Chris Bennett
Well-Known Member

Sony NEX 5 (full spectrum) / E 18-55mm / 72nm filter
This is my first serious attempt at a building
Hi Brian,I like this a lot; the white of the building and the black sky compliment each other so well.
Chris I don't know if, by this statement, you're new to architectural photography or to photographing buildings in the IR spectrum. The following is based on my assumption that you intended the former. (If I'm wrong just disregard.)
About architectural images: We used to have a participating member by the name of Darren Bradley. Darren is a very fine architectural photographer who specializes in modern architecture. At one point Darren contributed a series of posts about architectural photography to RPF. At the time I had a growing appreciation of architectural photography but as yet no meaningful practice to develop decent images in that genre. Darren's posts helped me take steps in that direction. I think Darren's posts still exist in the forum. I'll see if I can find them and post the link.
I did take some more, Rob - I'll see what I can do about posting them.Wow, very ghost-like. Love it. Any more from that shoot?
Thanks Stevenson.Very impressive with the black sky behind the building, and what a building it is! I think the snowy-white foliage also gives it (somewhat paradoxically) a rather tropical feeling.
And I like the camera too - I have one of those! Not IR-converted though. Hmmm....
And thanks for introducing me to M.C. Escher. I spent about an hour looking through his works. I've seen one or two before I think but hadn't really appreciated his style. Wow.
Thank you again Ralph.Wow.. stunning pics, Chris, particularly nos1,4 & 5
Thanks Brian. The monastery is such a great subject and, I think the conditions for IR photography must have been near perfect. I so rarely see skies like that in the northwest of England!A fine set of images, Chris. (I think Darren's primer on architectural photography is not a top priority for you.)
So often one or two photos from a set stand out as better (to my eye) than others, which is helpful to me as I try to contribute meaningful comments. But in this case I think all five of your follow-up photos are superb. That's a delightful composition in #3 as well as 5. (So maybe those two are standouts for me but it feels strange to suggest it given the quality of the other three.)