Random Roundup
It's been a bit too hot to get out on the moors or anywhere particularly exciting this week, so instead I've been out on a number of short walks, including a very short one first thing this morning to catch the mist, which turned out more murky than misty.
All images taken with the Fujifilm GFX100S + 35-70. Processed from individual raw files in Capture One Pro 23. The woodland and sunny evening shots also employed a CPL. The woodland and morning shots were taken on a tripod, the rest are handheld.
Brinscall Woods
This was the first set of images I shot with the GFX. I did take the Nikon Z7 along for comparison (and shared a pair of images from both for comparison last week), but these are just the GFX shots that I liked. Quite a lot of what I shot were ruined with blown highlights as the GFX100S' histogram has practically zero overexposure headroom, unlike the Z7 which is generally just about right when the top end starts to bunch up a little. It does counter this with incredibly deep shadow recovery and vanishingly low noise, so swings and roundabouts I guess. I am shooting with blinkies on now, which gives me a bit more information to decide if I'm bothered about the blown areas than just using the histogram on its own.
Pikestones
This next set were taken on a Wednesday evening wander in the area surrounding Pikestones. This is a neolithic long barrow burial chamber on Anglezarke moor. It's been badly damaged over the years, which does make it looks like little more than a pile of rocks, but parts of the structure of the burial chamber are still standing, as pictured here.
From Pikestones, I took a brief wander out onto the moors towards the summit of Hurst Hill. As it was a very hot evening I only got as far as The Manky Pool of Anglezarke Moor before deciding it would be wiser to turn back before I fried beneath the oppressive sun.
On the way back, I spotted this view of Rivington Pike. It would have been nice to get in a bit tighter here, but at the moment, I only have the 35-70 for the GFX, so other than heavy cropping that wasn't an option. Having said that, I'm quite enjoying the 65:24 in camera crop. It's roughly a half height frame, but that still leaves me 50MP to work with. The raw files are saved as full 4:3 images, unlike the Nikon, which only saves the cropped area for some unknown reason, so I can reframe it later if I want to. C1P also ignores the cropping metadata, so I do need to remember that I've taken a cropped shot rather than just shoddily composed it, then reapply the crop during edit.
I quite liked this backlit tree that I spotted on the way back to the car.
Murky Morning
On my way out for the Wednesday evening walk, I spotted this scene from the top of Nickleton Brow.
With the promise of a little mist this morning, I decided to head back to Nickleton Brow to try the same shot under different conditions. Unfortunately, misty turned out the be more murky than anything, so the results aren't really what I'd hoped for. Under this lighting the ploughed field in the foreground feels a bit more intrusive. I took this just inside the open gate on the field, so I am wondering if I'd get a better shot wandering a little way into the field, hopefully not upsetting the farmer in the process.
Turning to face Rivington Pike from the same spot yielded this view. Again, I think this would be nice were it not for the foreground. Maybe I need a 100ft tripod to get above it, plus some substantial ladders to reach the camera?
This was taken at the top of Nickleton brow. The field where the other two shots were taken is just off camera to the right. I think there's a good shot here, in the right light, so I will be having another crack at it if the right conditions coincide with me being up and about.