Night photography.
When I think of night photography two names immediately come to mind – Brassaï and O. Winston Link. The former for his mythical images of Paris at night, the latter for the greatest steam train images ever made.
Back in 2013 I determined to photograph the festive season windows at night in that up market retail paradise, Carmel, and related the experience here. It bears adding that I have owned many 35mm focal length lenses but two stand out – the 35mm f/2 Asph Leitz Summicron for its contrast and the 35mm f/1.4 Sigma for its sensational definition – assuming you can get one that actually focuses correctly. The resolving power of the Sigma is unquestionably the highest I have enjoyed on any camera and the stellar definition is abundantly in evidence in my images. So it was the Sigma, attached to a Nikon D3x, which was the optic of choice for the night images of Carmel’s magnificent shop windows. Anything but lightweight, this combination was mounted on the outstanding Sirui K-40X ball head attached to an ancient and massive Linhof tripod. Looking at the data exposure times varied from 1/15th to 8 seconds and apertures were mostly f/5.6 or f/8. I let the Nikon do the exposure figuring though I had the camera set to underexpose by 1 stop, knowing that burned out highlights in these very high contrast images would not be recoverable in post processing. And speaking of processing, the new to me features of Lightroom Classic compared with my ages old Lightroom v6 made the already fine images even better, specifically the sophisticated masking tools and the ‘Texture’ slider which made the many images of clothing really come alive. Why, I almost feel good about sending Adobe $10 monthly for these enhancements. A couple of images were round tripped through Affinity Photo 2 to square things up.
Anyway, of the 56 images 42 were winners and you can view the slide show by clicking the picture below. The music is Cole Porter’s “I’ve got you under my skin” and the slideshow was generated using LRc. I encourage you to view this on the largest screen in your home, the TV, as the quality of the photos is nothing short of spectacular.
Click the image for the slideshow.