How to Photograph Ruins

Your goal is to capture the romance and nostalgic feeling that is often associated with these former structures and not so much on their tourist appeal since most major tourist ruins have been photographed to death.

Photograph your subjects from various angles, perspectives and by day and by night. Using flash will be required at night and a diffuser will probably be handy during the day. It is always better to photograph when you have a diffused ambient light condition such as when the sky is overcast.

If you take a photograph of a rock structure upon which there are some reliefs during the midday sun and when the sun is about to fade or even at dawn you will see much more detail and the reliefs will be easier to admire during dawn,dusk or when overcast.

Midday sun light creates a “washed out” effect and most details will be hard to distinguish not to mention a noticeable lack of visible texture. This is why photographing while the light is diffused makes sense to most photographers.

Also, don’t just focus of capturing images of the subject’s exteriors include aspects of the interiors whenever possible and safe to do. Take long shots, wide angles, close ups and include elements of the surrounding scenery to put into perspectives the location where your subject is located.

A lot of photographers like to include the human element in their ruins photography, I do not since if I wanted to take photos of people I would do it under another theme. I just want to concentrate on the ruins themselves and allow my viewers to immerse themselves in the images before their eyes. This will often lead them to imagine the history of the place without the interference of modern details.

A good staring point to ask yourself is “what photograph can I take that will let others feel as I felt “. Seek more than ordinary pictures. Instead capture photographs that invoke a feeling instead of photographs that just look pretty.

via How to Photograph Ruins.

How to Photograph Ruins

Your goal is to capture the romance and nostalgic feeling that is often associated with these former structures and not so much on their tourist appeal since most major tourist ruins have been photographed to death.

Photograph your subjects from various angles, perspectives and by day and by night. Using flash will be required at night and a diffuser will probably be handy during the day. It is always better to photograph when you have a diffused ambient light condition such as when the sky is overcast.

If you take a photograph of a rock structure upon which there are some reliefs during the midday sun and when the sun is about to fade or even at dawn you will see much more detail and the reliefs will be easier to admire during dawn,dusk or when overcast.

Midday sun light creates a “washed out” effect and most details will be hard to distinguish not to mention a noticeable lack of visible texture. This is why photographing while the light is diffused makes sense to most photographers.

Also, don’t just focus of capturing images of the subject’s exteriors include aspects of the interiors whenever possible and safe to do. Take long shots, wide angles, close ups and include elements of the surrounding scenery to put into perspectives the location where your subject is located.

A lot of photographers like to include the human element in their ruins photography, I do not since if I wanted to take photos of people I would do it under another theme. I just want to concentrate on the ruins themselves and allow my viewers to immerse themselves in the images before their eyes. This will often lead them to imagine the history of the place without the interference of modern details.

A good staring point to ask yourself is “what photograph can I take that will let others feel as I felt “. Seek more than ordinary pictures. Instead capture photographs that invoke a feeling instead of photographs that just look pretty.

via How to Photograph Ruins.

Unusual and Unique Lots from Ineliz

 

The Lost Train Station – I love trains, especially travel by train. The grand old train stations are relics to their past. Sad to see them in decline. It hurts my heart for them to be so forgotten and neglected.

The Industrial House – I like old factories and old, sometimes derelict, buildings in general. I photograph old buildings where I live in rural Ontario, Canada. So, I can’t resist exploring an old building, even if it is fictional.

Victorian Library Ruins – I can’t pass up exploring a ruined library. 

Scavenger’s House – Just as you would think from a scavenger, assorted this and that somehow pulled together into one unique place.

Across the Street from the Bank Ruins in Thunder Bay

I noticed a ghost sign on a building across the street from the burned out ruins of the CIBC bank building in Thunder Bay. I had looked up the bank on Google Street View and noticed the area looked old and run down. It has seen better times I’m sure.

The building with the ghost sign has been known as the Roy Building at some time in its history. It may be empty now, I wasn’t sure.

One more ghost sign, a little farther down the same street.

Know the Earth Beneath Your Feet with an App

Capture

Flyover Country is a National Science Foundation funded offline mobile app for geoscience outreach and data discovery. “The app analyzes a given flight path and caches relevant map data and points of interest (POI), and displays these data during the flight, without in flight Wi-Fi,” describes its website. It “exposes interactive geologic maps from Macrostrat.org, fossil localities from Neotomadb.org and Paleobiodb.org, core sample localities from LacCore.org, Wikipedia articles, offline base maps, and the user’s current GPS determined location, altitude, speed, and heading.”

Source: A New App that Tells You Everything About the Earth Below You  | GOOD

Really nice for urban explorers. You could get at least some history of the area you are photographing. In time the software/ app could include information from local history (from libraries and historical societies) and even urban exploration photos taken from ruins, tunnels and rooftops.