While in Japan earlier this month, I revisited a place that has meant a lot to me, photographically...
These days in the U.K. there would probably be a "jobsworth" securíty guard
there ready to shout at you even when you were still about 20 yards awayVery ínteresting, Andy. What surprised me was how long some the the exposures had to be I may have been conditioned by the light conditions on the day of the tour and not realised that when you took the shots the light conditions were quite different
The night shot with the trails of the aircraft at I think 4 hours was probably the longest exposure I have seen but was clearly needed. How do you go about working out the exposure? Clearly a few minutes either way makes no difference but if you'd asked me to guesstimate the exposure I don't think I have estimated anything close to 4 hours which only goes to show that even at very long exposures, instinct and finger in the air guesses might be well wide of the mark
I was surprised at how white( almost IR like) the tree foliage came out with a green filter but maybe it was in fact quite light in colour anyway and not a deep green
You seemed to be the only tourist that day, no doubt due to the weather. You could have fried an egg and some bacon on a shovel as you walked around
By the way the underpass did not look open to me.These days in the U.K. there would probably be a "jobsworth" securíty guard
there ready to shout at you even when you were still about 20 yards away
pentaxuser


Very impressive—I love the juxtaposition of the 2023 video with your B&W shots from 20 years ago. The B&W images have a dignity that is absent from the video. It's remarkable that you were able to find so much of the same subject matter in the same positions all this time later. A question: in found sites such as this, are you ever tempted to move loose items around to make a different composition? I'm thinking of the gloves, for example, at 12:11 or the shovel laid across the tracks at 15:10? I can never bring myself to do that, though I'm not sure why.
Nice safari hat, by the way!
--Ben

Thank you, Ben. I don't like to move items around, but sometimes a little tweaking is necessary. The shovel was not touched. It is how I found it. The gloves in the box are how I found them. The box was leaning against the wall however, I did adjust its tilt ever so slightly. Very little has changed there, other than clean up, keeping the weeds down, repairs, replaced windows, info placards here and there... That hat was absolutely necessary in that sun!![]()
I too will not move or stage objects for photographs. I leave things as I find them.
I'll move stuff that is in the way - e.g branches - but I rarely stage stuff.

I'll move stuff that is in the way - e.g branches - but I rarely stage stuff.
I was constantly holding weeds out of the way, tree branches, etc. To photograph in the toilet, I had to remove a gauntlet of cobwebs in the doorway!![]()
Yes, I will do that and remove empty cigarette packages too.
Andy, thank you for inviting us along on this visit. Stunning images indeed.
| Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |
