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A Dance On The Beach

Gulls at sunrise, Natural Bridges State Beach, California 2012

Published January 17, 2013
Updated July 27, 2016

I began teaching photography 40 years ago. So much has changed since then. Cameras. Software. Digital printing. It’s such an exciting time for photographers, but it can be difficult to keep up with all the rapidly changing technology. After a couple of decades of using film, large-format cameras, and darkroom printing, I’ve managed to adapt. I switched to digital printing 20 years ago and put the use of film behind me in 2005. I have no regrets.

Recently, I began teaching private workshops in Yosemite again after a long break. It has been such a pleasure to share my enthusiasm for this great national park with my fellow photographers once again. In the process of teaching these sessions, I realized that although the tools have changed over the years, the lessons I’m teaching now are much the same as when I started. Here’s a reader’s digest of what I teach:

Compose precisely. Watch the edges of your composition. Eliminate any distractions. Draw the viewer’s eye to your subject. Consider proportion and spacing of items within your frame.

Find great light. Get up early. Stay out late. Pick dynamic conditions for dynamic photographs. If the sky is boring, don’t include it. Watch the weather, learn the light, wherever you are. Don’t settle for “okay” light.

Be ready for inspiration. It will come if you have a sense of wonder about the world around you. Be ready to fail. Mistakes will happen—and become our greatest lessons. Practice is the process of being ready for it all to come together! Trust your vision; you have a unique point of view. Having faith in yourself is critical.

You’ll become a better photographer by focusing on these fundamentals.

The tip I’d like to focus on today is the willingness to push oneself creatively. This has been a key trait for me as I try to grow as an artist. I often see photographers giving up too soon, or not moving from one spot, or only trying a few variations. Photography is a dance of possibilities! Experiment with everything from camera and light angles to shutter speeds to lens choice, and have fun with the process. The risks taken will result in many failures, but they also will lead to new ideas and creative breakthroughs.

On a recent trip to the coast, I was eager to photograph a local state beach at sunrise rather than the classic sunset hour. I got out there in the near darkness of dawn. It was a beautiful morning, with warm glowing light, crashing waves, and birds calling and scurrying to feed along the surf line. I was moving constantly, trying different options, focal lengths or foregrounds, and playing with blurring the waves. I was especially intrigued with a natural arch formation, so my compositional arrangements centered on the arch and surf. I was having a great time when a flock of seagulls landed right in front of my viewfinder. At first, I was frustrated with them “blocking” my view and wanted to chase them off. But then I decided to incorporate them. I experimented with various shutter speeds, hoping to have gull impressions “painted” onto the beach. The resulting image shown here pulls together my vision. A few small tweaks in post-processing emphasize the mood of misty light backlit by the early morning sun with the ghostly birds like a dream.

Soon the gulls were gone, the good light passed, and I was famished, ready for breakfast after a joyful, two-hour dance at the beach. Some things never change.

William Neill

William Neill, an American photographer and resident of Yosemite National Park area since 1977, is a renowned nature and landscape photographer. Neill's award-winning photography has been widely published in books, magazines, calendars, posters, and his limited-edition prints have been collected and exhibited in museums and galleries nationally. Neill has received the Sierra Club's Ansel Adams Award for conservation photography.

Neill's assignment and published credits include National Geographic, Smithsonian, Natural History, National Wildlife, Conde Nast Traveler, Gentlemen's Quarterly, Travel and Leisure, Wilderness, Sunset, Sierra and Outside magazines. Also, he writes a regular column, On Landscape, for Outdoor Photographer magazine. Feature articles about his work have appeared in Life, Outdoor Photographer, and Communication Arts. His corporate clients have included Sony Japan, Canon USA, Nike, Nikon, and The Nature Company.

He is the photographic author of many books, including The Sense of Wonder, The Tree, By Nature's Design, The Color of Nature, Traces of Time, Yosemite: The Promise of Wildness, Landscapes Of The Spirit, William Neill – Photographer, a Retrospective, and Light on the Landscape.

Author archive Author website

July 28, 2019

Fine Art Photographs, Fine Art Photography, Inspiration, Landscape Photography, Morning Light, Nature, Nature's Design, photography

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2 Comments

Add yours

  1. Krishna Prasad Kotti

    July 28, 2019 at 1:41 PM

    Reply

    I love this image. Thank you for the great information provided….

    All basics which we tend to forget in our quest to get the shot…..

    Reply
    • William Neill

      July 29, 2019 at 11:07 AM

      Reply

      Thanks for following and commenting! Cheers, Bill

      Reply

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