Sea Glass



One of the pleasures of living by the sea is beach combing. We will go for walks on the beaches near our home in Dunbar and pick up interesting items such as driftwood, rocks, shells and sea glass.  

If you don't know what sea glass is, they are pieces of glass that have been physically and chemically weathered by salt water and the action of the tides. These weathering processes produce natural frosted glass and the beaches of East Lothian are a great place to find excellent examples.  In fact one of the best beaches for collecting sea glass is less than one kilometre from our front door.

Over the past year we have collected quite a few pieces of sea glass and I decided to set up a table top studio to photograph the colours, shapes and textures of some of the best bits.

Using the glass from an old picture frame as a table which I raised up on some books so I could put a light underneath to shine through the pieces of sea glass I placed on the picture frame glass to photograph.  I used an LED light bar for the light source and after focusing on one or several pieces I moved the light bar around to give me the best lighting.

Here are some of the results using the Fujifilm X-T1 and Fujinon XF60mm f2.4 macro lens.




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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