photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Alan K | all galleries >> Galleries >> Hanging out in my PAD 2010 > 100307_071610_6232 Morning Light, Bicentennial Park (Sun 07 Mar 10)
previous | next
07-Mar-2010 AKMC

100307_071610_6232 Morning Light, Bicentennial Park (Sun 07 Mar 10)

Lake Belvedere, Bicentennial Park, Sydney Olympic Park, NSW view map

In some ways this follows on from what I was saying at the end of yesterday's shot. If I had to nominate the single biggest advantage of starting to PAD? You start to develop a much greater appreciation of the nuances of light; its colour, direction and quality. Prior to PADing I'd often see a scene and unless the light was exceptionally bad, I'd just fire away. Now, I can actually see the changes moment by moment as the sun rises, as the clouds conceal and reveal it in turn.

I had probably only 10 to 15 minutes of "good" light around Lake Belvedere this morning. After that clouds covered the sun, diffusing most of the light and leeching the colour out of it. The golden/reddish tint of this scene? That's no colour balance issue, that's what the light really was at that time. Down by the lakeside it was one of those "good to be alive" moments, though the fact that work was the better part of 24 hours away didn't hurt.

(What would I have done differently? Stopped down a bit more. At full size, the DOF is a little shorter than I'd like, but it's not so noticeable when reduced to web size.)

The aquatic landing of our feathered friend in the foreground was partly luck, partly timing. I was positioning the camera to capture more or less this scene anyway, concentrating on getting the reflection of the tree in the frame on the right, when I saw the duck inbound. I had just enough time to finish positioning and hit the shutter to capture the landing, though I wasn't fortunate enough to get any of the "close in" takeoff or landing shots that I would have liked.

Bicentennial Park / Homebush Bay is the area around which the 2000 Olympic Games were centred. (The suburb is now called Sydney Olympic Park, and sits within the City of Parramatta. Bicentennial Park sits within the suburb. It was formerly known as Homebush Bay.) You wouldn't think that it's rejuvenated industrial land and garbage dumps, would you?

Canon EOS 40D ,Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS USM
1/200s f/8.0 at 40.0mm iso400 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
Mairéad08-Mar-2010 21:45
Lovely golden light and reflections, with the ducks adding life and interest to the scene.
Bill Reed08-Mar-2010 13:01
This is excellent, you can feel the early morning sun working its way across the pond, the tone of the sun and the reflections in the water are perfect. The duck was a great bonus.
Doug Cruden07-Mar-2010 15:32
I really like this Alan - your comments about the quality of light are spot on, it's too easy sometimes to just keep on firing in the vain hope of pulling one out of the bag (I know, I've done that loads of times!) but I think you've got it right here. The trees and their reflection make a lovely full RH side; they also make a strong pointer for the eyes to go to the left into the frame where the ducks are...really nicely composed. My only comment would be that the scene is a bit 50/50 between fore- and background - I wonder if shortening the focal length (ie. zooming out) a tad and pointing slightly upward (or downward) to make the split more 70/30 would work better? But that's all, everything else gels together here beautifully
Máire Uí Mhaicín07-Mar-2010 11:30
A fine serene image, with a beautiful capture of light, and a serendipitous dipping by the duck. Did you shoot in RAW? If so, you might've pulled the exposure slider negatively to see if it would give you the effect you wanted with another stop down. But I think this is pretty perfect as it is.
Type your message and click Add Comment
It is best to login or register first but you may post as a guest.
Enter an optional name and contact email address. Name
Name Email
help private comment