Stormy Seas


With autumn in full swing the seas off the East Lothian coast have been a little 'choppy' for the past few days, with high winds helping things along.

The two shots used in this post demonstrate two techniques using fast and slow shutter speeds to record the wave movement.  

The image at the top of the page was taken on the Fujiflm X-Pro1 and XF18mm f2 lens.  Using a slow shutter speed of 1/6th second, the crashing waves are blurred just enough to give the sense of movement. A longer shutter speed would've blurred the entire sea, turning it 'milky' but this isn't the effect I wanted.

The shot below was taken using the X-T1 and the XF56mm f1.2, with the focus locked on the rock as the waves crashed over it.  Using the motor drive at 8 frames per second and a high shutter speed of 1/1000th second, the wave is frozen, with the water droplets clearly visible.  



-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE SUPPORT THIS BLOG BY VISITING THE ADVERTISERS ON THIS PAGE
By clicking on the adverts you are helping support this blog - thank you.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ALL IMAGES ARE THE PROPERTY OF MACLEAN PHOTOGRAPHIC AND CANNOT BE USED FOR ANY PURPOSE WITHOUT PRIOR PERMISSION


If you like what you see on this blog please visit our Facebook page and click 'like'

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

REVIEW: The New Fujinon 2x Converter

REVIEW: Using Nikon Lenses on a Fuji X Camera

Rode Wireless Go for the Fujifilm X-T4