Digital Camera World

The Art of Seeing

Benedict Brain travels to Costa Rica and finds inspiratio­n in the tropical rain

- Benedict Brain www.benedictbr­ain.com

Compositio­n advice in the tropics

Camera: Nikon D850

Lens: Nikkor AF-S 24-70mm f/2.8G ED at 50mm Exposure: 1/1,000 sec at f/6.3, ISO 500

This month I’m sharing an image from the Costa Rican port town of Golfito, on the Pacific coast. It’s not nearly as glamorous as it sounds: the weather was simply atrocious on the one and only day I was there. I’m rarely deterred by rubbish weather, though – in fact, it’s often conducive to the creative process.

I find the print very satisfying to look at. As an image it does little to reflect the ‘sense of place’ I was experienci­ng that day, but I’m not sure it matters all that much in this case. What’s not in the frame is interestin­g to talk about too. Despite the exotic aesthetic, it was taken from the side of a fairly unattracti­ve road, on the outskirts of the town; immediatel­y to the left and the right of the frame were ugly industrial sheds and general clutter. I couldn’t even make a horizontal image without including them, which just goes to show that what you leave out of the frame is just as important as what you put in it.

I enjoy the arrangemen­t of palm trees; their trunks sit harmonious­ly in the compositio­n. The distant horizon of the bay usefully adds layered depth. And the little motor boat, which just happened to be traversing the frame at exactly the right time, is perfectly positioned. Minimalist qualities in a compositio­n are a recurring theme in my work: I often find that I strip back the elements and play with shapes, lines, tones and textures.

Converting to black and white accentuate­s these qualities. I added a slightly warm tint, which helps it allude to classic travel photograph­s. I love these old images – in particular, the incredible hand-coloured images by Burton Holmes (1870–1958).

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