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Matching Colors

Exploring with your camera can be a fun thing to do when you are on vacation or just taking a few days of rest. The other day I was out and about in Rockport and drove by one of my favorite doors along Main St. A nice yellow wreath and fishing balls were hanging on the storm door. The colors are what drew me in. The complimentary red and yellow color gave me the image. Three main elements gave me the composition I was looking for. My tour clients often ask about colors and composition. I like to think of it this way; I look for one main color with other complimentary colors that add to the scene.

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Leica M-P 240  90mm Leitz Summicron  ISO 400  1/250s  f5.6

Paying attention to depth of field

One of the things I miss most from the old days is the depth of field scale (dof). Some of the new lenses have one but plenty do not. My Leica lenses all have a dof scale which makes it really handy to figure out what is in focus and what is not. Think about this. How many of you press the dof button to see what is in and what is out of focus. How many of you know what that is and where it is located. I know I use it very infrequently. The reason for this is if you are shooting at a small aperture like f11 or f16 it’s to dark and you can’t really tell what is in or out of focus. So the dof scale is very handy, unless there isn’t one. A good rule of thumb is to focus 1/3 of the way into the image and use an f stop that will cover the distance from front to back if that is what you want. The image above was focused on the end of the traps using f11 as the aperture with a 35mm lens. This gave me sharp focus from in front all the way to just past the boats. When you are out shooting experiment a little with dof. So when you are traveling you don’t come back with images that are not in focus like you would want. The cause of this is most likely the camera being on auto and the f stop was picked for you and most likely wide open at 3.5. The camera will always default to the highest shutter speed it can to make sure there is no movement. Good luck and happy shooting!

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Leica M-P 240  Leica 35mm Summicron  ISO 200  1/250s  f11

No Trespassing

Exploring with a camera can be one of the most interesting parts of traveling. Cape Ann has an endless supply of great places to explore. This image has several things going for it. Texture (my favorite), great light, shadows, and of course meaning. The No Trespassing sign is a no brainer with overgrowth and and a drain pipe laying on the stairs leading upward. Who knows what kind of shape the stairs are in. The knot hole in the railing makes this image for me. I don’t know about you but it pulls me right into the image. Exploring while traveling means you can find interesting things like this.

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