2010-04-15

Landscape Photography Influences - David Noton

I read David Noton's book Waiting for the Light a little while ago. It is a great practical guide to Landscape photography with detailed notes on the many beautiful photographs and information on how David went about capturing these images. David is a former winner of the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the year.

David travels the world capturing images of remote and spectacular wilderness areas. His work is characterised by strong light and colour and evokes a strong emotional response. He seems to have an uncanny knack of being in the right place at the right time to capture the perfect image. His images are often very colourful but they are not overdone, which one often sees these days now that the saturation slider on Photoshop is so accessible. His work is mostly images of the classic vista, isolated elements of the landscape and panoramas. Here is an example of his work.


Lake Pehoe, Torres del Paine, Patagonia, Chile                        Photograph by David Noton www.davidnoton.com















In addition to reading the book I have been lucky enough to attend a weekend photography workshop with David on the Jurassic Coast in Dorset UK. I now realise that his photographs are not about luck. David carries out meticulous reconnaissance before any shoot, seeking out the best viewpoints and anticipating the light. He is uncompromising when out shooting. He is prepared to wait for as long as it  takes to capture the scene at just the right time.

He is quite experimental technically. His images often show movement (in foliage, water, clouds, people etc) through the use of long exposures. He uses depth of field to great effect using extreme wide angles and tilt shift lenses. He frequently includes people in the landscape to provide context and/or scale. His portfolio is also well populated with environmental portraits, often with the landscape as a backdrop. In these portraits he generally uses limited depth of field so that the sense of the landscape is maintained but being out of focus it does not detract from the subject.

His management of exposure always seems to be just right. To achieve this he makes very effective use of graduated ND  and polarising filters. In very high contrast situations David sometimes combines two images in Photoshop to avoid clipping shadows and highlights. 

For many years David used both 35mm and panoramic film formats. Today he has moved completely over to Digital SLRs.

During my weekend workshop with David in Dorset, we were not blessed with fine weather. Indeed it was a weekend of storms and winds (of up to 100mph). Watching David work in this situation was very instructive. He chose subjects to hightlight the stormy weather and was very careful to accomodate the wild conditions in his choice of viewpoints and camera settings (high shutter speeds and ISO's were the order of the day).

I was able to capture a few decent photographs during the weekend but I particularly liked the one below. This shows the view looking west along the coast at Durdle Cove. At the time of taking the shot I was lying on my stomach on the edge of a cliff. The wind was blowing at around 50mph. The camera was on a tripod set low with my 70-200 lens and a 0.9 ND grad filter. To avoid camera shake I had the ISO set to 800 which gave a shutter speed of 1/2000th at f/6.3. I remember concentrating on trying to keep the camera steady so as to maintain the framing I was hoping for. With hindsight I think I should also have been concentrating a bit more on what was happening within the frame. Happily I took a number of shots and this one was the best - one of the big positives of digital shooting!

Durdle Cove, Jurassic Coast Dorset England

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About Me

I have been taking photographs since I was young boy some 45 years ago, but only seriously since 2005 when I enrolled to study at the Open College of the Arts. I am working towards a BA in Photography. I am a Licentiate of the Royal Photographic Society. This log record details of my projects and assignments during my studies. It also records ideas, work by other artists/photographers, notes on books/websites/exhibitions, influences, discoveries, thoughts, research findings and observations as I work through my courses. You can contact me at keith.greenough@btinternet.com or simply leave a comment on one of my posts.

Landscape Photography Bibliography

  • Andrea G Stillman (2007), Ansel Adams 400 Photographs, Little Brown New York USA
  • Andy Grundberg (1999), Crisis of the Real, Aperture Foundation New York
  • Ansel Adams (2007), Examples The Making of 40 Photographs, Little Brown New York USA
  • Ben Maddow(1989), Edward Weston, His Life, Aperture Foundation New York USA
  • Charlie Waite (1989), Scottish Islands, Constable London
  • Charlie Waite (1992), The Making of Landscape Photographs, Collins and Brown London
  • Charlie Waite (1999), Seeing Landscapes, Collins and Brown London
  • Charlie Waite (2002), In My Minds Eye, Photographers Institute Press East Sussex UK
  • Charlie Waite (2005), Landscape, Collins and Brown London
  • Clive Minnitt and Phil Malpas(2009), Finding the Picture, Envisage Books London
  • David Noton (2008), PHOTOGRAPY ESSENTIALS: WAITING FOR THE LIGHT, David & Charles PLC, London
  • Fay Godwin(1985), Land, William Heinemann London
  • Fay Godwin(1990), Our Forbidden Land, Jonathan Cape London
  • Fay Godwin(1998), Glassworks & Secret Lives, Stella Press East Sussex UK
  • Fay Godwin(2001), Landmarks, Dewi Lewis Publishing Stockport UK
  • Galen Rowell (1995), Mountain Light, Sierra Club Books San Francisco USA
  • Galen Rowell (2001), Inner Game of Outdoor Photography, Norton & co New York USA
  • Galen Rowell (2002),Galen Rowell's Vision: The Art of Adventure Photography, University of California Press USA
  • Harry Callaghan (1993), Ansell Adams in Color, Little Brown New York USA
  • Hunter, Biver & Fuqua(2007), Light Science & Magic, Elsevier Oxford UK
  • James Bentley & Charlie Waite (1987), Languedoc, George Philip London
  • James Bentley & Charlie Waite (1987), Languedoc, George Philip London
  • Joe Cornish, Charlie Waite, David Ward, Eddie Ephraums (2006), Working the Light, Argentum London
  • Joe Cornish, Charlie Waite, David Ward, Eddie Ephraums (2007), Developing Style and Vision, Argentum London
  • Joel Meyerowitz (2002), Cape Light, Little Brown and Company New York USA
  • John Berger, Ways of Seeing, Penguin Modern Classics
  • John P Schaefer (2007),The Ansel Adams Guide Book 2 Basic Techniques of Photography, Little Brown New York USA
  • John P Schaefer (2007),The Ansel Adams Guide Book I Basic Techniques of Photography, Little Brown New York USA
  • John Szarkowski (1981), American Landscapes, The Museum of Modern Art New York USA
  • Landscape Photographer of the Year Collection 01 (2007), AA Publishing
  • Landscape Photographer of the Year Collection 02 (2008), AA Publishing
  • Landscape Photographer of the Year Collection 03 (2009), AA Publishing
  • Liz Wells (1996), Photography:A Critical Introduction, Routledge Oxon
  • Liz Wells (2003), The Photography Reader, Routledge Oxon
  • Marc Garanger (1989), Louisiane, Kodak
  • Robert Adams (1996), Beauty in Photography, Aperture Foundation New York USA
  • Robert Adams et al (2009), New Topographics, Steidl Germany
  • Stephen Shaw (2004), Uncommon Places The Complete Works, Thames and Hudson, London
  • Susan Sontag, On Photography, Penguin Books London
  • Terence Pitts (2008), Edward Weston (Icons Series), Taschen
  • TPOTY Awards (2010), TRAVEL PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR Journey Three, Travel Photographer of the Year Suffolk UK

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