Tag Archives: Nikon

Photo of the Week – Kelly Clampitt

Nature Is The Ultimate Artist

Uluru in Ulu?u-Kata Tju?a National Park- Central Australia

Uluru in Ulu?u-Kata Tju?a National Park- Central Australia

Uluru (also known somewhat lamely as Ayers Rock) is a giant sandstone monolith in Australia with a circumference of 5.8 miles which reaches a height of 2,831 ft. above sea level. As impressive as these facts may be, they do nothing to describe the delicate beauty of the scene Kelly captured during a visit in May of 2007. In her words, “When it rains the rock catches water which runs down basins and gullies formed over the millennia to the ground where catch ponds form. There is almost always water running down from somewhere on this monolith. Thus the area immediately around the rock is like an oasis for plants and wildlife and magical to the Aboriginal people who request certain areas of Uluru, which were used in specific rituals and ceremony, not be photographed. I was fascinated by the feminine aspects of the etched stone, the reflections, and the silvery color of the light in the reflected water trickling down into the very quiet pool fringed by green plant life.” The colors, shapes, lines, textures and overall composition contribute to a totality that defies description. The gentle diagonal curve of the quiet pool is the final touch.

Photo of the Week – Lori Tucker

A 2 Year Old Arabian Shows Off

Lori Tucker - Young Arabian Stallion in Tennessee

Lori Tucker - Young Arabian Stallion in Tennessee

Those members who attended the June meeting of the ACC were treated to a presentation of great photographs captured by Lori Tucker and Dale Forrest on a recent visit to an Arabian horse farm in Tennessee. The above shot was selected from several possibilities to post here due to it being an excellent example of this month’s assignment, i.e, the effective use of a slow shutter speed to depict motion. Lori stood in the center while “Probie” strutted his stuff by rapidly circling the ring. She used aperture priority mode (f/4.9) which allowed quick and easy experimentation to find the ideal shutter speed of 1/60 sec to maintain sharp focus as she panned the horse while pleasantly blurring the background. There is still motion apparent in the chestnut’s mane as it gallops by. The natural, soft light was ideal.
The camera is a Nikon D200 fitted with a Nikkor 35-70 2.8 lens zoomed to about 52mm. The ISO was a low 100. The result of all this careful planning and expert execution is apparent.