42 Exposures of the same view, that of McWay Falls, makes the selection process a bit daunting... When the subject never changes and you're just trying to capture the right piece of it in a photograph, it's hard to look at that many exposures with very little differences and know where to begin... don't worry - there's no way I'm posting all 42! Hopefully just the best of the bunch - its kind of laughable how similar they all look, so I'll try to just post those with obvious differences.
I've been staring at these 42 exposures in Lightroom for almost an hour. When looking at this many identical images I realize a few things... One - Don't take so many shots of the same landscape! Either I have THE shot or I don't - change my perspective or move on! Don't continue snapping pics, hoping I have what I'm looking for. I think I'm so excited to be there thinking about what I'm doing photographic-ly instead of really looking at the landscape... Finding THE shot and getting the camera to capture it. I think too much about how it's going to look in the camera.
Photo #72 (Below gives us the entire cove view) Also the only exposure taken at 18mm.
Meta Data: Photo Taken: 11 June 2011 ~ 2:38 pm
1/160 sec at f/22, ISO 200, 18 mm (18.0-55.0 mm f/3.5-5.6)
I cropped it in 72A (Below) to bring the waterfall into focus more. (Created a virtual copy of 72 than cropped so original file could be saved).
Jason says he likes seeing more of the surrounding hillside and get the entire cove view. I wanted to crop them out and get closer to the surf.
When I was looking through the 42 exposures trying to find the next good shot, I'm looking for a composition where the waterfall lays along the first vertical third of the shot (a.k.a. rule of thirds) The waterfall is my subject and the human eye is most drawn to photos where the subject is not exactly in the center, but instead along one of the 4 intersection points when a 3x3 grid is drawn over the image. This helps me to eliminate a lot where the waterfall is too close to the left edge of the photo.
And using Lightroom I'm able to rate each photo as I browse thru them, rank them with1 to 5 stars. Then I can sort for the 5-stars and ignore the majority.
Photo #83 (Below) is one of my favorites because of the color variations in the sand.
Meta Data: Photo Taken: 11 June 2011 ~ 2:41 pm
1/160 sec at f/22, ISO 200, 35 mm (18.0-55.0 mm f/3.5-5.6)
This last photo #99 (Below) is my favorite. I like the rocks leading into the surf on the bottom of the frame.
Meta Data: Photo Taken: 11 June 2011 ~ 2:38 pm
1/125 sec at f/22, ISO 200, 55 mm (55.0-200.0 mm f/4.0-5.6)
We managed to arrive at McWay Falls at possible the worst time of day to shoot photographs - during the high afternoon sun. Photographs are better in soft light - dusk or sunrise. I've seen some pictures of what McWay Falls can look like in sunset tones of pinks and reds (Google Image search: McWay Falls and you'll see them too.) But never having been to McWay Falls before we didn't know exactly how to plan our day around it. Took us about 2.5 hours from Santa Clara. I think it's definitely worth the long trip back for the right conditions.