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A quiet Irish cottage beside the sea with soft Connemara clouds over a shining sea.   My brother dropped me by the side of the road while he went to get some salmon - the light ebbed and flowed but I caught this moment for posterity.  Taken on a beautiful winter's morning at Claddaghduff near Galway. Ireland at its best.

After Paul Henry

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A quiet Irish coastal cottage with soft Connemara clouds over a shining sea. My brother dropped me by the side of the road while he went to get some salmon - the light ebbed and flowed but I caught this moment for posterity on a beautiful winter's morning at Claddaghduff near Galway - Ireland at its best.

NookFeatureMural
Dimensions
  • Story
  • Planning
  • Technical

How this shot came about.

We settled into our AirBNB at Clifden and, using it as a base of operations, spent the next few days exploring the surrounding countryside. My brother Brian had heard about a fishing village along the coast where we could pick up some nice smoked salmon, so early one morning both families packed into the 12 seater van we had hired and headed off on our "fishing" expedition.

When we arrived at Claddaghduff* we turned left at Our Lady, Star of the Sea church along a country lane heading towards Omey Island. We were only 100m or so down this lane when the view from the passenger seat where I was sitting was too tempting to pass up and I asked to be let out so I could take a shot. "Pick me up on the way back", I said and unloaded my gear. The van rapidly diminished along the road, was soon lost around that bend and I was left with the sun and the sea and the sound of the waves lapping on the rocks in the distance.

What I had seen was a composition which I hoped would be a worthy homage to one of my favorite Irish painters, Paul Henry. Henry is famous for his post-impressionist depiction of the West of Ireland particularly capturing the essence of the quiet cottages and the unusual cumulus formations which form above them as the Atlantic air, heavy with moisture, intermingles with the coastal thermals formed by sunshine on land.

The sky above me was presenting just such formations and with the cottage nestled into the bend in the road I set about taking the shot. I took several different versions of this shot over the next hour and a half but this image is the one which, in my mind, comes closest to capturing the essence of Henry's work.

The clouds and the cottage, of course, anchor the shot but I also love the contrast of the stones in the wall, the sheen of the wet road, the lush green of the grass and the long line of sight which goes from the camera, across the wall, past the rocks at the water's edge all the way to the house on Omey and on up into the clouds.

I commented to myself at the time about how peaceful and comfortable I felt standing at the roads edge but it was only later that I discovered the reason why.

When my parents saw the shot they told me that many years previously when I was about 3 years old the family had taken a caravan just around the corner from the cottage and spent several weeks on holiday in the area.

I had no conscious recollection of the holiday but I most certainly had a strong visceral response to the vista which had presented itself through the windscreen!

*Gaelic: "An Cladach Dubh" or the dark shoreline - so named for the dark sands found along this part of the coastline

Shot Location

The Shot

Quite apart from my desire to capture a shot worthy of the name “After Paul Henry” this image was born out of a visceral reaction on my part to this vista as we rounded a turn at Claddaghduff. As such I can safely say there was no premeditated planning done for this shot.

Having said that, once I was in situ and setting up the shot, The Photographer's Ephemeris is always your friend and I took a moment to assess the time of day and the track of the sun.

Later, when I was back in Australia, I needed to get the GPS co-ordinates for the shot and the ephemeris was very useful again as by knowing the time of day and the date of the shot I was able to pinpoint the location by using the direction and length of shadows in the shot to re-establish the shot's location on Google Maps.

The Photographer's Ephemeris showing the shot location

The Photographer’s Ephemeris is a trademark of Crookneck Consulting LLC, registered in the United States.
Please visit their website at https://photoephemeris.com for more details
All other trademarks and logos remain the property of their respective owners

Gear

Camera: Canon EOS 7D

Lens: Canon EF-S 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 IS

Storage: SanDisk Extreme Pro CF UDMA 7 64Gb

Ballhead: Manfrotto 498RC2

Tripod: Manfrotto 055XPROB

Cable Release: Promote

ND Filter: None

Exposures

Count: 28

HDR Count: 7 exposures per shot

Aperture: f8.0

ISO: 100

Focal Length: 28 mm

EV values: -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3

Shutter: 1/400, 1/200, 1/100, 1/50, 1/25, 1/13, 1/6

Filters

ND Filter: Not used

Gradient Filter: false

Polarizer: false

Image

Rows: 2

Shots: 0

HDR Shots: 4

Aspect: Portrait

Arrangement: 2x2

Post Production

Basic Workflow

  • I used Lightroom to stitch the 28 HDR exposures together into a 4 image mosaic. 
  • I passed the image through Topaz DeNoiseAI which does a very effective job of removing CCD artifacts from the image.

 

Image Adjustment

  • A little dehazing and constrast adjustment was done to the clouds. 
  • I did a curves adjustment on the road surface to bring the intensity of the sheen down a little
  • As always I removed more modern man-made items like telegraph poles and wires which were along the roadside
  • Interestingly that intense green of the grass and moss is completely untouched
  • Once I was satisfied with the results there was then a very light pass through Topaz SharpenAI
  • Finally a crop to tighten the composition completed the image

A graphic of the shot's layout structure

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