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These are images of the world taken from a standing position - an eye-level perspective. Some landscapes require detailed planning, others involve the element of chance encounters. The dramatic lighting and extreme weather conditions before a storm on Lake Ndutu in Tanzania illustrates serendipity contributing to the quality of an image.

I had planned to be there but did not arrange the storm.

 

Four main principles govern my approach to photography. The first is that “I photograph what I see”. This proposition dictates the use of a narrow range of lenses with a focal length close to that of the eye. Hand holding my camera, without the use of tripods, allows the freedom to move in a landscape to balance the composition.

Reflections in a Dutch canal, Amsterdam
Ndutu 1406 RA.jpg
Mixed grasses in sunlight in Sardinia, Italy
Delapitated house in Humberstone, Pozo Almonte, Chile
A rusting car in the Namibian desert
Two multi-coloured lilos on a pool in Salina, Italy
A broken bridge at Diaz Point, Namibia..jpg
Fjallsárlón glacier, Öræfi, Iceland 
A boat house gate's ripple reflections on Lake Windermere, UK
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