Embracing the gloom

The winter days in London can be unforgiving. Sometimes the world is shrouded in heavy cloud. For the photographer, there is no light and shade, colours are flat – there is little to work with.

Aside from coming home with no shots at all, there is a way to deal with these dispiriting days. Embrace the gloom and look for images that capture this maudlin mood. My usual approach is to go monochrome, think black and white and seek out the sunlessness.

Thames emptiness

THAMES EMPTINESS

This photograph is the product of a recent low light day. It’s the River Thames at Putney, with simple layers of sky, trees, river banks and a waterway showing little life and action. There is a sheen on the water, but it’s dark and empty. Quite unusual for this stretch of the Thames.

I saw this view and pounced on it, hopefully capturing the mood of a flat day.

Treasure hunter

Treasure hunter

This could be a quiet rural scene, photographed by a remote coastal area or the edge of some distant lake. But this on the River Thames, taken from bustling Putney Bridge and next to the hubbub of London life. The man is scanning the edge of the water with his metal detector and looking for some valuable treasure hidden beneath the pungent mud.

The feel of this shot reflects the sense of a maudlin day when the sky was blanketed in thick cloud and the light was flat and unyielding. I’ll share another of these images tomorrow (Friday) and thoughts on how to tackle such days with your camera.