Richard G
Veteran
When I realised I was going to work in the dark and coming home in the dark for quite a bit of the year I started taking a walk at lunchtime with a camera, around the dense network of small streets near my office. I would vary the route a little but always within a few hundred square meter block. On a Sunday evening after about 4:30 I was taking a regular walk from home, usually the same route, week after week. It was amazing what I saw and what disappeared and what appeared for the first time on those many walks. I learnt more about the weather. So often in that late afternoon, overcast, around 5:15pm a silvery light suddenly would blast from under the clouds about 45 minutes before sunset, and illuminate the ordinary in the most beautiful way. I've taken film and digital cameras and lenses from 21 to 50mm focal length. It didn't seem to matter what. Conversely on the same track by the ocean each January I saw so many things differently when I first carried the Hasselblad over my shoulder on a tripod, things I'd walked past at least twice a day for two weeks every year for ten years or more.

Hawthorn West by Richard, on Flickr

L9005064.jpg by Richard, on Flickr

Likely Ektar 100, M6 and 35 Summicron. by Richard, on Flickr

Hawthorn West by Richard, on Flickr

L9005064.jpg by Richard, on Flickr

Likely Ektar 100, M6 and 35 Summicron. by Richard, on Flickr