Last year I bought a ND1000 filter to have a play around with long exposure photography. However, due to work etc, have only just got around to having a go and used a recent short break to the Yorkshire Dales to have a go. Bear in mind I was also hiking / map reading for the rest of the party, so wasn't carrying a Tripod and was just using rocks / dry stone walls to rest the camera.
Also due to the conditions on one day, thought I'd try some HDR, again something I'd never tried before.
Advice, comments & criticisms (be nice!) all welcome.
Taken with Canon 70D + Sigma 18-125 + Hoya ND1000
Footbridge over the Rawthey (15 sec)
Arten Gill Viaduct & Great Knoutberry Hill (30 sec)
Whernside Tarn (15 sec)
Whernside Trig Point (15 sec)
Waterfall Off Green Hill (15 sec)
Stream into Dent (25 sec)
Road over the Rawthey (15 sec)
Bridge of the old Ingleton Branch Line over the Rawthey (15 sec)
Up Towards Cautley Spout (10 sec)
Cautley Spout (20 sec)
The Calf Trig Point (10 sec)
A Couple at Night (Obviously without the Filter, Both 30 sec)
A trio of HDR's, not really sure if it made all the difference, but here they are all the same
And to finish (not in slow motion at all), running 15 minutes EARLY, 45690 Leander, though Britain's highest mainline station of Dent
Thanks for looking and well done if you made it this far!
Yorkshire Dales in Slow Motion (+HDR)
Re: Yorkshire Dales in Slow Motion (+HDR)
Looks like you had similar weather to me last time I was up Whernside............
Re: Yorkshire Dales in Slow Motion (+HDR)
Dr Cake wrote:Looks like you had similar weather to me last time I was up Whernside............
That's the 4th time I've been up there, still yet to see anything!
Re: Yorkshire Dales in Slow Motion (+HDR)
ted633 wrote:Dr Cake wrote:Looks like you had similar weather to me last time I was up Whernside............
That's the 4th time I've been up there, still yet to see anything!
Think I've been up twice. First time was reasonably OK but we were caught out quite badly last time!
I'm off up there somewhere next Friday - probably around Grassington somewhere.