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Posts Tagged ‘river’

“Porto Panorama” : 9th September 2011

OK, it’s a fairly touristy view I know, but hey, it had to be done.

Porto has a very changeable climate : in the few days I was there, it went from cold and rainy to sweltering heat and blue skies, sometimes both on the same day.

I had to act fast to shoot everything in decent light. Look carefully at the top of the picture, where the river meets the sea. You’ll notice a bank of ominous low cloud that rapidly swept up the valley shortly after this photo was taken, making everything hazy and grey…

See a larger version of this photo here.

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“Bright Blue Boat” : Porto, 9th September 2011

Boats are always a great subject to photograph, especially when the sun’s out. There’s nothing like seeing those beautiful reflections of the sun’s rays sparkling along the underside of the hull – quite magical, really…

Check out the larger version of this photo here.

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Porto, 9th September 2011

There you go, a straight, touristy shot of Porto looking out over the warehouses of a Port wine producer towards the Douro river and the medieval city centre on the hillside beyond.

It’s a nice place : go there…

Click here for a larger version of this photo.

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“Porto’s Port Boats” : 9th September 2011

Today I present you with a themed series of three photos.

Porto, in the north of Portugal, not only gave its name to the country, but also to the most famous product of the city, fortified wine.

On the Douro river one can numerous boats like these, laden with barrels in the back and bearing the names of the manufacturers.

One can only assume that they are for touristic purposes these days, not to mention advertising.

Nonetheless, they are very attractive and a good target for the photographer.

Larger versions of these photographs can be found here, here and here.

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“The Price of Industry” : Hiroshima, Japan, 17th February 2012

Today I decided to walk through some random places in Hiroshima in the hope of finding things to photograph.

I took a couple of trains out to the northern suburb of Omachi, where I got out and strolled about ten kilometres back to the central station, with the occasional snow flurry making things rather interesting weather-wise.

Somewhere along the trail I encountered this fairly bleak view of the sun trying to battle with fat storm clouds reflected on a dirty and polluted-looking river. I make it look uglier than it is, but it’s no secret that Hiroshima is not a very beautiful city.

Just for fun, here’s the iPhone Instagram version I took of the same view: they always look great on a tiny screen, but the low quality is evident when it’s exported, and look at how badly blown out the sky is – all the cloud detail has vanished! Good fun, though…

You can see a larger version of the first photograph here.

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“Portuguese Tower View” : Belem, Lisbon, 7th September 2011

I took this deceptively simple shot from Lisbon’s Torre de Belém, a sixteenth-century fortified tower on the banks of the Tagus river which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and closely associated with the age of discovery.

I say simple, because the picture straight out of the camera was suffering from some horrible distortion caused by using a wide-angle lens. Correcting this is a nightmare, so I usually don’t bother, but here it detracted from the beautiful tones and lines of the image so much that I made the effort. This involves importing the file into dedicated (but tediously slow) software where I was able to make the tower on the left and the column on the right roughly parallel.

Just for comparison, and an insight into the world of post-processing (or ‘faking it‘, as some would have it), here’s what the original picture looked like:

As well as the correction of the lens distortion, you can see that I levelled the horizon and applied a filter to the sky to produce a more pleasing tone (at least to my eyes). I think all of these changes are fairly subtle, but they improve the image enormously.

The wonders of modern technology, eh?

Have a look here for a larger version of the first image.

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“Tourists in Action” : Lisbon, Portugal, 7th September 2011

Today I present you with a rarity – at least for me: a photo featuring human beings as the centre of attention.

I was walking along the river front (although it looks like an ocean) in Belem, Lisbon, enjoying the glorious summer weather and having already photographed the obligatory architectural delights to be found in that area, when I thought I’d try my hand at a little candid work on my fellow tourists.

This trio were just framed so beautifully against the bright concrete promenade, the turquoise water and the pale sky that I had to attempt a capture, and this is the result. It’s far from perfect technically – if you zoom in, you’ll see that these folks are all out of focus because I shot at a ridiculously slow shutter speed for some reason that escapes me – but I’m very pleased with it, nonetheless.

I still feel a bit uncomfortable doing this kind of shot, though…

A larger version of this picture can be found here.

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“Bicycle Burial” : Hiroshima, Japan, 8th January 2012

Is this first photo taken in 2012 that I’ve published? I think it is…

I was strolling around Hiroshima Station yesterday, not really feeling like doing a lot of walking to look for something of interest, and luckily just two minutes away I found fertile ground for photography down near the river.

In an underpass where there is a minor homeless shanty town of blue plastic sheeting, a lot of people park their bicycles, and evidently more than just a few end up in the river, either as a prank or due to adverse weather.

The river was low, revealing this fairly new machine lying in repose on the muddy bed, already so smeared in gunk that the original colour of the paintwork can no longer be discerned at all.

Black and white seemed like the right way to go, since the alternative would have just been all-over brown…

Check out the larger version of this image here.

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“Nature’s Mirror” : Strasbourg, France, 1st September 2011

There’s a whole side to the French city of Strasbourg that most tourists don’t get to see.

Once you leave the quaint picturesque timbered medieval houses of the old quarter, there are the grand boulevards and impressive public buildings of more recent times, giving way to the university, the botanical gardens and then the area dedicated to the assemblies of the European Union.

It was on the edge of this latter region that I stumbled upon this beautiful, and somehow typically European scene, bringing out the latent landscape photographer in me.

Incidentally, this will be the last photo from France for a while, since I have now finally begun processing the pictures I took in the last third of my summer trip, which took me to Portugal, so expect a change of atmosphere.

As usual, you can glimpse a larger version of this photo by clicking here.

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“Night Flowers” : Strasbourg, 29th August 2011

After an amazingly productive night of photography in Strasbourg I headed back to my hotel on the periphery of the old town and just happened to notice these overflowing flower beds on the side of the bridge I was crossing.

Actually, I’d noticed them before in the daytime, as I’d used this bridge frequently, and although the flowers were a nice touch to the iron span, they hadn’t really registered as being worthy of immortalising in a digital format.

But at night, with the distant lights casting reflections on the river and the flowers spotlit by an overhead street lamp, a magical transformation took place…

You can see a bigger version of this image here.

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