While visiting Gloucester in late September, Rebecca and I spent the morning walkabout in the city centre and after passing the huge cathedral (which I didn't feel able to do justice to, due to its huge size and us being so close), we came across the small church of St. Mary de Lode. I don't know why, but I felt compelled to wander around it documenting it from many sides. Challenges to this were the variable light and proximity of several large trees still in leaf.
Talking of leaves - and taking one from Frank's book - here is a potted history courtesy of Wikipedia and other sources.
The word Lode is from the old English word for water course or ferry and in this case it refers to a ferry that once crossed a branch of the River Severn to the west of the church, which no longer exists. ~ The church has a Norman tower and chancel, and a monument of Bishop John Hooper stands in its grounds.
In March 1643 and also in 1646, during the English Civil War, the church was used as a prison to hold royalist soldiers captured by Sir William Waller and Lieut. Col. Edward Massey.
The church is believed to have been built on the site of an ancient Roman temple which became the first Christian church in Britain. The Roman mosaic tiled floor can still be seen in the church.
In 1979, archaeological excavations in the nave showed that the church is built over two Roman buildings of the 2nd to 4th and 5th to 6th centuries. There was also evidence of a church on the site Saxon times, or earlier. According to written records, the earliest church on the site dates from the late eleventh century, consisting of a nave, tower and chancel but these were destroyed in a 1190 fire. A new chancel was built in the thirteenth century.
There is a fifteenth century wooden pulpit and an organ which was moved from Gloucester's St Nicholas Church in 1971. The church also includes stained glass windows commemorating the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars and the Gloucester poet Ivor Gurney.
Although it is apparently still a functioning church, opening hours are quite limited, so access inside wasn't possible at the time we visited.
I was shooting with the Nikon P510 (bridge camera), not my D5000 DSLR for these, so the originals were jpg, this will be my first serious foray into processing jpgs with this type of subject.
We walked from the Cathedral through Westgate, so starting with the monument to Bishop John Hooper and moving on to the building itself (from the rear), have I succeeded in giving a feel for the fairly compact nature of the church?
I also took a conscious decision that I'd shoot wide and crop to correct perspective on the ones I could - and leave perspective alone in PP on the ones where this wasn't possible. I also framed to minimise distortion of things that need to be 'square' by not putting them too near the corners when shooting at 24mm FFE. So this was a bit more of an effort on my part to "get it right in camera", it has largely worked, although I miss the wider dynamic range available when RAW shooting, it limited what I could recover from the shadows where I didn't blow the sky. I had previously discovered that jpg shooting with the P510 requires much more precise exposure compared to RAW shooting with my DSLR. So that was another area where I kept re-shooting the scene until I got what I wanted on the histogram.
I left the WB on Auto, my theory was this was more likely to give consistent looking results (in the changing light conditions) than me jumping it from one preset to another as the sun came and went. I haven't adjusted colour temp in PP, as I'm likely make it worse, having not shot any WhiBal references to refer to.
I present them in order of a clockwise circumnavigation of the building, but in order to reduce the number of shots and avoid repitition here, I have had display them out of the sequence they were shot, explaining the apparent changes in weather; in practice, it started dull, then the cloud thinned. Is this ordering the correct decision?
#1:
Nikon P510 at 4.3mm: 24mm (FFE), 1/320s, f/5.9, iso200, EC -0.7 (291P_7645_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 750px × 1000px (recommended)
Processing:
Limited to the clone 'disconnecting' a bit of tree from the memorial on right, levels, LCE and sharpening after downsize. Framing as shot.
What I've learnt:
Need to get a new UWA lens so I can tackle this type of shot on the D5000 and shoot RAW (I am limited to 28mm FFE on that).
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#2:
Nikon P510 at 4.3mm: 24mm (FFE), 1/640s, f/5.9, iso200, EC -1.3 (291P_7643_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 956px × 1000px (recommended)
Processing:
Sigificant crop because I kept the camera level and the tower in the middle of the frame.
Cloned over a parked van and car, blurred, desaturated and toned down the house and its windows to avoid the fairly bright red brick and bright, sharp (as shot) windows distracting from the main subject.
Lifted midtones as far as I could without posterisation setting in, but it still looks dimmer than I'd like (Boo-hoo, I want my RAW )
It was very hazy sunshine here; no shadows to speak of. Levels, LCE and sharpening after downsize.
What I've learnt:
As above, if shot RAW, it would have provided much better dynamic range for PP. I should have used a wider aperture on this shot; say f/2.8 (FFE f/16), although the benefit of that would have been minimal; all I had to do was blur the background a bit in PP.
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#3:
Nikon P510 at 4.3mm: 24mm (FFE), 1/500s, f/3.7, iso200, EC -0.3 (291P_7578_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 821px × 1000px (recommended)
Processing:
In PP, I nearly broke my resolve not to perspective correct on this shot, it takes -30 quite well if I extend the canvas to 5000px, but I didn't in the end.
I left the trees in the top corners since I think it shows the "hemmed in by nature" aspect of the locality, but I did clone out a bit top centre, levels, LCE and sharpening after downsize.
What have I learnt:
Given the poor sky, I really should have re-shot this later like the first two above. In hindsight, I am concerned that the conifer on left blocks a bit too much of the scene, although the aim was to show the Chancel (and tower).
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#4:
Nikon P510 at 4.3mm: 24mm (FFE), 1/320s, f/3.7, iso200, EC -0.3 (291P_7582_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 974px × 1000px (recommended)
We have made it to the front, another of the earlier shots with bright overcast.
Processing:
Crop the bottom off, clone out a couple of posts in foreground, desaturate copious overload bloom/lateral CA in tree leaves against sky, levels, LCE and sharpening after downsize.
What have I learnt:
I took several of this aspect, some had flare, glad I took a few from slightly different positions - in fact I may have even shaded the lens, as this was shooting into the light.
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#5:
Nikon P510 at 8.3mm: 45mm (FFE), 1/100s, f/4.4, iso200, EC -0.7 (291P_7586_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 1562px × 1000px (recommended)
I grabed this shot as the sunlight was fading, it didn't return (while I was in the area) for what could have been a slightly better composition. This is the north side, as you might guess from all the moss, these walls never really see direct sun and with those two huge trees keeping the whole area mostly in shade, it's a bit dark in this corner.
Processing:
Make a better stab at composition by cropping, desaturate overload bloom/lateral CA in leaves against sky top left, levels, LCE and then sharpening after downsize.
What have I learnt:
Don't hesitate, shoot (but see #6).
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#6:
Nikon P510 at 7.6mm: 42mm (FFE), 1/100s, f/4.3, iso200, EC -1.0 (291P_7629_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 1315px × 1000px (recommended)
I wanted a shot using the path leading to the door and to show the tower walls and chancel, it also shows the circular window and castellated decorstion above the door. I shot one straight on to the door, but it doesn't really work.
Processing:
Composition is basically as shot, I removed a slither off the left edge and wished I had included more on the right. Desaturate the overload bloom/lateral CA in leaves against sky top left, levels, LCE and then sharpening after downsize.
What have I learnt:
Don't rush a shot (but see #5).
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OK folks, last one, well done if you're still reading
#7:
Nikon P510 at 4.3mm: 24mm (FFE), 1/1250s, f/4.2, iso200, EC -1.0 (291P_7638_H1000)
Hit Kbd F11 and click image, then F, to see at 1315px × 1000px (recommended)
I'm not sure this works as a photo, but I did learn a lot processing it.
Processing:
Composition is exactly as shot, cloned out a couple of bits of tree on right above roof to give a 'cleaner' look.
Copied to two layers, processed one for the tower and everything else, double processed the other with levels, LCE to bring up the detail in the 'unlit' side and roof, erased the top to let this show through, flattened, LCE again and then sharpening after downsize.
What have I learnt:
I never knew you could push jpg shadow so far to recover detail, here's what I started with;
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Well, I don't often post pictures here, but I had the day off work while the car was serviced, so I set to.
I hope others with bridge or P&S cameras that are Aperture Priority capable see that you don't have to have a fancy DSLR to produce decent results for web display (well I think they're decent).
Note that although this is the legendary P510 with 1000mm capable 42x zoom, the longest I used here was about 45mm and the widest 24mm.
Also, although I used CS5 to edit, Elements or GIMP could have done it just as easily.
I'd be grateful to hear your thoughts on whether I have achieved what I set out to.
Thanks for viewing (and hopefully commenting),