The power of Black and White

Posted by: Bas Meelker Landscape and Wildlife Photography

Bas Meelker Landscape and Wildlife Photography

I love bright and contrasty colors. The more the better! Still, I find myself more and more taking black & white photo's. Mostly landscape's. I like the power of b&w. The subtle nuances between light and dark, the shadows and the way b&w seems the emphasize certain parts of the picture. I don't really take b&w photo's but as usual these day's, I convert them to b&w during post processing. As a photographer though, I try to 'see' in b&w. A realy good b&w photo has it's own time and place and only a view really stand out.

Zonsondergang bij Roderwolde - Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 16-35mm f2.8 L II, diafragma f22, sluitertijd 25 sec., ISO 100, genomen vanaf statief met Lee ND9 grijs gradatie filter, opgeklapte spiegel en draadontspanner.
Sunset near Roderwolde - Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 16-35mm f2.8 L II, aperture f22, shutterspeed 25 sec., ISO 100, taken with a tripod and Lee ND9 graduated grey filter, mirror lock-up and cable release.


In the mean time I am still processing photo's from my last trip to the Bavarian forest in Germany. I have a stack of landscapes waiting to be unleashed in the image library. Yesterday evening was the start of my advances landscape photography course at the School of Photography in Groningen, the Netherlands. Twice a year I take the students on a journey through landscape photography, teaching them what it takes to make a good landscape photo. It is nice to see their enthusiasm and eagerness to learn. It give's me a lot of energy! 

Wolkendek boven het Beierse woud - Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8 L, diafragma f11, sluitertijd 1/400 sec., ISO 100, genomen uit de hand.
Cloudscape over the hills at the Bavarian forest - Canon EOS 5D Mark II + Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8 L, aperture f11, shutterspeed 1/400 sec., ISO 100, handheld.

Trackback(0)

TrackBack URI for this entry

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Show/Hide comments

Write comment

smaller | bigger

busy