White on white
backing off the sliders
in Antarctica , Wednesday, October 26, 2016
For some random reason I recently stumbled across a group of photos I took in Antarctica in 2013, and which I had more or less discarded. The photos are of icebergs, and I suppose I had tried to turn them into the sort of eye candy which is more or less obligatory these days, with ominous dark skies and intense saturated blues. Easy enough to do, but not really very satisfying. I have some shots which are naturally that way, and those, I let be. These, however, I finally realised, have a lot more potential to convey something of my idea of Antarctica. I've mentioned this before, probably too often, but I find a lot of common ground in the work of Stuart Klipper, who's Antarctica photography is a million miles away from the 500px aesthetic (I'm being polite, there).
So I tried to accentuate the soft light, the feeling of mystery, and the essential whiteness of it all. Something a bit like this:
Actually the reason was far from random. With practically zero planning, unexpectedly I am off to Antarctica again next month, and I needed to pick up where I left off.
So I tried to accentuate the soft light, the feeling of mystery, and the essential whiteness of it all. Something a bit like this:
Actually the reason was far from random. With practically zero planning, unexpectedly I am off to Antarctica again next month, and I needed to pick up where I left off.
Posted in Antarctica | Apple Aperture on Wednesday, October 26, 2016 at 06:28 PM
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