Tagged: france

CAN’T HELP BUT LOOK UP !!!

Yesterday, I went to the Natural History Museum to see dinosaurs with my nephew (yes, I’m sure a customary post of the roof will follow at some point). It was a series of vast chambers which reminded me somewhat of a  less-pompous version of Le Louvre. And then, as I took in the majestic Brontosaurus skeleton in the main auditorium, natural light cascading down on it from on high, surrounded by ornate walls paved with countless ancient artefacts, I thought of this picture I shot at the Louvre itself. There are evident similarities, whilst only the direct subject matter differs. The one niggle that slightly disappoints me here is that I couldn’t capture the final corner of the roof pattern up top (and I was tucked right up in the edge of the chamber to maximise space); if only I’d spent a little more on the 16-35mm lens rather than my 17-40mm – the extra millimetre might just have been wide enough!!!

Shot on a Canon EOS 5D mk2, 17-40mm lens at 17mm, f 5.6, ISO 6400, 1/400 sec.

‘THE BIG PALACE’…

… or more properly, le Grand Palais, just off the Champs-Élysées in Paris, France. I was there  roughly 6 months ago, in uncomfortably hot conditions during the day, and surprisingly chilly extremes during the evening. As I wandered along, completely unprepared (other than happening to have a camera strapped to my back), I stumbled upon this outrageously majestic, fabulously backlit piece of Gallic masonry, with a cold frost in the air to illuminate the vapours of darkness.

It. Needed. Photographing!

I wanted to go in tight for this shot, to capture the truly imposing nature of the architecture, but that would have needed an inhumanly steady hand. With no handy tripod, there was only one option; whack up the ISO, zoom to max, shoot at f4, & hope for the best from my shutter speed! By so doing, I’d accepted that there’d be inescapable noise, especially since this was my inferior EOS 5D mk 2, which doesn’t handle the dark so well. The result is an image which excites the romantic within me for its lighting 🙂, yet disappoints the perfectionist within me for its grain 😦  The ideal here would be f20 –> ISO 100 –> tripod –> deploy. But ‘sacrifices must be made’. N.b. the two specks of white in the sky are in fact prominent stars, not sensor catastrophes, and I’m actually quite fond of them, after much deliberation!

Shot on a Canon EOS 5D mk 2, 24-105mm lens at 105mm, f 4.0, ISO 3200, 1/13 sec.