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The last rays of a winter sun bath a beautiful panorama of Pines Island reflected in the waters of Derryclare Lough near Clifden, County Galway, Ireland.  Taken from the water's edge after scrambling down the embankment from a nearby road.

Celtic Reflections

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The last rays of a winter sun bath a beautiful panorama of Pines Island reflecting in the waters of Derryclare Lough near Clifden, County Galway, Ireland. Taken from the water's edge after scrambling down the embankment from a nearby road.

NookFeatureMural
Dimensions
  • Story
  • Planning
  • Technical

How this shot came about.

It had been quite a while since the family had gone back ‌to ‌‌Ireland for a visit and so in 2019 my brother Brian and I headed back to the old country with our families to have Christmas with our parents in Enniskerry, County Wicklow.

With three late-teen children in tow we felt it would make polite sense to give our parents a break from the unaccustomed hordes and head over to the West for a short holiday. We had booked a nice B ‘n’ B in a little coastal town called Clifden, which is just a hop and a skip West of Galway, as we thought the location would be a good staging point for a driving holiday in Connemara and maybe The Burren as well.

After a half-way stop over at the Porthouse Hotel in Athlone we all piled into the 12 seater van we had hired and aimed ourselves at Galway and the West. I had already had a frustrating morning having missed out on an excellent opportunity for a “misty lake shot with geese” and was really hoping that somewhere along the journey another would present itself.

Unfortunately nothing really stood out as we traveled along until we got quite close to Clifden. With sun setting and the light rapidly fading Denise (my better half) shouted for us to stop as she had seen a pretty lake to the North of the road we were traveling. We pulled over, piled out, grabbed the camera gear, climbed up an embankment and down to the lake shore on the other side.

I have never seen such still water...such a perfect reflection. There are plenty of times where one plans a shot for days, weeks, months and even years before bringing it to fruition but with the pressure of a fast setting sun and a concern that the perfection would not last, I entered a state of flow, Panorama, Tripod - Ballhead - Camera - Focus - Exposure and the image was captured!

C‌eltic Reflections is one of my favourite shots to date. I love the calmness that washes over me when I ‌stand and immerse myself in the image but I also love some very specific elements of it as well...

  • The warm light of the setting sun illuminating the clouds on the left but then breaking over the central mountain and hitting the peaks on the right as well.

  • The deep, deep purple hue to the water of the lake caused by a fine suspension of peat

  • The tiny little cottages nestling beneath the hills on the extreme right of the image

  • The imperceptible ripples breaking the perfection of the reflection along the mountain edges - broken but yet somehow enhanced at the same time.

Shot Location

This Shot

I guess there is planning as a process which starts long before the event and then there is planning which happens almost simultaneous to the event itself. This photograph is one of those latter types of planning.

In fairness I had been monitoring the sunset time and what light and shadow would be cast on the landscape using The Photographer's Ephemeris but this particular shot was all about taking advantage of a circumstance which rarely presents itself in the West of Ireland in the winter - a calm clear evening with still waters.

Planning in this instance consisted of seeing and then shooting. 


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: 112

HDR Count: 7 exposures per shot

Aperture: f10

ISO: 100

Focal Length: 35 mm

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

Shutter: 1/800, 1/400, 1/200, 1/100, 1/50, 1/25, 1/13

Filters

ND Filter: Not used

Gradient Filter: false

Polarizer: false

Image

Rows: 2

Shots: 0

HDR Shots: 16

Aspect: Portrait

Arrangement: 2x8

Post Production

Basic Workflow

  • I used Lightroom to stitch the 112 HDR exposures together into a 16 image mosaic
  • I passed the image through Photoshop's denoising filter
    • removing CCD artifacts from the image
    • particularly in the clouds and the clear areas of the sky
  • I used Photoshop's spot healing tool to remove quite a few sensor artifacts from the image

Image Adjustment

  • The image didn't need any sharpening
  • There was a contrast and clarity adjustment to the clouds to accentuate the difference between the darker and lighter portions
  • The spot healing tool was used clean up the image by removing
    • transformers
    • power poles and power lines
    • foreground foliage (which remained after cropping)
  • Cropping was performed as a compromise between
    • removal of foreground artifacts as a result of the stitching
    • retention of the widest possible view of the panorama 

A graphic of the shot's layout structure

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