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On Landscape
United Kingdom
Registrace 25. 07. 2013
On Landscape is a subscription based bi-weekly magazine dedicated to landscape photography. But it's not just this because most magazines don't have video content and interactive 360 location guides.
Most magazines don't have instant interactivity and community feedback either. And most magazines are only part landscape, usually mixed with the very different genre of wildlife photography.
Most magazines don't have instant interactivity and community feedback either. And most magazines are only part landscape, usually mixed with the very different genre of wildlife photography.
Any Questions? Episode Two with Joe Cornish, Tim Parkin and Lizzie Shepherd
Welcome to the seond episode of our "Any Questions" series, where hosts Joe Cornish and Tim Parkin delve into the questions you've submitted.
This month's guest was Lizzie Shepherd, and we had a bunch of questions about her printing, skiing, creative photography, ethics, etc.
You can view the images Lizzie talks about in the podcast here:
www.onlandscape.co.uk/2024/02/any-questions-with-special-guest-lizzie-shepherd/
This month's guest was Lizzie Shepherd, and we had a bunch of questions about her printing, skiing, creative photography, ethics, etc.
You can view the images Lizzie talks about in the podcast here:
www.onlandscape.co.uk/2024/02/any-questions-with-special-guest-lizzie-shepherd/
zhlédnutí: 1 347
Video
Any Questions? Episode One with Joe Cornish, Tim Parkin and Alex Nail
zhlédnutí 2,1KPřed 4 měsíci
Welcome to the first episode of our "Any Questions" series, where hosts Joe Cornish and Tim Parkin delve into the questions you've submitted. Joining them in this episode is the accomplished photographer Alex Nail, who has just published his second book on the mountains of Scotland. Our discussion revolves around the intricacies of book production and the art of capturing breathtaking mountain ...
Mirex Tilt Shift Adapters Demo
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed 9 měsíci
The popularity of tilt-shift lenses has risen quite considerably since cameras nudged past the 10 megapixel barrier and the awareness of the quality that these lenses can provide was really brought home with the new 24TSEmk2 and 17TSE from Canon - both of which set some stunningly high standards for edge to edge sharpness (especially when compared with the fairly poor 24TSEmk1). Read more about...
Autumn in Scotland
zhlédnutí 3,4KPřed 10 měsíci
A look through some of Joe's images taken during Autumn 2018 www.onlandscape.co.uk/2019/02/autumn-in-scotland/
Nature’s America - David Muench part 1
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 2 lety
David Muench is one of the first great colour landscape photographers. With a huge back catalogue of publications, he has influenced a generation of photographers and has created many of the places Americans now call icons. Tim Parkin and Joe Cornish go through the book “Nature’s America” discussing its influence on Joe and the assets of the photographic skills shown inside. We hope you enjoy i...
Nature’s America - David Muench part 2
zhlédnutí 411Před 2 lety
David Muench is one of the first great colour landscape photographers. With a huge back catalogue of publications, he has influenced a generation of photographers and has created many of the places Americans now call icons. Tim Parkin and Joe Cornish go through the book “Nature’s America” discussing its influence on Joe and the assets of the photographic skills shown inside. We hope you enjoy i...
Joe Cornish talks about Peter Dombrovskis
zhlédnutí 5KPřed 2 lety
One of the reasons I upgraded to the Canon 5Dmk2 (apart from very nice screen on the back and a couple of extra pixels) was to start creating some video content. I’ve already posted a couple of sample videos on developing your own colour transparencies and also a practise run creating content in the field which let me get used to the technology (including Final Cut Pro to post process the video...
Joe Cornish in Black and White pt1
zhlédnutí 4KPřed 2 lety
After our article on black and white last in the last issue we thought it would be topical to take a look at some of Joe Cornish's black and white photography. www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/06/joe-cornish-in-black-and-white/
Dancing Trees - Hindsight
zhlédnutí 671Před 2 lety
This issue of the Hindsight series takes a look at a set of images from Joe Cornish’s back catalogue. If you have Scotland’s Mountains then you will have seen a couple of the images before but there is also a final image from Padley Gorge in the Peak District. www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/02/first-light-dancing-trees/
Joe Cornish in Black and White pt2
zhlédnutí 2,4KPřed 2 lety
After our article on black and white last in the last issue we thought it would be topical to take a look at some of Joe Cornish's black and white photography. This brought up a few nice surprises along the way. www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/06/joe-cornish-in-black-and-white/
Joe Cornish in Black and White pt3
zhlédnutí 1,4KPřed 2 lety
After our article on black and white last in the last issue, we thought it would be topical to take a look at some of Joe Cornish’s black and white photography. www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/06/joe-cornish-in-black-and-white/
Carbon to Carbon
zhlédnutí 279Před 2 lety
David Chalmers, a product photographer who specialises in the drink industry, is also a landscape photographer and Joe Cornish recently interviewed him at the Woodend Creative Workspace. His recent work, and the major topic of the talk, is the use of carbon printing but with the extra twist of making the photographs from wood sourced from the copse that the photographs were taken in. We also as...
Nature’s America - David Muench pt2
zhlédnutí 505Před 2 lety
David Muench is one of the first great colour landscape photographers. With a huge back catalogue of publications, he has influenced a generation of photographers and has created many of the places americans now call icons. Tim Parkin and Joe Cornish go through the book “Nature’s America” discussing it’s influence on Joe and the assets of the photographic skills shown inside. We hope you enjoy ...
David Clapp - Stacks of Aurora
zhlédnutí 235Před 2 lety
After David Clapp’s recent wonderful article on Iceland where we saw some stunning aurora images and some novel locations we asked if he could show us his focus stacking technique used on the ‘shooting star’ aurora shot. Well when we were in Dorset last week David us invited us into his lair and showed us how. www.onlandscape.co.uk/2013/03/stacks-of-aurora-with-david-clapp/
Nature’s America - David Muench pt1
zhlédnutí 632Před 2 lety
David Muench is one of the first great colour landscape photographers. With a huge back catalogue of publications, he has influenced a generation of photographers and has created many of the places Americans now call icons. Tim Parkin and Joe Cornish go through the book “Nature’s America” discussing its influence on Joe and the assets of the photographic skills shown inside. We hope you enjoy i...
Phenomenal images and insightful provoking commentary. Totally enjoyable experience!
A master photographer and artist. Its amazing the difference between someone such as John and the swathe of poor or mediocrity on youtube and the web these days. Its laughable just what so many call photography
great!
Yes, the original photographs tended to be very warm (combination of Fuji emulsions and warming filters) and dark (Dombrovskis liked saturated colour).
I knew Peter. He started off with 35mm film cameras (like Olegas Truchanas), then moved to two-and-a-quarter square for his first book, and then for the rest of his career used a Linhof Technica, almost always with Fuji sheet film, which he liked for its warm tones compared to Kodak emulsions. He was a lovely, softly-spoken man and he died far too young. He never liked the streak effect in slow-shutter photographs of water and, from that point of view, would have loved today's digital cameras. As far as I remember, Peter only ever used very slight warming filters (81A, 81B, etc). Also, you haven't mentioned Eliot Porter, a great influence.
Great chat here... just goes to show you how commission work and personal work is so so different, both with approach and how that shows in the completed works. Different yes, but i would say not up to Joe's high standard... and as he mentioned, composition wasnt the main focus here. Maybe if the landscape was as it was when designed, then composition may of been more important.. i dont know? The structure of images are different to Joes usual works, and things like the edges of the frame maybe not be as considered as they would be? Interesting point though.. they commissioned Joe for this because of his style.. so it must be a personal challenge to have a brief that needs to show the designers original vision (hard due to change) and at the same time, not to shoot for yourself... even though im sure, the client may of been perfectly happy with whatever images they got :)
Great talk.. but im certainly not from any reptile
wonderful talk, but 90% cold wet and inhospitable scenes, It's a cold day in England, would love more warm climate photos! Why are all professional photographers only happy in a woolly hat and bad weather?
I was there a few weeks ago to rekindle my photography after a very long break... i chose NOT to go to this tree deliberately lol Stunning area.
So beautiful they are💜
I like the first image... im surprised Joe didnt stager 2 different grads to soften that lower part where it meets the land. The last image is lovely... but i dont like the creep of the lower right corner of a bit of tree... tiny issue... just something that my eye immediately went to. Also.. maybe cool the top part a bit so that it recedes a little.. not sure if the fg needs warming up to bring that forward.. cant really tell on youtube :)
Probably because it would darken the edges of the mountains too much - a trade off with grads and transparency film
All light is definitely good... it comes before composition and subject for me all the time... flat light, dramatic light, directional light, blue hour, diffused light... no matter what it is... it gives the right subject and composition what it needs.. we just have to find it.
This is what I love with my photography... getting out and about and enjoying the outdoors.. photography is a passion dont get me wrong, but its more about being out and the process than really the images.
Great vid... looking at this now it seems so dated with the tech lol I wasn't that impressed when i had an a7r3.... now I have a fuji gfx... the quality of file, colour and texture is amazing... so little processing necessary.
He is right, get it right in the camera. I don't like zooms at all, primes do produce a better image.
Fabulous. Thoroughly enjoyed this. Jem's love for his subjects really comes through.
Its good to have some honesty :)
That was so interesting 😊
I'm really enjoying and benefiting from this talk. Thank you
Very enjoyable and informative, thanks guys.
Great works.
So glad Joe mentioned Peter Dombrovskis! I am Tasmanian born and I grew up looking at the Wilderness Calendar he put out every year until his untimely demise. He was a photographer who could shoot a grand landscape as well as an intimate composition and sometimes combine the two, all on medium format film. A great sharing of thoughts & perspectives between Tim, Alex & Joe!
Thanks Tim for moderating such a reflective in 2024! Never met but highly appreciate!
Dear Joe, appreciate so much to have met and photographed with you back in 2019 in Cornwall. Heinrich from Germany
This is a super video, with not only the how, but the most importantly the why, with only 288 likes.
Interesting podcast. Is it de rigeur to have a messy hairstyle in order to be a successful landscape photographer ? 🙂
Not everybody can have perfect hair like me :-)
Oh really enjoyed this! Joe hits a big one with this idea to be original! Images become contrived and dare I say obviously trying to grab attention. Also bang on with the shoot local! So much in this short video from all of you that hits the nail on the head. Stay on the bloody bus! 😁👍 keep the chat flowing, love them. Big thanks Lizzie for many moments of inspiration.
Thanks for an interesting discussion! I was interested in the responses to the question about sexual differences - I believe that there is some evidence that men and women perceive colour slightly differently. I have looked to see how this affects photographic aesthetic preferences but have not found much. If you could find someone who knows more I think it would be very interesting magazine topic?
Quite an eye-opener. Many thanks.
Cheers guys, not enough of this quality of content on CZcams with the depth of knowledge around landscape photography right here, look forward to similar in the future.
Clicked the link expecting to see Joe Cornish the comedian/filmmaker, but luckily I'm also a landscape photographer! 🤣
awesome video, thank you very much
Thank you Tim, Lizzie & Joe and the last comments on imperfections and mood were certainly worth waiting for. The lovely thing is you learn something new every day and it makes you wish you had heard it 30 years ago.I look forward to further interviews.
Good to see Tim and Joe again, looking forward to another question episode.
I should add that I have been to Norway twice, so I am a hypocrite!
A great podcast, many thanks. I would like to point out that whales are hunted in Norway too, and they are a rich country with no rel need to do it.
It's wonderful to listen to such a thoughtful examination of the art of landscape photography. There are a lot of great landscape photographers, but very few have the ability to string together sentences as thoughtful, coherent, and insightful as those of Alex and Joe. Thanks for sharing.
Many thanks! We've got a few photographers lined up for the next few months, but if there's anyone in particular you'd like Joe and Tim to interview, please let us know!
Another success. Ms. Shepherd was great and Mr. Cornish's x axis/y axis bit was music to the ears of this near field photographer!
what a wonderful lecture by an amazing photographer, lots to digest in here
I have fairy recently come across your channel and what a great collection of videos... looking forward to looking at the catalogue....a lot of extremely helpful tips and advice....I was on a tour with Colin Prior and he mentioned you quite a bit Joe. Also nice to see you Tim having come across you more recently on the Natural Landscape Photography Awards competition 😊👍
Many thanks for a truly interesting conversation. More please. Getting on in years, I find it necessary to take pictures in less dramatic conditions!
Thanks Tim , Alex and Joe for a very interesting and informative chat , always good to listen to all three of you , bring back the meeting of minds , go on
Thanks for that. It's great to get the podcasts resurrected and have a forum for discussion. Appreciate the comment /Charlotte
Please do take Alex's suggestion and do at least one podcast on color.
Thanks Doug. I'll add it to the list of topics to cover in this series.
Looking forward to the conversations between such high caliber participants