208.880.5382 info@moffettphoto.com

Taming the Sea with Long Exposures

Pacific waves

Taming the Sea

Long exposures are amazing! I use them all the time in my landscape photography. I find that long exposures help create mood and feeling in images. Due to the fact that I shoot a lot of my photographs before sunrise or after sunset I am forced to use long exposures. The image shown here is a 15 second exposure. While the sea was rough and wild that morning, the long exposure smoothed out the scene and calmed the troubled waters. It created an almost mist-like looking photograph. Instead of a snapshot looking image where you see every drop of water and the rough waves, a long exposure seemed to calm the sea.

Framed!

Framed

Hiking through Ecola State Park near Cannon Beach with Christeena and my camera was a great way to spend an evening. We had no timetable. No place to be. Just enjoy the company and the scenery. We all need a break now and then, and this one proved to be just what I needed to refresh my spirit. I love being with my family, but that is not always a vacation! However, when it is just the two of us it is very much that needed vacation.

This image I found while descending a trail in the park just before sunset. The back lit leaves made a perfect frame for the haze filled mountainside. The haze cut the contrast to just manageable and created the illusion of depth in the image.I don’t usually photograph with the subject dead center in the frame, but this time it worked. It is those situations that are different like this that I am always on the lookout for. Breaking the rules with a purpose. That is what makes photographing exciting for me.

Reflections of Sunrise

Reflections of Sunrise, Lake Lowell

Arising early to revel in the beauty at sunrise is a wonderful experience. To be able to capture that experience in a photograph is even more incredible. I love returning to my feelings often, and my photographs help me do that.

Lake Lowell has become a favorite place for me to spend the mornings. I have been photographing at the lake now for several years just when I think that there is nothing else to photograph I find something. The light changes. My attitude changes. The water level changes. The only thing constant is change, and that is what makes it possible to continue this project indefinitely. I will continue to photograph the lake probably for years to come. I will continue to enjoy my mornings of walking, pondering and photographing. I will continue to show new photographs of an old subject. It creates an excitement in me. I will continue until I lose that excitement.

Ocean waves

sea spray

Whitewater

Braving the elements with camera in hand is nearly always an awesome experience. While at times I must talk myself into venturing out in less than ideal conditions, I am never disappointed when I return. There is something unexplainable about the experience of creating images at times that others would rather stay safe inside. I have been out in rain and lightning storms trying to keep gear dry and make photographs at the same time. I have been battling rain and the rising ocean surf at the same time, running from an approaching wave and at other times being overtaken by a sleeper wave mid exposure. It can get exciting! That tension and excitement comes through in the photographs. It is something that until you experience it you will never understand.

The image above was made while battling wind, storm surge and rain at the same time. I broke the number one rule of the ocean just once and paid the price. I turned my back to the ocean to photograph the other way and just as I did I got hit with a wave. It was a shocker because no wave previously had come nearly as high as I was. I really thought I was safe. I did learn my lesson, though.

The turbulent wave crashing over the rock was a sight of beauty. The stability of the rock, unmoved by the powerful force of the ocean speaks volumes about life. If we don’t have that stability then the turbulence will carry us away or smash us into the rock. Much can be interpreted in the images. My goal is not to give the answers, but to open the questions and let you, the viewer answer them in ways that are meaningful to you.

Stormy Reflections

reflections in Washington Lake

Reflection, Washington Lake

Backpacking is a favorite summer activity of mine. I remember the first backpacking trip I ever experienced when I was just 8 years old. It was miserable. My feet hurt. My back hurt. I thought I would never make it to camp. I had a miserable night as we had a new spring break through the ground under my tent and soaked through the bottom of the tent. However, those memories faded fast as the next summer approached and we planned our next adventure. It was a tradition in our family and I actually began to enjoy the trips. It was time to get away from the stress and worries of everyday life and enjoy the creations of God. When I began backpacking we carried just food, shelter and fishing gear. Then I began photographing and in later years I carried in more camera gear than food. I had learned the art of fishing by then and relied on that for nourishment.

My first trip into the White Cloud Mountains took me into Washington Lake. The water was crystal clear… and cold! The landscape reflected off the surface as if it were a mirror. I photographed. I fished. I was successful with both. What more could I ask for? I soon found out! In the back country of central Idaho you never know what the weather may bring. In early August you would think summer like weather, but not this time! It turned winter like. Snow and sleet. It became miserable overnight. Instead of pushing on to Chamberlain Basin, we stayed put, and then, seeing that it was not going to let up , we turned back a day early. Snowed out in August, but not empty handed. I did have photographs. And I will go back for more.

error: Content is protected !!