Recently (here) I was reflecting on how our mood impacts on the images that we make.
Whilst that discussion was taking place in the context of an image that was captured and made whilst I had very dark clouds bearing down on me, today proved to be somewhat different. Today, with the sun shining and my heart full of joy and hope .. and a personal issue with someone very, very dear to me sorted out after I behaved very stupidly, I took myself off to a place that has a particular meaning for me because of that person.
Kingsbarns Beach in Fife (just along the road from St Andrews, for the golfing enthusiasts) is, now, for me, a beautiful place. It was here, with my recently deceased dog, that I walked on Christmas Day just past - the first Christmas Day since my wife, Sheila died. But as the leader of the group I attend at Maggie's Centre in Dundee said, cancer killed one person, not two. I am still alive and have a life to lead.
That I may do so with someone else who has become very special to me is a matter for the future. Kingsbarns Beach is a place with special, joyful meaning to that person also.
So, I can celebrate the joy that being on Kingsbarns Beach brings. And today I did so.
I always think that a 16:9 format lends itself particularly well to beach scenes. It gives that sense of panorama but still allows enough vertical space to capture key elements in a composition.
This was captured with the Lumix DMC-LX100. The lovely thing about it is that it allows you to set ratios so that you can view the composition before capture. This allows you to compose precisely using the back screen or viewfinder. So, in post processing there is no 'trying things out'. You know your composition from the outset.
Any comment you wish to make about the image or about how mood affects our image-making will be welcomed.