Boaty McBoatface In Retirement

Canon 5D, 40 mm, ISO 100, 1/4 sec @ f/22

There’s a little old unnamed yellow boat moored near the oil terminal that looks for all the world that she’s been abandoned and left to the elements. I have decided that she is my Boaty McBoatface.

As the sun lit the little boat up, along with the water around it I liked the banding caused by the foreground shadow from the overhead pier, the lit up mid-ground and the dark background, finally followed by the lighter sky.

Not So High Tide


Canon 5D, 22 mm, ISO 100, 122 sec @ f/22

Unbelievably it’s getting on for a year since I last spent the afternoon down near the river to photograph the rising water levels as the Mersey approached high tide. Today I had the opportunity to do this again, and since the weather was nice it seemed daft not to. The fact that there’s a fantastic pub pretty much on site has nothing to do with it..! Last time I visited I was making do with a 3-stop ND filter to slow the shutter but this time I was armed with the Big Stopper I had previously coveted. It was also a first chance to use my new low-profile Landscape Polariser, also from LEE.

Unfortunately although I had determined it was high tide, I hadn’t paid enough attention to notice it will be Neaps in a few days so the water level was quite low. The trials and tribulations of being an amateur photographer never end it seems!

New Brighton Lighthouse


Canon 5D, 17 mm, ISO 100, 0.4 sec @ f/22

I did something I haven’t done for a long time this morning – got up with the intent to take some early morning shots. After doing a bit of research with Tides Planner to determine that it would be low tide at New Brighton at around sunrise – 06:32, and then with The Photographer’s Ephemeris, I decided that the sun (should it play along) would be nicely positioned to take a picture of the lighthouse at New Brighton…

So at 06:00 I arrived at the site and positioned myself, fired off a few test shots and waited. There was an encouraging gap in the clouds through which the sun was scheduled to appear and at around 06:45 it decided to make an appearance, lighting up the lighthouse but unfortunately not the sands. The result was a nice but unnaturally yellow-looking lighthouse, hence the conversion to black and white using Silver Efex Pro 2.

Prior to converting I had initially used Color Efex Pro 4 to apply a Midnight filter that I played with slightly. Whilst I like the effect I don’t normally use it but had last night been reading an article featuring Paul Sanders in Light and Landscape Magazine where a couple of his images had a similar feel. Unlike Paul however I had to rely on post-processing to get the effect. After a while I decided the effect was a bit too heavy handed – probably down to my fat fingers – and reverted to straight black and white.

Sarsia


Canon 5D, 17 mm, ISO 100, 180 sec @ f/22

Had a wander over to East Float again this afternoon to try out the big stopper filter. I also used a Lee 3ND soft grad filter to help balance the sky against the boat’s hull. Final conversion to black and white done in Silver Efex Pro 2.

Tranmere Oil Terminal


Canon 5D, 28 mm, ISO 100, 120 sec @ f/22

At long last I’ve got myself a Lee Big Stopper filter, so I popped down to the river near the Tranmere Oil Terminal to try it out. The tide was at it’s lowest so I was able to get well down the jetty. Unfortunately as the water was so far out it wouldn’t feature prominently! Still as I was taking some pictures the tide started to rise and the water moved in. This was the best of the bunch – not brilliant but OK for a first attempt, and it’s smoothed the water out quite nicely. Converted to black and white using Silver Efex Pro 2.