Isle of Harris Workshop

I have two spaces free for the Isle of Harris workshop, due to two last minute cancellations. So if you've been wanting to come to Harris this May, and spend time on one of the most beautiful islands in the outer hebrides, then please do drop me a line, or book online.

This is a very special workshop, because we spend our entire time outside of the UK mainland, on a very special island. Harris has a lot of very stunning beaches, and it has a timeless quality to it. We will be heading onto Lewis as part of the trip to photograph the Calanish standing stones too.

Iceland Photographic Safari

South Iceland - Icebergs, black sand beaches and waterfalls 9-day photographic safari, Sept 24 - 2nd Oct

£1,995 per participant

On Friday I published news about this new photographic safari via my monthly newsletter. I will be going to Iceland this September to spend 9 days photographing the south coast with a group of 8 participants.

I decided that if I were to run a trip in Iceland, it would have to allow some concentrated time in some great locations, rather than be a flat out, snatch a few hours tour round the entire country. This I feel, is impossible, because there is just far too much to cover, and not enough time.

This trip has been put together to give everyone several days in a few choice locations. My favourite place being Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon where we will have two whole days there to shoot sunrises and sunsets, and also explore the black sand coast line where you will find many icebergs of varying shapes, texture, size and colour.

For more details about the trip, and the locations we will be visiting, please go here.

Please note: this is not a workshop in the detailed sense that my workshops are in Scotland. We will be moving every couple of days, and as such, our time will be limited to on-location shooting. So it's really a 9 day trip to get as much as you can out of the locations we will be visiting, and of course, you will get guidance from myself, be able to share ideas and thoughts with a group of like minded souls and immerse yourself in photography for a concentrated time.

I always let folks know about new trips through my newsletter first. The trip is now mostly sold out - six of the spaces have been filled and I only have two spaces left. If you want to know about new trips, and get first chance at booking onto them, then it's a good idea to subscribe to my newsletter! :-)

If you'd like to come, the two remaining spaces can be booked here.

Do you want to come to Eigg this April?

UPDATE: This trip is now SOLD OUT. I've had a last minute cancellation for my Eigg workshop this April (dates are April 23rd to the 28th).

This is an extremely popular trip, so if you had wanted to come, you'll have noticed it was sold out for some time. Well, now's your chance to take up the cancelled space :-)

You can book the last space here.

Patagonia - now sold out.

Update: this trip is now sold out! Last week I had a cancellation for my Skye workshop, which was filled straight away, so the Skye trip is now sold out, for those of you who were considering it.

As is the nature of having bookings taken so far in advance, things change in people's lives and suddenly, they can't make a trip any more. One of my participants for the Patagonia workshop can't make it now due to a family member's graduation, so there is now a freed up space on the Patagonia workshop.

If you'd missed booking the trip when it sold out, then now is your chance to come along. It's been a very popular trip so far, so if you want to come, have a look at the details here. It has all the information on the trip, and also the booking form should you decide to come.

First come, first served.

Skye - now sold out.

Update - this trip is now sold out! Just a quick post to let you all know that a space has become free for the Skye workshop this March 5th-10th.  One of the participants can't make it due to damaging their knee. So if you were interested in this trip - now is the time to book, as there's only one space :-)

Intermission

I'm away to the isle of Eigg to do a workshop this week. Service will be resumed once I'm back. in the meantime, enjoy this intermission.

Harris & Skye

This November I'll be running some workshops in the north west of Scotland. The Isle of Harris and the Isle of Skye. I still have some spaces for these and thought I could perhaps persuade some of you - who have been considering coming on a workshop with me, to come on one of these trips (hey, you can of course come on both if you like!). Each year I always find these trips slow to fill up because, I'm sure, that for most beginner photographers, they think that sunny weather and summer are the best times to take out the camera and make images. It just seems to be the nature of the beast. Also, most amateur photographers believe that Summer is the time for vacation, and winter is the time to board yourself up in the house, beside the fire, and wait it out until the sun comes back in Spring.

Well this is all very well, but most photographers don't realise that the best images are made on the edge of changing weather, and we get a lot of that here in Scotland in the winter time. With one weather front passing over, only to be replaced by another weather front, there is never a dull moment.

I also find that people tend to take mental snap shots of the weather during their working day. If we get up in the rain and go to work in the rain, then we think it's been raining all day. Ever since I started to do the workshops, I've never had a week where the weather is constantly wet or windy. It seems that as the week goes, I forget that we started off with a lot of wet weather and by the end of the week, we've experienced days of sun, cloudy weather, still mornings, windy evenings. It just keeps on changing.

The above four photos were taken this February on my Glencoe weekend workshop. The final day we were outside, the rain kept on coming in. I've seen photographers for years on my workshops want to pack away their cameras and consider the day is finished if the rain comes on. But it's actually a very beautiful time to make images, if we can manage to keep the rain of our graduated filters and front lens elements. Anyway, just look at the moods in the sky I captured. This is only possible when things are changing, and dark clouds are passing through - and this kind of thing doesn't happen on sunny days.

But winter is not just about changing moods on the landscape. Consider this Skye image below, shot last December:

Those magenta tones are very visible in winter time, and mostly never seen in summer. In fact, I often think that summer is full of yellow tones in the sky. Winter on the other hand seems to provide some great textures to pay with in many ways: moving changing light, a low sun with long shadows across the landscape, and also of course fast moving clouds blending and blurring the skies as in this shot here of Horgabost beach on Harris:

So I'm hoping this post has given you some ideas about shooting in winter.

If you have been thinking for a while about coming on a workshop with me at some point, then we're just coming into the best times of the year for shooting great, changing light.

Printing Workshops

I'm in the middle of looking into setting up some printing workshops for next year. The way I see it is that i've had a lot of participants over the past few years who, if they've mastered the editing on a computer side (otherwise known as the digital dark room in my book), few, actually print their material out. For the select few who do, there seems to be an endless disagreement about what is the right way to do it. Some find their prints too dark (a common mistake), or when viewing them, I find there's a lot more that could have been done to optimise them.

What I find very interesting is how we 'read' a print. If you've been fortunate to seen the work of Ansel Adams in the flesh for instance, you soon realise what a great print is. It's very easy to think that most prints are good. Most prints are mediocre. Like your first photoshop edits, over a few years, you come back to your first prints and realise they weren't very good at all. It takes a long time to master the final print. Like I say on my workshops - there is no good-taste button in photoshop. You can go too far, over saturate, over sharpen, completely kill the image and not realise it at the time. That's where experience comes in.

I know there's a lot of technical stuff to cover, and most get very bogged down in that region. But shouldn't the final print be the final statement? How do you convey what you were feeling in the final print? Many suffer because they can't get their prints to come out in a consistent way.

Printing requires an understanding of , and adoption of colour management practices. Just how do you make sure that what you see on your computer screen - matches exactly what you anticipate in the final print? I've had so many emails from people who tell me they have their colour management 'close enough'. Well, it shouldn't be 'close enough'. That little statement suggests that it's not consistent and they're sometimes surprised by what pops out of the printer.

I'd love to give a workshop on making prints. I thought it would be great to cover some of the principles of colour management right through to digital dark room techniques and then the preparation for final output. Lastly, accurate print evaluation is really important.

I'd like to run some practical hands on workshops in my office, in the centre of Edinburgh next year. At the moment, my idea is to limit each workshop to a group of four, each with a computer, Eizo display and screen calibrator - for over a weekend. We'd go through setting up our environment for colour management, editing in the digital dark room, and producing high quality prints in a repeatable - expected way on an Epson printer.

Please don't ask me any specifics about it just yet - as I'm in the middle of trying to work it all out, but I'll let you know when I do have a more concrete syllabus for a weekend workshop.

Assynt workshop - last minute cancellations

Two of my clients for the Assynt workshop this October, have had to pull out because of ill health.

This is just a short post to say that I now have 2 spaces available for those of you who had been interested in the workshop, but had noticed these past few months that it was sold out. I expect these spaces to go very quickly.

You can find out more about the Assynt workshop, as well as book (if you want to come)  here.

Worldwide Photographic Safaris 2012

This Tuesday past, I announced to  subscribers to my news letter, that I am running two Photographic Safaris in South America next year.

The Patagonia photographic Safari is now sold out.

The Bolivian Altiplano Safari safari still has a few spaces left.

If you'd like to be put on the waiting list for for the Patagonia trip, then you can do it by going to the Patagonia workshop page and choosing the 'book online' button (confusing, I know), or go directly here.

If you're not part of my news letter, and would like to get first hand news of any forthcoming workshops, then feel free to subscribe.

I'd just like to say a big thank you to all those who have booked these trips so far. I feel 2012 is going to be an exciting year!