Update of a 2 year old shot. At the time I submitted this I wasn't all that happy with the white balance, which was too warm and didn't really fit with the mood of the picture. It was something I kept meaning to go back and change, but as as with all things in life, other stuff happened and I never got around to it. Anyway, stuck at home with a touch of flu this weekend, cleaning out the h/d on my old laptop, and came across the master RAW of this shot. Finally got around to getting the hues closer to how I wanted them
The Photo
This image was taken back in February on a long weekend trip in southern Portugal. I took quite a few shots I was happy with on the trip and Ill probably submit some of them over the next couple of months. My previous submission [link] was taken on the same trip, on the day before I took this.
The weather was mostly cloudy and overcast, which gave an interesting atmosphere for waterscapes and I had a lot of fun shooting.
On our journey home to Lisbon, we made a detour to pass a place called Carrasqueira, a fishing village on a river estuary about 150km south of Lisbon. Id been there once before, and had a really successful shooting session, capturing this [link] and this [link] so I was eager to go there again. This time I had very different conditions, overcast sky and subdued lighting, but the location is so wonderful that its always a pleasure to photograph there, and I was equally happy with 3 or 4 shots from this session. I was also surprised to see exactly the same boat there as 6 months ago
On my first visit Id had the place to myself, but this time there were quite a few other photographers wandering around the piers shooting. The structures are quite flimsy and shake a lot when people move on them, so I spent a fair amount of time sitting behind my tripod waiting for people to pass so the pier would stop shaking and I could make an exposure.
The place is wonderful though, and transmits such a feeling of peace and calm that its a pleasure to be there and photograph.
Technique
With shots of piers like this, I will usually attempt to do a long exposure as the smooth water draws attention to the texture of the wood on the pier.
As it was still very light, I used a 9 stop Hoya ND400 filter to allow me to use a long shutter time. Before attatching the filter though, I measured the exposure of the pier to get my base reading (1/15), then I took a meter reading from the sky to see how much brighter it was and see how many stops of ND grad filter Id need to hold the sky back. As it happens the sky wasnt that much brighter than the foreground (around 4 stops), but I used a 3 stop filter anyway to intentionally darken the sky a little more. When Id lined up the graduated filter, I took off the entire graduated filter holder with the filters still in place, and screwed the Hoya ND400 onto the lens. I then place the grad holder back on the lens and added nine stops of exposure to the base exposure Id already measured (this is done by simply doubling the base exposure 9 times) which gave me an exposure time of 30 seconds.
After that, its just a matter of clicking open the shutter with a cable release and waiting
Metadata
Taken at Carrasqueira, Alentejo, Portugal Nikon D80 | Sigma 10-20mm | Nikon Cable release Manfrotto 190XProB w/ 322RC2 ballhead Hoya ND400 (9 stop) | Lee 0.9 (3 stop) hard GND 30 seconds | f11 | 10mm
Great shot. I have such a hard time keeping things in focus when screwing back on my 10stop filter with a cokin holder too. Why did you use ISO200 on this long exposure out of curiosity?
It was a while ago when I took this picture, but if I remember correctly there were people walking around on the piers, making them shake, so I tried to keep the exposure a little shorter by increasing the ISO a little.
Why did you use ISO200 on this long exposure out of curiosity?