November 2011: Calendars...
Calendars have proved very popular this year. The 2012 landscapes calendar is available in two formats: 1) A4 size and 2) cd desktop.
There are only a few remaining. Order quickly to avoid disappointment.
Update 4th December: A4 sized calendars now sold out
cd desktop calendars still available
The calendar features some of my favourite local landscape photographs. These include Sunset at St Catherine's Chapel (Abbotsbury), Bluebell woods, Poppies, West Bay and Stembridge Tower Mill (England's only remaining thatched windmill).
See the link below for further details.
http://kjw.photium.com/news52214.html
Alot of people have asked about the cover photograph and the story behind it. I was driving back into town aruond sunset time one autumn evening when I saw the sky changing colour. I pulled over to find a view towards a barn in a field. I set the camera on the tripod with the barn as the focal point, but not much happened in the sky. I looked over my shoulder to see the most amazing colour in the sky in the other direction. I moved quickly to find a tree to act as the silhouette, underexposing slightly to create the silhouette effect.
In the short period of time that the sky lit up, I managed a couple of portrait and a couple of landscape shots. Photography by chance, I was in the right place at the right time, and it pays to look the other way!

There are only a few remaining. Order quickly to avoid disappointment.
Update 4th December: A4 sized calendars now sold out
cd desktop calendars still available
The calendar features some of my favourite local landscape photographs. These include Sunset at St Catherine's Chapel (Abbotsbury), Bluebell woods, Poppies, West Bay and Stembridge Tower Mill (England's only remaining thatched windmill).
See the link below for further details.
http://kjw.photium.com/news52214.html
Alot of people have asked about the cover photograph and the story behind it. I was driving back into town aruond sunset time one autumn evening when I saw the sky changing colour. I pulled over to find a view towards a barn in a field. I set the camera on the tripod with the barn as the focal point, but not much happened in the sky. I looked over my shoulder to see the most amazing colour in the sky in the other direction. I moved quickly to find a tree to act as the silhouette, underexposing slightly to create the silhouette effect.
In the short period of time that the sky lit up, I managed a couple of portrait and a couple of landscape shots. Photography by chance, I was in the right place at the right time, and it pays to look the other way!
