Thursday, January 15, 2009

In the spotlight


In the spotlight
Originally uploaded by borealnz
We went for a walk along the beach the other evening after dinner, one of the benefits of the long evenings we get this far south, it was a popular place to be too, there weren't any swimmers or surfers but there were plenty of other walkers.

There is more sand on that beach than I've seen for years, which makes a stark contrast to the winter when they were worried about coastal erosion and sand loss. In winter you'd be rock hopping to get to the steps that lead up to the esplanade, at the moment the steps are half covered with sand; perhaps the most noticeable change is to the poles that appear in many of my photos, at the moment the taller ones nearer the sea would only stick out of the sand by about a metre or less, whereas in the past winter you'd be looking up at them and the ones at the back were almost completely covered.
I don't know where all the sand has come from but I'm sure it's more golden than the sand that's usually there and has tiny shells in it.

On our way back down the beach toward to the esplanade the sun decided to peek through a hole in the cloud cover and the light was so dramatic -with amazing shadows and silhouettes. I had the wide angle lens on so those distant silhouettes were actually much closer than they appear. And just as quickly as it has arrived the sun disappeared behind the clouds again.

6 comments:

paulgrand said...

What luck for us all that you had your camera for the brief sunburst!:-)

Yours Truly said...

sounds like a dream....we crave for sandy beach like that where I am from. We have to drive up south for this and it's too far! I love the beautiful capture. seen on flickr =)

Anonymous said...

hi there, i've just started TTV photography and can only take pictures with the duaflex on the ground. how would you recommend taking higher pictures eg of the sky?
thanks!

Borealnz (Jill) said...

Hi there anonymous, (hope you see this) I hope I've not misunderstood your question but with your bottom (ttv camera) in one hand and your other camera in the other (and with your "contraption" if you use it between them) it's really just the same as taking normal photos and even taking photos of the sky is relatively easy. It's harder to do if your top camera doesn't autofocus though.
Check out the TTV group on flickr http://www.flickr.com/groups/throughtheviewfinder/ there's a wealth of information there. Hope this helps a little.

Tom Espen said...

Hi!

I am contacting you about one of your photographs that I think would fit our upcoming cd cover perfectly.

Please get back to me asap if you are interested.

Thank you,

Tomcat (tomespen@englebarn.com)

Borealnz (Jill) said...

Thanks Tom, an email has been sent.