A few months ago I got up really early and went to visit a nature reserve about 10 miles away from my home. The night before I used maps, Google Earth, weather forecasts etc to explore where I was going and everything and planning where I needed to be for sunrise. I was greeted with misty lakes and an amazing sunrise. I got two amazing shots of which I have sold a couple of prints. I didn't scout the area at all before hand. Real 'beginners luck', it would seem.
Ever since then I have been plagued by disapointment with my landscape photography. For months I have been trying to capture a really good woodland shot worthy of canvas production to hang in my lounge. Just as with the nature reserve, I have plotted and scouted many areas before heading out into the wild, but then finding that I don't get a single shot worth keeping. Today I drove 93 miles (round trip) as part of my latest scouting mission to explore the area in and around Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire. I walked round for a couple of hours and found a couple of potential compositions that face East for the sunrise, but at 45 miles away from my home I'd have to get up in the middle of the night to get there for sunrise, and even if I manage that, there's nothing to say I'll get anything worth keeping - that's not to mention the fact that oftentimes these places don't open until 0700.
I have come to realise that photographing people, families, babies, children, pets and other things is much easier than landscapes! You're at the mercy of so many things - your ability to forecast mist\fog\clear\damp\wet, the relief of the environment, making sure street lights won't be in your shot, knowing which way is East (or West) not to mention knowing a good place to go!!
I live in Derby, Derbyshire, UK. Does anyone know an area near to that which has dense decidious woodlands, ideally oaks, (so not pines or other evergreens) that is a good distance from roads with street lights?
Cheers
Ted
Ever since then I have been plagued by disapointment with my landscape photography. For months I have been trying to capture a really good woodland shot worthy of canvas production to hang in my lounge. Just as with the nature reserve, I have plotted and scouted many areas before heading out into the wild, but then finding that I don't get a single shot worth keeping. Today I drove 93 miles (round trip) as part of my latest scouting mission to explore the area in and around Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire. I walked round for a couple of hours and found a couple of potential compositions that face East for the sunrise, but at 45 miles away from my home I'd have to get up in the middle of the night to get there for sunrise, and even if I manage that, there's nothing to say I'll get anything worth keeping - that's not to mention the fact that oftentimes these places don't open until 0700.
I have come to realise that photographing people, families, babies, children, pets and other things is much easier than landscapes! You're at the mercy of so many things - your ability to forecast mist\fog\clear\damp\wet, the relief of the environment, making sure street lights won't be in your shot, knowing which way is East (or West) not to mention knowing a good place to go!!
I live in Derby, Derbyshire, UK. Does anyone know an area near to that which has dense decidious woodlands, ideally oaks, (so not pines or other evergreens) that is a good distance from roads with street lights?
Cheers
Ted



