November 11th, 2006

Urban Photography That Works

It’s usually very difficult to get an interesting or original shot of city architecture. Everything is rigid and unchanging. One has to somehow find a new perspective in order to make such a scene his own. Photographer Alisdair MacDonald got this great shot by taking advantage of the changing environment, with multiple exposures:

london

t could almost be a stairway to heaven. This remarkable picture of the full moon was taken by photographer Alisdair Macdonald from the South Bank this week after 20 years of trying. It is not a montage but one picture exposed 10 times.

Mr Macdonald shot it with traditional film and said: “I had to sweat overnight until I could take it to be developed.

“When I saw it I just said ‘Yes!’ It’s a lovely feeling when you know you have got it. I’ve tried many times to get the shot but I always messed it up or a cloud would come along.

“This time there was not a cloud in the sky. Tourists stopped to see what I was photographing. Then they all tried with their little cameras. I was thinking ‘Good luck!’”

Mr Macdonald used an 80mm lens on his Nikon mounted on a tripod. The nine hundredth-ofasecond exposures are all four minutes apart. For the final shot he captured the buildings with a two-second exposure.

The clock on St Paul’s Cathedral captures the time of the final exposure: 5.45pm.

From the daily mail’s website.


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