Showing posts with label camera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camera. Show all posts

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Old shots from Japan for Sunday Best

 





When I was in high school, photography was a slower, more deliberate practice. I worked with film—slides and negatives that demanded patience, economy, and intent. Each frame carried weight. There was no screen to consult, no instant reassurance, only the quiet discipline of seeing and committing. In that restraint, I learned to look carefully: to wait for light to settle, for a gesture to complete itself, for the world to offer something honest rather than spectacular.

The absence of distraction shaped the work. Without the constant pull of adjustment and review, attention remained fixed on composition, tone, and timing. The camera was not an extension of noise but an instrument of listening. Images emerged from stillness, not urgency, and the process itself became a form of contemplation.

That was a different style, and a different era—one defined by limits that clarified intention. I plan to share a number of those images over the coming Sundays. They are not merely records of what stood before the lens, but artifacts of how seeing once felt: unhurried, tactile, and quietly faithful to the moment as it passed, unrepeatable, into light.



Canon EOS3


Linking Sunday Best


Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Treasure Mirror for Treasure Tuesday

 




The mirror is not really clean. But it will do for a click. 


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4


Linking Treasure Tuesday



Monday, January 24, 2011

Temple via fish eye view


This is a high contrast image out of Voigtlander 12mm f5.6 which has that dramatic effect of wide perspective. The two people included in the image were my old photography pals. The image is a little desaturated to enhance that feeling of aged old look.

ONE in four Victorians think driving 10km over the speed limit in a 100km zone is socially acceptable.