Monday 16 April 2012

Chasing Perfection


Photography, the art of ‘writing with light’ is by its very nature about control. The majority of the time photographers have control over their images. As a photographer I decide what time of day I take my photographs, I decide where I take them. I decide whether to use natural light or set up my own. I set the aperture, I set the shutter speed and I set the ISO. Photography can turn that image in your head into the image on your screen.

Until you work with wildlife.



People can be instructed, buildings tend to do as they’re told and even landscapes can be obedient, if you account for light and weather. Wild animals, however, are under no obligation to help you to make your vision a reality.

Nature often has a way of making you wish it would move slightly to the left, in order for you to get the image you want. Branches get in the way, birds fly off, a passing creature casts a shadow and scares off your subject...there are many things outside of your jurisdiction. Obviously studying your subject helps enormously. If you know where a species grows or how it behaves then you increase your chances of success  10-fold. However sometimes nature decides to unexpected or just downright weird things.



Take this snail – in a Vanhoutte Spirea, I don’t even know how it got up there (about a meter from the ground) or the cabbage white caterpillar that opted to fall off a leaf the moment I thought about photographing it.

Despite not always being able to anticipate a successful outcome, sometimes I find myself with a project. Most of them, I will admit, stem from annoyance at not being able to get the shot I want on the day. Most recently we have the Bee Fly (Bombylius major).

Bee Fly (Bombylius major)
I first saw these this time last year and I was confused. It Looks like a Bee, sounds a bit like a Bee, isn’t a Bee and when you see it up close definitely isn’t a Bee. I photographed it at the time and then thought no more about it. Now they’re back and trickier than ever. They’re like teeny tiny hummingbirds, adept at both speed and evasion. I have studied them and tracked them down, only for them to disappear without a trace time and time again.

Here is just one of a selection of near misses:

Bee Fly


Although it's going to take work to get the outcome I want, I wouldn't switch exclusively to studio or another, more structured, form of photography. The buzz (pardon the horrendous insect pun) you get from chasing and, eventually, capturing the shot is utterly worth it.

Monday 2 April 2012

Ladybird, Ladybird...

Seven-spot Ladybird (Coccinella septempunctata)
 This recent spell of warm weather we’ve been having in the UK has meant that the trees are alive with the sound of buzzing. For the time being, insect life is abundant and so I have been enjoying the macro possibilities.
Harlequin Ladybirds (Harmonia axyridis) 

This image shows two Harlequins (recognisable by the black 'W' on their pronotum) mating. In hindsight, a narrower aperture to blur the rosemary would have been more aesthetically pleasing but the colours translated really well. Ladybirds of a variety of species covered this rosemary but the Harlequins were definitely in the majority.
Seven-spot Ladybird
There are definitely divided opinions on what should be done about invasive species. Some think culling is the answer, others biological pest control, others letting nature find its own balance. Personally I'll be doing a bit more research and taking many more photographs before I do anything hasty.