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Docklands Light Railway, June 2001
This was one of the photos I took once I discovered that the camera
extends the exposure if you keep the flash off in the dark. The fact
that I was holding the camera in my hand unfortunately blurred the
photo more than I was hoping and the fact that I was not inconsiderably
drunk didn't help matters.
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Limehouse, July 2001
Another one on the way home from the pub and whilst feeling
unusually creative. Unfortunately I didn't realise at the time that it
was a good 'un and so the resolution is only 640x480.
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Somewhere Rural, August 2001
Taken whilst away GeoCaching
with a colleague. The pastime involves traipsing around the country
looking for caches hidden by other participants and locatable via a GPS
and some written clues. I did take a lot of other photos at this
excellent site but as I didn't have a tripod and the light was
reasonably bad, most of them were quite blurred. This one is too, if
you look at it carefully, so please don't.
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Bosigran, August 2001
Having sort of fallen into membership of a climbing club in London,
Dan Lear (the dashing young gent in this picture) made me actually go
and do some climbing at Land's End. The cleanness of the sea came out
very well but I left the subject in the dark and failed to give any
impression of the enormous drop below us.
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Burning Man, September 2001
I took a great deal of shots at the Burning Man
festival in the Nevada Desert but most of them ended up a bit
directionless. This was one of the better efforts; I think it portrays
quite nicely the desert weather, the dust and the general lackadaisical
attitude of the festival itself. You, however, may think it does
nothing of the sort.
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Limehouse, October 2001
I had for a while an intention to take several photographs directly
up into the air or directly down to the ground and see if they
"worked". Generally they didn't, but this was one of the better ones.
It was taken on the way to work; I did wander around for a bit trying
to make the clouds look more symmetrical and eventually settled on
this.
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Moorgate, October 2001
I took this one on the way home from work in Moorgate tube station.
I sat the camera down on the handrail and waited for someone to walk
past me. I quite like the "corporate" effect it ended up with and the
sense that the viewer was moving down the escalator, rather than
stationary.
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Battersea Park Fireworks, November 2001
This was the first time I'd gone to an event armed with a tripod,
and I was very pleased with the results. I watched almost the whole
event through the viewfinder and took fifty photos, of which a couple
were reasonable. I messed around a lot with the exposure, as can be
seen from this shot of a bonfire. I liked this one primarily because of
the way the fire seems to consume the sky.
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Loch Nagar, January 2003
At the end of a very long day hiking, tried and failed to capture
the stunning sunset that appeared over Loch Nagar and our conquest,
Broad Cairn (the far right small bump in the middle). I took a few
shots with the camera (Kodak DC260) rested on a stone I'd paddled over
to. Despite (or maybe because of) auto-everything on the camera, this
one came out by far the best, and I resisted the urge to fix the
contrast.
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