NPhoto

Room to bloom

John Holmes made the most of lockdown restrictio­ns by improving his editing skills and experiment­ing with a whole new genre

-

MISSION: Experiment and learn new techniques while confined to the house during lockdown PHOTOGRAPH­ER: John Holmes LOCATION: Limerick, Ireland KIT USED: Nikon D750 and Tamron SP 90mm f/2.8 Di MACRO 1:1 VC USD FACEBOOK: facebook.com/john.holmes.334491 WEBSITE: http://bit.ly/2pssahq

From my mid-teens onwards I always had a camera. I started off with an Instamatic, before moving on to a Nikon F-301 and then a Nikon D80. When I retired in 2010, I decided to focus on photograph­y more and bought a Nikon D300S, a wide-angle lens and some ND filters. Thinking I had this photograph­y thing sorted, I went to a coastal photograph­y workshop and suddenly found out what I didn’t know and what I actually needed to know.

Moving forward I learned what I could from books and Youtube, but ultimately gained more knowledge and experience while out shooting with other photograph­ers, entering camera club competitio­ns and attending workshops.

Experiment­al edits

During the boring days of lockdown (when the opportunit­y to travel for landscape photograph­y was very restricted) I decided to focus on improving my software skills and invest time in Adobe CC, re-working old images and using some newly acquired techniques.

Fortunatel­y, I come from an IT background and I get as much satisfacti­on processing an image as I do capturing an image.

Not many people would enter a floral photo to a black-and-white competitio­n, so I submitted the chrysanthe­mum [1] to be different. The simplicity of the original image with the black-and-white conversion provided the visual impact I wanted. It was taken in our utility room against a black background with very low light and was processed in Lightroom and Photoshop.

Up next [2] is an abstract I reworked from a shot of three red peppers using a similar setup to the chrysanthe­mum image, but with two Manfrotto LED lights. While the original image was good, it was processed as an abstract using Photoshop and Lightroom, which I think turned out better than the original.

The third abstract started off as a topdown image of a dandelion seed head and was taken outside in natural light [3]. Again, while the original image was okay it didn’t convey the visual impact I wanted.

The two abstracts were created using standard Photoshop filters and techniques I learned on Youtube. A final edit was completed in Lightroom to adjust the shadows, exposure, clarity and texture to add extra punch. I tend to create abstracts from images with dark background­s and brightly coloured, isolated subjects – flora is particular­ly great for this.

 ??  ?? [1] John’s utility room became a temporary studio when he photograph­ed this chrysanthe­mum.
[1] John’s utility room became a temporary studio when he photograph­ed this chrysanthe­mum.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? [2] This image started as three red peppers before John used Adobe CC to turn it into an amazing abstract.
[2] This image started as three red peppers before John used Adobe CC to turn it into an amazing abstract.
 ??  ?? [3] John’s striking abstract images are created in Adobe Photoshop and refined in Lightroom.
[3] John’s striking abstract images are created in Adobe Photoshop and refined in Lightroom.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia