Photo of the Week – February 3, 2012

I’ve always admired black and white photographers.

(Or at least photographers who take black and white photos…)

The photo below, however, is a color photograph.  It just happened that the scene was black and white.

Ice stalactites on the edge of a hole in a frozen stream. Lancaster County, Nebraska.

This photo was taken along a frozen stream in Lancaster County, Nebraska – just north of Lincoln.  The surface of the stream was frozen solid enough that I was able to walk on it, but there were a few places where the water beneath the ice was flowing strongly enough that it kept small holes in the ice open.  This image shows a portion of the edge of one of those holes.  (The hole was probably 2 or 3 feet in diameter.)

Because the water was flowing fairly fast, it splashed periodically, and those splashes – and subsequent drips – created stalactites of ice from the flat roof of ice over the water.  There were several holes with similar formations, but this was the most dramatic of the stalactites.

It was a bright overcast day with high thin clouds that eliminated shadows but still created a well-lit scene.  Cameras can only handle a certain range of light from bright to dark, so the degree of contrast between the white ice and the darker water below is what results in the black and white look of this image.  I wanted to be sure I captured the details in the bright white ice, but in doing that, the camera  was unable to also capture the full range of colors and tones in the much darker water below.  As a result, the water shows up in the photo as black.  In a delightful bit of serendipity, the glare from the bright sky reflecting on the dark water created some terrific highlights that both break up the dark background behind the ice and show the movement of the water beneath.

Photo of the Week – November 11, 2011

Sometimes the simplest things make the best photos.  The below photo was taken right outside my back door, and is just two fallen sycamore leaves overlapping each other.

When photographing leaf patterns, I often have a hard time finding a composition that captures what really draws me to a certain leaf or group of leaves.  Often, I have to pause for a moment and define what it is about a particular scene that’s actually appealing.  Is it the color or pattern of one particular leaf or the juxtaposition of multiple leaves together?   That helps me decide what the appropriate scale is for the photograph.  Many times, I end up getting closer and shooting a smaller scene – to scale down to the real essence of the subject.  Other times, I back up and either try to capture the way several objects interact visually with each other, or the way a subject is set off against its surroundings.  (I also abandon a lot of potential shots because I just can’t find a way to make them work.)

With this photo, I decided that what I really liked about these two leaves was the shape of the line that separated them.  When I tried to compose a photo showing both leaves in their entirety, the power of that line was diminished, but when I got closer, the line dominated the photo – and that’s what I wanted.