I’ll admit, I didn’t feel a sense of nostalgia when I stepped onto the beach at Big Talbot on Saturday. It wasn’t until I began processing the first photos from my new camera that the memories of the solace I found there five years ago came flooding back.
I came then to take pictures of the driftwood with my little Nikon D40. It was the first place I brought my D7100 and D7500 after that. It did not cross my mind, however, that I would be christening my new camera, as I had time and time again, by bringing it here. Still, something in my subconscious drew me back to this beach on Saturday with a new camera and a renewed zeal for photography.
My new camera is a Fujifilm X-T30, a small but exceptionally powerful mirrorless camera. It is so vastly different from the Nikons I have loved for so many years that I spent the better part of two weeks getting acquainted with the features and controls of the camera, watching tutorials and reading the manual like my very life depended on it.
Because the camera itself was more expensive than any of the Nikons I have owned, I only managed to pick up the camera and an 18-55mm f/2.8-4 AF lens at first. I knew I wanted a wide angle lens, like my old Tokina 11-16 f/2.8, which had quickly become one of my absolute favorite landscape and architecture lenses. The autofocus lenses would have put me back $500+, and I couldn’t justify this, so I took a flyer on a Rokinon 12mm f/2.0 manual focus lens.
I have not used a manual focus lens since I used my mom’s old Minolta SLR, but it proved to be an incredibly rewarding experience. I felt more like a photographer dialing in the aperture manually and focusing the lens with the slightest movement to just below infinity, than I can ever remember on my autofocus lenses. I picked up a cheap, but razor sharp manual focus 35mm f/1.2, which is by far the fastest lens I have ever owned. I think this one is going to be more of a challenge, but I am greatly looking forward to it. I have my eye on an 85mm f/1.8 for portraits of the kids (with their ages and frenetic movements, autofocus is all but a requirement).
The photograph above is the first one I took at Big Talbot. The shot was taken handheld at 12mm, f/2.8, 1/350, ISO 125. The sky was wonderfully expressive, and the application of a bit of a gradient filter to it in lightroom brought out the heaviness of the clouds that began to unleash their rain very shortly after I got into my car to leave.
I only took 150 shots during the hour and a half I was there. With my Nikons, I would have taken at least twice that and kept, perhaps, five or six shots. Something about the camera and the lens made me more thoughtful about composition and the elements in the shots. I hope you enjoy this one, and the ones to come. We are going up to North Carolina at the end of the week, and I cannot wait to see what my home away from home has in store for me.
Beautiful! Beautiful! I just started learning Lightroom. I am one to mess around more, read instructions less. I need to switch that around once in a while 🙂
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