Amateur Photographer

Leading the way

At the start of 2018, Neil Burnell set out to win APOY. By Christmas, he’d done it. He tells Ailsa McWhinnie how he went about tackling the eight-round competitio­n

- See more of Neil Burnell’s work at www.neilburnel­l.com

Neil Burnell, the winner of APOY 2018, talks to Ailsa McWhinnie

AP: How did you get started in photograph­y?

Neil Burnell: It started four or five years ago, and was off the back of my other hobby – fishing. I used to fish a lot on the coast around where I live in Brixham, Devon, and I bought a camera to take pictures of my fishing friends and the local scenery. It’s fantastic to be out fishing early in the morning, and that’s when I realised I should be taking pictures of what I was seeing.

After a while, the photograph­y took over, and I hardly ever go out with my rods any more. I’m selftaught: I bought a tripod and a set of filters, and learned by studying others’ work and styles – paying particular attention to seascapes.

AP: You’re a graphic designer by trade. How has this informed your photograph­y?

NB: It has certainly helped, and my graphic design style is also quite minimal, so that’s played a part in my photograph­y. Going back 25 years or so, I did take a photograph­y course while I was at college, but it was secondary to design. At the time, I was into sports – particular­ly football – so I didn’t have any spare time to pursue photograph­y. I retired from playing on a local level a few years back, so had more time. As you might have guessed, I tend to throw myself into my hobbies!

AP: Did you have a turning point with your photograph­y?

NB: It was when I started to study long-exposure photograph­y more closely. The first photograph I took that I was really pleased with is a minimal image of a stick in the mud in a local river. It was misty and there was no background – and that sort of minimal, monochrome style is something I really like.

AP: You take competitio­ns pretty seriously. Tell us a bit more about this.

NB: I entered APOY last year, and was about eighth in the final standings. Then, last year and the year before, I won the Wex Photograph­er of the Year award. Also last year, I won the Your View category in the Landscape Photograph­er of the Year with a minimal beach hut scene. As far as APOY is concerned, I worked very hard at it, and doing as well as I possibly could was my main aim at the start of 2018.

I’m quite a competitiv­e person – I know I shouldn’t be! With the Wex competitio­n, because it’s weekly, once I got to the stage where I was

doing well, it motivated me to go out and take more photograph­s. Generally, because I work full-time, I can only go out shooting at weekends, so during the week you can be planning and thinking about what you can do. It definitely motivates you to do more.

AP: What was different about APOY, and how did you plan your year?

NB: I’ve done a lot of photograph­y I wouldn’t normally – such as portraitur­e. So having so many different categories and genres has really pushed me, and it’s the sort of thing that can only improve your photograph­y as a whole.

As each round was announced, about a month before each deadline I’d start to think about what I could shoot to enter into it. This sort of planning helped particular­ly with the portrait round, and I actually took a day off work to go out with my daughter to shoot something cinematic and stylish – something a bit more eye-catching than the norm. It was a longer-lens panoramic shot – and my Zeiss lens renders bokeh so nicely, I knew I’d get a creamy effect in the background. I then applied a split tone in processing. Photograph­y is all about mood and light, and I can definitely take what I learned from the portrait shoot into woodland photograph­y and the landscape.

Of course, there are some rounds where you know you have a suitable shot already. I do a lot of landscape, so I knew which shots would go into those rounds. But when it came to the macro category, I spent pretty much every weekend for a month going out and shooting images so I had something to enter.

I view it as a year-long project. It got me out and motivated, so I enjoyed myself whatever the outcome. If I didn’t have these projects and competitio­ns I’d end up not going out half the time.

AP: How did you learn post-production?

NB: I’m self-taught. Years ago, I had a one-to-one Photoshop session as part of my job at the time, and that taught me the basics. I’ve learned a great deal from YouTube videos. If I have a spare moment and want to learn how to process an image in a certain way, I’ll watch countless videos to learn how. I don’t follow anyone in particular – I just do a search and watch the

highest-rated ones. Some YouTubers can make them very complicate­d, so I look for ones that are easy to follow. I always have something in mind when I’m learning and try not to take on too much informatio­n in one go.

I’ve also started watching more landscape videos – not with the aim to learn anything in particular, but for enjoyment as much as anything and to see the locations.

AP: And what about equipment?

NB: I started off with Canon, but my brother-in-law had a Nikon and I liked the look of it more. My first camera was a D7000; then I changed to the D810, which I used for four years. More recently, I’ve upgraded to the D850, the main reason being because I’ve suffered with quite a bad back this year – mainly because of doing macro. The tilt screen on the D850 means I don’t have to mess my back up again. There isn’t a great difference in image quality, but I’ll definitely notice the difference physically when I come to do macro again.

As for lenses, I chop and change them a fair bit. They range from a Zeiss 21mm to a Nikkor 17-30mm f/2.8 for landscapes, and a Zeiss 100mm macro for close-up and portraits. It tends to be the same few that come out with me.

AP: Do you plan to keep photograph­y as a hobby?

NB: It’s so difficult to become a profession­al unless you’re willing to do stuff like weddings. For me, that would ruin my enjoyment of the

hobby I love. One avenue into becoming a profession­al is YouTube, but I wouldn’t be comfortabl­e with that. It’s such a hard thing to make money at – the landscape side, particular­ly. In a way, I’m making an income of sorts from the prizes I’ve won, and I sell the odd print – certainly not enough to make a living from, but that’s fine.

AP: What advice would you give to someone thinking of entering APOY this year?

NB: Put some ideas together in advance, even if it’s on paper, and be prepared for each round. Don’t leave it until the last minute. Put in the effort and research, and think about what you’re going to do.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? His first attempt at a minimal long-exposure, this is still one of Neil’s favourite images Nikon D810, 21mm, 126sec at f/8, ISO 100, 10-stop ND filter
His first attempt at a minimal long-exposure, this is still one of Neil’s favourite images Nikon D810, 21mm, 126sec at f/8, ISO 100, 10-stop ND filter
 ??  ?? Neil often heads for this rugged stretch of coast in the South Hams when it’s stormy Nikon D810, 24-70mm, 3sec at f/11, ISO 64, 2-stop ND filter
Neil often heads for this rugged stretch of coast in the South Hams when it’s stormy Nikon D810, 24-70mm, 3sec at f/11, ISO 64, 2-stop ND filter
 ??  ?? This unusual stitched panorama of his daughter Anya scored highly in the portrait round Nikon D810, 100mm, 1/80sec at f/2, ISO 100
This unusual stitched panorama of his daughter Anya scored highly in the portrait round Nikon D810, 100mm, 1/80sec at f/2, ISO 100
 ??  ?? Our APOY winner describes himself as ‘addicted to long-exposure photograph­y’ Nikon D810, 35mm, 77sec at f/14, ISO 100, 10-stop ND filter
Our APOY winner describes himself as ‘addicted to long-exposure photograph­y’ Nikon D810, 35mm, 77sec at f/14, ISO 100, 10-stop ND filter
 ??  ?? Neil captured this orange-tip butterfly early in the morning, using a shallow depth of field for attractive bokeh Nikon D810, 100mm, 1/160sec at f/2.8, ISO 64
Neil captured this orange-tip butterfly early in the morning, using a shallow depth of field for attractive bokeh Nikon D810, 100mm, 1/160sec at f/2.8, ISO 64
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 ??  ?? An admirer of b&w city photograph­y, he tried it himself on a trip to London Nikon D810, 15-30mm, 1/100sec at f/10, ISO 64
An admirer of b&w city photograph­y, he tried it himself on a trip to London Nikon D810, 15-30mm, 1/100sec at f/10, ISO 64
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