The Monochrome Challenge

Five monochrome photographs in five days on Facebook. This was the gauntlet laid down to me by photographer Steven Kelly. This gave me the chance to delve into the archives and revisit favourite old shots and explore why they are etched in my memory. Click the images to enlarge

Towards West Pier

Day one: Towards West Pier from March 2012, one of the first shots published on mikeosbornphoto. Brighton’s skeletal structure is often photographed, while the figures on the stone jetty make it look distant. It’s timeless in monochrome and reminds me of a coastal visit on an unusually warm day.

Towards the mountain

Day Two: Towards the Mountain. Taken on the Spanish island of Fuerteventura in May 2013. It’s not just a holiday playground but endowed with dramatic landscapes. The lone figure trudging across the sand makes this memorable for me.

Wapping portico

Day Three: Wapping Portico. A shot from 2012 of a covered walkway in the affluent riverside area of London. The shadows and sense mystery made it clear that architecture is a favourite area of mine.

Elegant descent

Day Four: Elegant descent. A swirling, beautiful design at London’s Tate Britain gallery which naturally lends itself to monochrome treatment. This is a piece of work that needs to be photographed.

Contemplation

Day Five: Contemplation. I picked a recent photo to complete my five shots, from the Tower of London on Armistice Day when the moat was filled with ceramic poppies. The scarlet has gone to add emphasis on the young woman’s expression and the capture of a moment.


And then the challenge is passed onto someone else, like a pleasantly creative chain letter. I asked Richard Cooper-Knight to choose his monochrome five, which he has published on his blog.

If anyone fancies a nomination, I will happily provide one!

The sunlight collection

The UK is languishing beneath freezing grey cloud, and some of the country is paralysed by snowfall. We expect a transition to a gentler climate now and to be wishing winter farewell.

I’ve done the next best thing and put together a collection of images which demonstrate that Britain knows what sunshine is.  I remember feeling warmed and content when taking them – hopefully it works for you too.

Click first image for the full gallery experience

See these warm, sunlit UK posts:

An Essex isle

In the Olympic Stadium’s Shadow

London’s defences

Top shots of 2012

Another year will soon be consigned to history, and I thought I’d share with you the 10 favourite photographs of 2012. This group is determined by statistics and most clicked – so they are your favourites.

Click the first image to view the gallery


 
My home city and source for many shots – London – hasn’t fared too well with only three in the top 10. A trio of night photographs from the coastal town of Brighton rate very highly, with two of them at the top of the pile. Images of Morocco and Dubai’s futuristic Burj Khalifa also feature. Let me know what you think of the results.

The sepia collection

Sepia is considered an old-fashioned way to treat photographs, stuffy and Victorian. But it’s still used in the digital age, and brings a certain something to various shots.

I’m a fan, but use it quite sparingly. You know when it fits a photograph and adds something to the story. Landscapes which contain people often come under the sepia gaze in my editing suite. It adds many different subtle moods and freezes a moment more delicately. Architectural details, already locked in time, can also benefit from this treatment.  This collection of UK shots that I’ve put together hopefully visualises these points.

Click on the first image to launch the full size gallery

The 10,000 moment

Mikeosbornphoto has just clocked up its 10,000th view, which seems a good moment to stand back and reflect on six months of sharing photography and thoughts.

Making contact with many great fellow photographers and bloggers has been a rewarding experience, including ckponderings, Diana J Hale, Stevie Gill, Noeline Smith and Danita Cahill – regular and much appreciated visitors and comment makers.

When I created this site, we had just enjoyed an unusual spurt of warm, sunny weather in parts of the UK, and the first photograph I posted – called Basking Brighton – seemed to hold hope for a barbecue summer.

Well, the season was blighted by wet weather but was saved by a feast of sport and Olympic fever. And that all seems a distant memory now, and today there is a chill in the air and a sodden depression swirling over us.

But thinking ahead to the next – hopefully – 10,000 visits, the future looks good. Photography is even more rewarding and enjoyable than ever, and sharing it through this site is a pleasure. Does anyone have any tips or advice for the coming six months?…