, mainly due to sleep motivation issues ( +Suren J I am looking at you here) but finally I made it 🙂

and.. ya know the real kicker? there were no hordes of togs there ! – well I don’t count +Rodney Campbell more than twice, so no hordes… just two 🙂

It was one of the really nice mornings to be out, nice colour, muted sunrise by a large bank of cloud cool rock formations and plenty of sweet green slippery ass moss (don’t quote that outta context)

As part of the reccy on +Google+ and the photographers ephemeris (photoephemeris.com) I noticed that towards the end of the year the sun lined up with the channel… hence the need to get there now-ish 🙂 There are several other nearby locations like this which come alive with the sun lining up channels and crevasses…all which are on the cards for the month of december 🙂

anywhos… onto the obligatory image info..

This image is captured from 4 different exposures, even with the graduated filters onboard the super dynamic range of the nikon D750 there is still the need to bracket to capture all the dynamic range without pushing the limits of the sensor range and raw files.

This was also taken using my 11-16mm DX lens since my 16-35 is currently being assessed for repair..which by comparsion was not as sharp (well mostly) as my DX 11-16mm…

Exif/setup data:
D750 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @16mm Aperture: f/11and Shutter Speed: 15s over exposed frame 5, 2 and 1 second for the highlight details shots. All manually blended in +Adobe Photoshop ISO 100
out front – Lee Graduated Filter 0.9x and the Hoya Circular Polariser.

 

The horn of Kurnell

the faces of the cliffs
Apparently, according to chaos, if you tilt your head the right way there is a chicken in there 😉 I can see a eagle with a beard, but it is late 😉

The cliffs that adorn the sydney coastline are always full of surprises and unique subjects for a photographer and it is this that draws me back every time. The pools of water are always a great subject and when coupled with predawn light can really come alive.

One would never guess that only a few kilometres away are some serious industrial plants, the Sydney Desalination plant (aka we need a nuke plant to run it 😉 ) and of course the Kurnell refinery. I am not sure whether its absolutely amazing that these two environments co-exist or just down right depressing.

2 frame Manual Blend.
Exif/setup data:
D7000 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 11.5 mm Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 152.1s (foreground) and 22.3 seconds (mid-sky)
out front – LEE 0.9 Graduated filter and Screw in HOYA circular polariser

As always, I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed.

Man Rays

and the path travelled
(truth be told I was looking at the whales 20 metres below 😉 )
A follow-on from my angelic halo 😉
https://plus.google.com/100975265940134223422/posts/bGYy5uJE1L8
Somewhere along the Kurnell coast line with the first of the whales heading north to the warmer waters for some sweet loving.

Exif/setup data:
D7000 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 11 mm Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 3seconds
out front – LEE 0.9 Graduated filter and Screw in HOYA circular polariser

As always, I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed.

Pool of Reflection

4 shot (bracketed) panorama view processed in by +Nik Collection by Google
Techie data:
D7000 with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 12mm – Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: multiple ( 3 brackets) 4, 1 & 15 seconds
out front -Hoya screw in circular polariser and LEE Graduated filter (ND) 0.90

I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed and always appreciate the time people take to have a look, plus and/or comment.

Fishing

View Large and fill that 16:9 screen with what its meant to be filled with – panorama love 🙂

Fishermen have featured pretty heavily in my images recently, I guess its just about them being in the right place at the right time 🙂

In this instance it was a lone fisherman on the edge of the rocks, whilst it may look somewhat dangerous, the place where he is standing is quite sheltered and at this tide level does not get too hectic 🙂 I really wanted to convey that sense of small-ness against the sunrise and sea, probably the real point is that I could not be arsed changing to a longer focal length lens 🙂 I did also want to get down lower to get him more silhouetted against the sky, however time did not permit it.

Techie data:
4 shot panorama (2 brackets per shot)
D7000 with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 16mm- Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 4seconds & ?
out front – Hoya screw-in Circular Polariser (CPL) and LEE Graduated filter (0.9)

I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed and always appreciate the time people take to have a look, plus and/or comment.

Fishing the Little Bay

Whilst it was a beautiful morning, these fishermen only had meagre luck, a few smallish barely legal size bream, after a short discussion, we were agreed it did not matter on a such a beautiful morning

Similar to a previous shot (https://plus.google.com/100975265940134223422/posts/MG2VGyeN62n), however of a panoramic view, I prefer my vertical composition, mainly since its was quicker to process than this 5 shot one 🙂

Techie data:
5 shot bracketed panorama (5 sets of 3 images, manually blended together)
D7000 with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 16mm- Aperture: f/16 and Shutter Speed: 01/3s, 1/10s & 1.5s
out front – LEE Graduated filter (0.9)

I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed and always appreciate the time people take to have a look, plus and/or comment.

Golf anyone?

View Large and fill that 16:9 screen with what its meant to be filled with – panorama love 🙂

Just as the storm rolled over, well not quite a storm but certainly enough rain to make it uncomfortable – I noticed a dinky little glow on the horizon and madly setup a shot with my back to rain to try and get something without covering the camera in rain.

Oddly enough 2 minutes later the sun poked its head thru the clouds for a brief moment, standby by for that shot 🙂

I only had to clone out about 15 million water droplet marks on my filter when processing this one 🙂

Techie data:
5 shot panorama
D7000 with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 13mm- Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 2seconds
out front – LEE 0.6 (0.9 was soaked with rain by this point) Graduated filter and Screw in HOYA circular polariser

No Carts

This was a quick grab shot between a locations, I could not resist that little gravel path and perfectly placed podium aka golf tee-off. The possibilities are endless here, however must be done before the early golfers turn up 😉

The couple of golf courses over this way really do command a pretty serious section of coast and make for scenic golf games, well when the weather is fair anyway. I can only imagine with a stiff sea breeze things could get interesting 🙂

3 frame Manual Blend.
Exif/setup data:
D7000 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 11 mm Aperture: f/8 and Shutter Speed: 8s, 20s (foreground) and 4s
out front – LEE 0.9 Graduated filter and Screw in HOYA circular polariser

As always, I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed.

Dragons Footsteps

Predawn blue bliss
I never ceases to amaze me the planet that we live on and how stuff just happens and sometimes so beautifully (well beautiful in a human perspective sense). Whilst its all just atmospherics and physics it is still amazing (for this lowly human) to watch the predawn colours develop from the night blue to light up the sky like a painter covering a fresh dark canvas – or in the words of my daughter, like the easter bunny has just painted the sky.

Sunrise is by far the best time of day.

2 frame Manual Blend.
Exif/setup data:
D7000 coupled with Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 @ 11.5 mm Aperture: f/6.7 and Shutter Speed: 121.5s (foreground) and 15 seconds (mid-sky)
out front – LEE 0.9 Graduated filter and Screw in HOYA circular polariser

As always, I welcome any suggestions, comments and improvements to my photography, they are always warmly welcomed.