Categories
Photography

Trek

Trek. Photo made with Olympus EM-10ii and Olympus M.Zuiko Digital 17mm F1.8 at Blue Mountain on September 12, 2017. Edited in Apple Photos and Polarr.
Categories
Photography

End of Summer

End of Summer by Christopher Parsons. Image made with Olympus EM10ii and a Panasonic 25mm F1.7 at Sugar Beach on September 3, 2018 in Toronto. Edited in Apple Photos.
Categories
Photo Essay Photography

A Quiet Sunday Walk

A friend of mine and I travelled into Toronto’s Canary district over the weekend to make some photos. Normally I take photos on solo walks, and it was a nice experience to be in the presence of someone else who was also focused on making images. Some of my highlights are below.

All images were shot using an Olympus E-M10ii and and Olympus M.Zuiko ED 40-150mm f4.0-5.6 R and Olympus M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6 II R Lens. They were edited using a combination of Apple Photos and Polar.

Namaste by Christopher Parsons
Primary Stairs by Christopher Parsons
Scrambled by Christopher Parsons
Memory by Christopher Parsons
Overheads by Christopher Parsons
Sands by Christopher Parsons
Melancholy by Christopher Parsons
Land by Christopher Parsons

And one shot from the walk home!

Flee by Christopher Parsons
Categories
Photography

Momma

Photo made with Olympus EM10ii and 14-42mm F3.5-5.6 E at the Financial District May 27, 2018 in Toronto. Edited in Apple Photos and Polar.
Categories
Photography

Lines

Lines by Christopher Parsons
Categories
Photo Essay Photography Writing

Photowalk Challenge

Natural Ladders, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons

There are a lot of different ways that you can challenge yourself to a photowalk. Use specific lenses or focal lengths or creative formats. Walk a predetermined distance and take a hundred photos from that site. Shoot black and white, mobile only, or focus on a concept, colour, or number.

I think I have a challenge that’s a bit different.

Recently I planned a photowalk to wander along a river in Toronto and, along the way, shoot some sculptures I’ve wanted to look at for the last several months. I got ready to head out, threw my camera over my shoulder, and walked out of my building and into a light drizzle of rain.

The low chances of rain had turned into the reality of rain, and it was only starting to come down harder. Without weather sealed gear there was no way I was going to be walking a few kilometres in the rain and shoot.

I quickly rerouted to an enclosed botanical garden that I live nearby. And pulled out my 12-42mm 3.5-5.6 II R kit lens and started at one end of the gardens and walked all the way to the other end.

Piles, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Sharp Symetry, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Unitlted, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Opening, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Revealed, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons

I then swapped out my lens for the Panasonic 25mm 1.7 I had with me, and proceeded to walk all the way through the gardens once more. The shots I got tended to be different from the zoom lens, and forced me to think about what was differently possible to shoot with the prime lens compared to the short zoom.

Rough Hills, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Valve, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Red Frame, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Untitled, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Apex, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons

Once I’d walked the length of the gardens once more I passed through it one last time, this time with my Olympus 40-150mm 4.0-5.6 R. This is definitely not the lens I’d normally use for this kind of shooting environment. And that meant that I was forced to really try with the lens and make it perform in a space in which I’m not comfortable using it.

Aligned, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons
Pals, 2018, Toronto by Christopher Parsons

What did I take away from this? That by walking the same space with different lenses possessing different characteristics I saw the space and photographic opportunities differently. It also was a useful exercise in just visualizing the possible: what shots was I willing and able to experiment with based on the lens at hand? What kind of shot — architecture or natural environment – captured my imagination with the different lenses?

The shots shown above are those that I was most happy with. There were, obviously, far more that got deleted (especially from the 40-150mm!). It was a fun opportunity, and a challenge I suspect I’ll revisit in the future.

Categories
Photography

Sacrifice

Categories
Photography

Chimes

Photo made with Olympus EM10ii and 14-42mm F3.5-5.6 E at the Music Gardens on January 21, 2018 in Toronto. Edited in Apple Photos.
Categories
Photography

Lover’s Embrace

Photo made with an Olympus EM10-ii and a 25mm Panasonic 1.8 lens at Lake Ontario in Kingston on June 17, 2017. Edited in Apple Photos.
Categories
Photography

Just Parking

Photo made with Olympus E-M10ii and Olympus M.Zuiko Digital 17mm F1.8 in Kensington Market on September 17, 2017 in Toronto, Ontario. Edited in Apple Photos.