Point Lobos – Pinnacle Rock (0.8-second exposure)
While high-dynamic-range (HDR) photographs are generally achieved using software such as Photoshop or Photomatix, long exposure photography is more of a waiting game. It’s a technique that advanced photographers use to capture light and movement. Patiently they wait, slowing down the shutter speed, trying to capture just the right conditions to turn a photo into a piece of art.
Though many try, few can actually enhance the natural beauty of this world like Patrick Smith. Splitting his time between computer database programming and wide-angle landscape and seascape photography, Smith shocks us with his talent.
“I make very few photos, perhaps just one or two per week but I try to make each one the very best view possible of a particular scene. Of course, this is never quite possible but I will keep going back to a place, often risking my camera and myself hoping to capture the perfect moment. For me, it is the journey and not just the destination!
I want each photograph to be a work of art and not just a straight photograph and I capture it all in the camera and minimize post processing.”
Big Sur – Garrapata Surf (1/4 second exposure)
Yosemite (30-second exposure )
Isla Mujeres, Mexico (30-second exposure)
Kauai, Hawaii (0.6-second exposure)
California Coast (30-second exposure)
Big Sur (60-second exposure)
San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge (2-minute exposure)
La Jolla, CA (1/6-second exposure)
Big Sur – Portal of the Sun (1/6-second exposure)
See more of his amazing work at Flickr.