Love this! The little pops of colour are hopeful.
Love this! The little pops of colour are hopeful.
Shadows always make for interesting images, and this is no exception.
The barn owl is a great bonus, just to watch.
All up to your usual high standard!
Interesting & wow, all made from solid marble.
Congrats on the new Z8, personally I'm waiting for an update on the smaller bodied Z7, if it should ever come.
That exactly mirrors what I think about these things. In this day and age, anyone interested in what the ruin is could look it up online, or even a small QR code on a plaque somewhere would be better for the internet connected crowd. The worst thing is they place them right next to the ruins and they're massive and not in keeping with the surroundings.
Here's a version of the same image with the sign left in place, it stands out like a sore thumb.
Some interesting buildings and adornments as always. I do wonder what some of these sculptures are depicting, they're a bit bizarre.
Welcome to Z8 club. I much prefer the control quadrant arrangement to the drive mode dial approach on the Z7, as you say, it's much nicer for getting in and out of bracketing modes. My only disappointment with bracketing is the lack of negative only or positive only bracket sequences, it seems a peculiar omission and is the one thing I really wish they'd add in a software update (open gate video would be nice too, but at least we've finally got shutter angle in the latest update as well as separate still and video settings banks I believe).
The horizon level implementation was one of the main selling points for me as I can configure it to show both the horizon level and the histogram at the same time, something the Z7 couldn't do for some reason, yet pretty much essential when taking high contrast landscape photographs hand held with a modern digital camera.
Barn owls are amazing thing to watch when they're hunting over moors. When I first saw one up there, it looked like some ghostly spectre, silently floating above the grass in the pale moonlight. Marvellous.
North Face
...of the wall.
Mossy dry stone walls are glorious things. I particularly like how you've caught a curious tree, peering over the wall to look at you in the last shot.
An Evening On The Moors
The planet is now getting back into a position in space where there's enough time for me to get up onto the moors after work for a couple of hours before it goes dark, which is very considerate of it. Even the weather has played ball over the past few days, so one night this week I was quite eager to gather my kit together and begin the lengthy trudge up the steep tarmac of Well Lane to reach Withnell moor.
Onto The Moors
This is actually the point where Hatch Brook leaves the moors and disappears beneath Well Lane to reappear in the woods before tumbling down its steep and rocky waterfall.
Whittles Plantation
Often, a cluster of mature trees on these moors is an indication of the former location of a moorland farm and these are no exception, although the farm ruins themselves are out of shot and way off to the left.
Ratten Clough
At the top of Well Lane stands the ruins of Ratten Clough.
...
As usual, another interesting and enjoyable story.
These two are my favourites from that good set.
Great compositions and lighting!
They'd also go down really well in the new Weekly Landscspe Thread, if you're interested :-)
Trevor