4×5 portraits

I got to learn how to use 4×5 camera this semester at school. And I am in love with 4×5. This is a whole new level of making photos as it brings so much possibilities into the photographs. I am learning how to focus on the subjects and how to use the camera movements to focus on multiple subjects in the frames. Here are some portraits I have made during the last 3 months. I hope somewhat capture the subjects’ characteristics or an essence of their feelings, this is my goal in large format portraits.

death inside – self portraits

This was not intended to be a self portrait series but I did not have a model at this moment so I had to put myself in front of the camera. This was my first ever self portraits and and consequently, they carry a raw vulnerability. I wanted to show a part of me that true to myself but also visually intriguing. I choose flowers to be my props because flowers are delicate and fragile, dead flowers are even more poetic. Reflecting on myself through the metaphor of flowers, I don’t see myself as a blooming blossom or one on the brink of blossoming. Instead, I identify more with a dried, withered flower—still possessing beauty, but in a more rugged and weathered manner. And to feel the beauty or value of a dead dried up flower, you need to have a different mindset than when you appreciate fresh flowers. In portraying myself as a human adorned with dead flowers sprouting from within, I aimed to expose the intricacy of my inner space. Through my poses, I hope to convey the pain, the ease and the peace that accompany a soul weathered by life’s trials.

All photo was taken on 35mm Ilford Delta 100 film. Darkroom printed and scanned digitally by me.

summer in yosemite

Yosemite in the summer on Pentax 6×7 medium format film camera

It’s been a while since my last post. I’m glad that I’m back on time for the summer. I was a big Lana Del Rey’s fan years ago. In her songs, I got the impression that summer is the most beautiful season of the year. All the summer vibes in her music are so goldenly youthful, vivid and full of lust for love. From her “Young and beautiful” lyrics, a perfect summer scene stuck in my head and I will forever looking for a summer moment in mid July, when the heat turns overwhelmed along with the humidity and the fruits are so ripe with all the juice about to burst out of their soft skin just before they turn rotten in the heat of summer. I just love how lively and vigorous but also nostalgic summer is in her mind, it’s the best suit for young and wild hearts that are full of love in the relentless summer heat.

My photos are quite different than what I posted here before, I don’t know why my “style” [if I had one] has changed but I’m glad with how it looks now. It’s a coincident when I wrote the intro for this post and realized how Lana Del Rey’s summer vibe was so similar with what I got here.

Here’s the slideshow for quick look at the series.

I like to begin the set with the photo of apples fell on the ground beneath an apple tree. The composition is not my best but I like how the apples lead our eyes from the bottom right of the frame to the top left. I like that the apple in the bottom right is out of focus giving a sense of depth in the photo.

apples on the ground

The next three photos are from an afternoon walking around my airbnb house. I was fascinated with the reddish tree trunks that look so vivid in the sun light. I like how the red and green contrast each other in these photos.

Next, I walked to a small waterfall near my airbnb house in the following morning to scout the waterfall and enjoy my time alone with my camera. The waterfall was nice but there weren’t a lot of water sine it’s summertime so I stepped on rocks that supposed to be under water to look around and go upper the stream.

On my second day in Yosemite, I went inside the National Park and visited some famous views. The first stop was Tunnel View. The view was beautiful but I wish the sky were clearer rather than misty and hazy as in the photos.

In the afternoon, I walked around the house again for some more discover. Here’re some photos that I like from the walk. I love the tree below because of its interesting gesture. I thought I need a wider lens to capture the whole tree but this frame still balance to me so I’m quite happy with it.

On the following day to Glacier Point I brought my digital camera instead of the Pentax 6×7, I end up didn’t take much photos because of the hazy sky but I still got some photos that I might like. But in the end, I just love the feeling of shooting film. Lastly, I walked to the near by waterfall in the last morning in Yosemite to make some long exposures. Here’re the results.

After these shots, I fell into a pond while trying to get over a rock to compose my next shot. My Pentax get wet and stopped working. Although it means I have to send the camera to repairman now but I don’t feel regret or upset at all, that’s my choice, and to me all will be worth it if I got some photos that I’m proud of. So, cheers for a vivid beautiful summer.

a bit of everything

This post does not have a specific theme but just shots from the Pentax 6×7, and some personal thoughts in life.

I got myself a Pentax 6×7 MLU body from Japan last September, along with a 90mm Leaf Shutter lens. I chose the LS lens in regard of the ability to shoot with flash, I don’t feel very comfortable with the flash sync 1/30s of the Pentax focal plane body. Since I got the system, I’ve shot with it through 4 rolls of film. Of course this is not a big amount of photos I’ve made with the camera but it’s very precious to me. The Pentax is my first 6×7 camera, I wanted a 6×7 camera for roughly a year back then, since the hype of 6×7 overrules Youtube and film community on Facebook groups. I never like the design of a replicate 35mm camera for a 6×7 system from Pentax, to me it’s just ugly and unergonomic. But after doing research, I end up getting the Pentax 6×7, because (1) the Bronica GS-1 is not as good as the Pentax or Mamiya, (2) the Mamiya RB is super heavy (not all people find it too much to handle but I’m a small Asian girl, it’s of course too big and heavy for me), and (3) the Mamiya RZ is so out of my budget. So the Pentax seems like a best option. When I received the camera, it’s not as bad as I thought, I actually did like to hold it. Gradually I find the Pentax 6×7 is not ugly anymore but kinda cool, because it’s black and huge and the sound is freaking amazing[?]. I set it up with a right hand 3D printed grip for more ergonomic to handle and of course a strap as an insurance for an expensive camera.

Since it’s 6×7 negative, means that I get 10 shots from a 120 roll, I choose my subjects and compose more carefully. Still I got some ugly and illegitimate shots, but I think my first 4 rolls are not disappointed. Not just because I got myself some favorite shots but also because the experience of shooting a “professional format” with a “professional camera”. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t mean those professional things make me a better photographer, but it gives me the spirit of intention and fidelity in my photography work. To this point, I haven’t done any paid photography job so the purpose of purchasing a Pentax 6×7 medium format camera has nothing to do with my professional or career but simply a dedicated inquisitive nature. My enthusiasm for photography is naive, I don’t know if I can become a photographer or have people admire my work, I am doing this because I want to create something that matters to someone, anyone. I’m always in the struggle of defining the purpose of my life and if I matter to anything or anyone. The only thing I can do to keep me from beating up myself with this query is keeping creating work and hope for one day, my work will give me an answer.

First shots I made with the Pentax 6×7 is still lives in my living room, shot with Ilford XP2. The main purpose of this is just testing out the camera to see if it works properly. The object I chose was a pineapple, because I like tropical fruits and the shape and texture of the pineapple is interesting to me. After a few shots with the pineapple, I decided to put more things in the frame, and I chose 2 eggs, because (1) 2 eggs and a pineapple makes it 3 objects in the frame, odd number of subjects is more pleasing to look at in general, (2) a pointy big pineapple is contrast with the round shape, smooth texture and small size of the eggs and (3) colorful contrast neutral (but you don’t see this in black and white photos, silly me). I like the contrast in life because things contrast each other doesn’t mean they are right and wrong, or against each other, they’re just simply different. It teaches me that everything may has its own way and we don’t necessary justify everything in order to accept it, we can just be opened and accept things or people for how they are.

The next 2 rolls I shot when riding a bicycle around my neighborhood. It’s fun to ride a bicycle just wander around and go to streets that you never go before. It reminds me of the time when I was 11~12, back then I was trying to ride bicycle and my friend was helping me and keep me company every afternoon that I went out and ride for an hour or so. Gradually, I didn’t ride bicycle every afternoon for practice anymore but because of it’s a pleasure time for me to hang out with my friend and passing by streets and scenes that elicited my curiosity and a strange urge to know/understand the stories behind visual things.

The first 2 photos I took to check out the shallow depth of field of the 90mm lens. I’m not sure why I shot a lots of cars with my Pentax but can’t denied they look quite cool on 6×7. My favorite photos are the one of the golden orange car packed in front of the windows with afternoon sunlight creating a clean line of light and shadow on the wall. I like the scene and the atmosphere here a lot. However the contrast between highlight and shadow is very high, it makes the shadows are too dark for my taste. The red car below is interesting to me because 1 of the head lights is half way up, makes the car has a sense of imperfection and uniqueness – something I’m always draw to.

The baby blue car below is cute and classic to my eyes. I like the shot of the wheel from outside of the window the most. The red color from the steering wheel lock gives a attraction to the frame, also the subframe is quite nice.

Next are some shots that feel very special to me. I’m from Vietnam, and I spent couple years in Saigon for my university study. There’s a area in Saigon that I usually went to with my friend for after school hang outs, called Thanh Đa. The places I went to with my friend back then were typical old, tight, a bit messy and mundane. Aside from all those adjectives, I still cannot find a proper word to define how was Thanh Đa exactly from my mind, but it feels very Vietnamese. And when I came across this street near my apartment here, I knew for sure it’s a Vietnamese community. The old houses and the tightness feeling and the way people hanging their stuff out on the walls, that all represent an old Vietnamese’s life style that I’m so familiar with. I don’t think these scenes are beautiful in other people’s eyes but to me they feel like a sad old poetic memory.

Final is some shots taken with Portra 800 in a rare foggy morning in my town. The tree standing there alone in the field feels very photogenic. I know that converting the photos to black and white will look more pleasing for these type of minimal shots but I personally don’t like minimalism style and “minimal shots + black and white” is too cliché for me. However, with these shots I was receiving a lots of helpful advices from fellows on Discord so I’m grateful for it.

Thank you for stopping by, hope my biography didn’t bore you to death. As always, leave a comment if you want to. Cheers!

mammoth lakes road trip [part 2]

Here we are for the continue part of my Mammoth Lakes road trip.

After the first day of going to Gull lake (which is I took a roll there but no photo came out that I want to post here 🙂 ) and another frozen lake that I forgot the name, we came back to the lodge because we weren’t sure to be out when the sun went down. So after getting back to the lodge, I walked out to take some sunset (or blue hour, for more precise) photos at the Meadow and stopped frequently on my way to take some nice house scenes. Here’re the photos that I like the most from the trip.

The first one is photo of one street in the lodging area, I captured it because it gives the general feel and architecture of the area, along with the massy mountain behind. The second one I took because the nice red house is quite interesting and the cloud above has a very nice shape and color. It’s a bit hard to take everything into the frame but I quite happy with the result, the only thing I don’t like is the bright red pole in the foreground that overlaps the house.


The photo on the right is when I went back the the lodge and the sky was dark. I saw the light from the light bulbs from the house was quite interesting and the tree in the front also had a nice shape and texture so I set up the shot for a long expose photo. I like how it came out but still think the composition is a bit off. I think if I had stepped back a bit and moved to the right couple inches, the composition would be much better, because the roof of the house wouldn’t ended right at the frame lines. Another lesson for watching your composition carefully before taking the shot.

I like this very much. This is the first photo I took when I walked out for the sunset. The sun pretty much hided behind those mountain already but there’s still a bit orange glow at the horizon. I think the colors here work together very nice, the red is pop but not taking away the cold calm vibe in the photo. The reflection in the glass window also looks so dreamy and poetic. I also like the composition and the complex of the scene. To me, everything works together very well in this photo.

This photo of the “Private Property” sign I took on the way back to the lodge. It belongs to the Snowcreek Golf Course. I think the photo represents very well the calmness and coldness of a winter sunset in a meadow surrounded by mountains.


The photo above here is the first one I took on the Meadow. Took with Portra 800. The sun was behind a peak of mountain but the field still have plenty of light and the glow at the horizon was so beautiful. After took this shot, I managed to take the photo on the left, of a part of the house and the mountain behind it. I think the photo is not bad but still something is off about it. The reason I didn’t include the whole house because I wanted the photo to be suggestive, not just show the objects straight out. I also like the little fence[?] in the middle of the frame, it adds a very nice touch to the field. One thing I think I could do better for this photo is exposing for the house to get more details out of that, and hopefully don’t blow out the highlights. In general I still like it but it’s not good enough to be showed as my best work.


On the right side are photos I took when the sky is almost dark and there’s not much light on the grass field to expose. I took these in the much longer shutter speed than the previous photo above. You can see how much the difference is compared to the earlier photo taken 10-15 minutes apart. This merged photo describes the vast scene of the meadow in blue hour. I really enjoy this photo.


The photo below is another panorama merge from 2 photos. This is the scene at Rock Tub Hot Springs. The tub itself is quite small and funny in the middle of the vast land. When I got there, the sun was high up and the sunlight was extremely harsh. I took a couple photos but nothing come out as I like, so here just a photo for you to have an idea how the landscape looks like. All the daytime photos were taken with Fuji Pro400H.


Final photos from the trip are some I took on my last hike to the place I forgot the name again, but that’s a long hike that passes couple lakes on the way. We could just have enough time to hike to the first lake and then had to come back but it’s quite a nice hike with beautiful view. The light was softer and warmer as it’s afternoon and we really enjoyed the hike.

The photos above are of the Green Church near the hot springs. When I first saw it on the way to the hot springs, I was fascinated by it. A small green church in the middle of no where, who can resist that? So on the way back from the hot springs, I stopped by and took these photos. Of course with the harsh light condition, I could get the photos as good as I want. I really hope I can come back and take photos of this church in a better light. The last one is the composition that I like the most. I don’t really know why but I like the fact that a part of the building is included with the backdoor stairs and the white fence with the gate. You can also see the grass in the field behind and the mountain at the horizon. There’s many elements in this photo to look at.


As you can see, the 2 photos on the left were merge to make the panorama below. Just so you know the view of the frozen lake that I got to see after the hike. I wish I could come down closer to the lake to have more close up photos but we’re really low on time so this is all I could get. I don’t think the composition is that good but it’s nice to see the whole view. I like the yellow grass field by the lake and the color of the sky reflect on the frozen surface.

The last 2 photos are other composition that I took of the lake from a closer spot. I like the final one because the branches at top right foreground and the shadow at the bottom combines to give a direction to the eyes to look at the lake surface. I definitely blow out the highlight in this photo but I like that you can see the cliff behind the left side tree that you cannot see in previous photos.

That’s a wrap for this Mammoth Lakes trip. Thank you for making it all the way here. Hope you like the photos. Cheers!

mammoth lakes road trip [part 1]

It’s 2 months late after the trip to publish this post but I worked quite hard on the photos so I hope you enjoy it. I went to Mammoth Lakes in the middle of last November. The trip was nice and lovely, the weather was beautiful. This trip gave me some favorite shots that I’m quite happy with. In this trip, I tried something new with my photography: first, I practice merge 2 photos together to make a panorama scene; secondly, I used my new wide angle lens for the Bronica, the PE 50mm/2.8, for the first time. Having a wide angle lens gives you much more ability to shoot landscape or just more scenes in general, in the end, I shot all the photos here with the 50mm lens. Since I have a good amount of photos to share here so I make it 2 parts because I don’t want to overload my page or make you wait forever for the photos to load.

Since it’s 2 months already so I apologize for forgetting the names of some locations that I took photos of. When I went to Mammoth Lakes, the weather was very nice, not very cold, there’s thin layer of snow on the ground but I did not see any snowfall. The fall leaves were long gone and the snow was just appeared. The sky was very clear and bright in the morning and afternoon, at noon, the sky was so blue and the sunlight was very harsh, made it so hard to take photos at this time.

First off, let take a look at the area my friends and I stayed during our trip. It’s a lodging [compound?] called Snowcreek, it’s located by the Kerry’s Meadow and next to the Snowcreek Golf Course. These photos here I took with Bronica 645 system and Portra 800.

The first photo is the road at sunrise. This is a very high contrast scene where the peak of the mountain is lit up but the road and houses down here was very dark.

Next is some houses in the sunrise light. I took these with the promist filter 1/4 to have the glowing affect on the trees and windows.


Next, the photos of the sunrise view that I took from the edge of the Kerry’s Meadow looking at the Mammoth Mountain. My specific spot here is just off the road between the Golf Course and the Meadow, I didn’t walk into the Meadow although it could be great if I did. Here I combined 2 photos together to make a panorama of the scene. When I went to the Meadow for the sunrise, I noticed the blue van was silently parked there, they must went there to watch the sunrise just like me. Even though I didn’t know them and we never talked to each other but since we came there for the same reason, I feel a connection to them, like ‘we were a same place at a same time waiting for the same thing’ vibe. Besides, the van is a nice addition to the photo in term of showing the scale of the scene. At this moment, the sun haven’t come out yet, as you can see the scene is flat and dim.

This one here is the view from the edge of the Golf Course looking at the peak of the Mammoth Mountain when the sun rises up.


Another panorama photo. I think I watch a lots of Nick Carver’s videos to make my photos into panorama ratio. But I don’t think my composition is that good, the first reason is I didn’t actually see the composition as panorama when I compose the shots, just the estimate and imagine from myself, so when I merged the photos together, the composition is always off. But it’s nice to make these photos and see the scene as wide as I can.


The following photos are some scene on the hike on the first day. Taking photos in the snow scenes was definitely hard because the snow is so bright and if you don’t know how to expose the shadow, your shadow will be pit black, just like my right side photo here. These were taken with Portra 160 expired.

Finally, these are photos of a lake that I forgot the name. I took these in harsh sunlight so the shadow was crushed to black. The film I used here was Fuji Pro 400H. I did heavily edit these photos because the “straight out of the scanner” were so terrible to look at [or just me being terrible at scanning]. The first two are not that great but still give you the nice view of the frozen lake. The last one is my favorite, I like the color palette and the way I can capture my shadow, just something about it makes me keep looking at it.


This is end of part 1. Thank you for making it here. Let’s check out the part 2! Cheers!

san francisco street photos

You may think that I just shoot landscape and houses because that’s all I’ve posted so far on this blog. Yes, I’m drawn into scenes that doesn’t have human present but definitely have human’s mark on it. Maybe because I like the hinted details or the metaphor of human’s present and their impact or just because I’m a big introvert. However, I had chances to take street photos and it’s quite excited I guess. I don’t think street photography is easy, it requires time and lots of exposures, skills and hard work. I know tons of street photographers go out walking for hours every single day to do their job. Fully respect from me for street photographers out there. Street photography is not like landscape or anything I do, you don’t have the time to meter, get your composition right, look for best angle, focus and then re-compose, everything happens in a split second and you have to react in a blink of an eye. However, it’s not all street photos are about capturing those candid moments like that, sometimes you can shoot slower depend on your themes. And I’m the slower shooter type.

I had a day in San Francisco in January this year and I luckily got some street shots that I feel good to share here. They’re quite different from what you usually see from my suburbs or landscape scenes. All were shot with Yashica T4 and Fuji C200. Hope you enjoy!

my favorite from the series

beach town observation

I went to the beach town by Victoria beach few week ago in sunset hour to take some sunset on the beach shots but got caught up in these residential houses scenes. I love the calmness and quiet atmosphere here, along with some nice little houses and windows that feels so warm and homely.

Before get into the photos from that afternoon, let me show you 2 photos I took in another morning walk in the same area. These shots are not anything special but I was testing my Mamiya 645 150mm lens before I sell it. Even though the composition is not that great but I love the tones here and the sharpness is really nice.


The next 2 shots I took one in golden hour and one in blue hour. That wasn’t the plan but somehow I feel drawn into the windows and the way it’s slide open just a bit to show a present of a person inside the room is quite nice and elegant. When I got back to the car after take photos on the beach, I came across it in blue hour and the yellow light came out of it is just nicely contrast with the blue sky outside. I think this is a short and straight forward form of “story telling”, something I desire to do in this blog. Wish that I were having the same composition so that the similarity and contrast are highlighted but it’s good to learn that same composition sometimes can help in story telling. I know that the trash cans are distractive but sometimes I just think if it’s there and I was capturing the scene, is it bad to exclude something out just because it’s not aesthetically pleasing? Or I should document the scene as its good and bad? So, I show you the non-crop and cropped version of the photo. Let me know if you hate the trash cans so bad 🙂


This one is a photo that I really like but I still feel something doesn’t work out in this. The whole house feel very mysterious and old, all the windows and doors were covered with white thick curtain like the owner doesn’t want anyone to look inside. The house blends into the blue hour sky and those bush in general feel weirdly but sad at the same time.

Bronica ETRSi. 75mm/2.8. Fuji Pro 400H

Bronica ETRSi. 75mm/2.8. Fuji Pro 400H

This photo is my favorite in the day. It’s the first scene captured my eyes in the town. I like the way the branches twist and the straight up street light glowing just in front of the tree. The scene was much more dynamic as in the photo but I think my photo is kind of 7/10 get to that atmosphere. The sky is subtle and soft while the green is quite saturated and pop.


After not successfully capturing the vibe of the house, I went back another day to try again. And these shots turn out okay I guess. The photo with the Harley sign makes me go down into the rabbit hole again about include and exclude things as it is or get the thing you want and ignore the rest. The others are nice in term of tones and composition.

So now you know how the whole house looks. This time I went in the morning so there’s no warm light as in previous photo but the photos are nice nevertheless.

And here’re some other shots I got from the day.

Pentax 645. 75mm/2.8. Fuji Pro 400H

Hope you enjoy the photo talk. Till next time!

[Vietnamese] Sequoia road trip

Mình và 1 số người bạn vừa có chuyến road trip ngắn đi Sequoia National Park cách đây 3 tuần. Khởi hành từ 8h tối thứ 6, đến 1h30 khuya sáng thứ 7 mình đến nơi. Mình dành cả ngày thứ 7 và nửa ngày Chủ Nhật để hiking và lên xe lái về OC lúc 6h chiều Chủ Nhật. Lý do đến bây giờ mình mới đặng bài blog này là vì mình cảm thấy chuyến đi này mình không chụp được nhiều ảnh đẹp như mong muốn. Nhìn chung hình không phải là tệ (hoặc tệ thật?!) nhưng mình không tìm được ảnh nào thật sự ưng ý và đẹp như chuyến đi Lake Tahoe lần trước. Đó là lý do khiến mình không tự tin để post ảnh nhưng sau đó mình nghĩ có thể ảnh không xuất sắc nhưng mình có thể chia sẻ kinh nghiệm và những sai sót của mình cho các bạn qua những bức ảnh này. Mong các bạn thấy bài blog này hữu ích và truyền cảm hứng.

Về camera và film thì mình mang máy Bronica ETRSi và 75mm/2.8 lens, đây cũng là lens duy nhất mình có cho máy, mình đã muốn có lens 50mm từ chuyến Lake Tahoe lần trước nhưng vẫn chưa mua vì thật sự vẫn còn cân nhắc về số tiền. Mình cũng mang theo 35mm camera là Nikon F2 cùng vài cuộn Kodak ProImage 100 (sau vài lần thử thì mình không thích màu của ProImage nhưng mua vẫn còn dư nên phải dùng cho hết), Portra 160 và 1 cuộn Portra 800 (vì Portra 800 đắt xắt ra miếng thật!). Film 120 mình dủng Fuji Pro 400H và Ilford XP2 trắng đen. Mình chưa bao giờ chụp trắng đen nhưng gần đây có bạn bảo mình nên thử chụp trắng đen để focus vô mảng khối và contrast trong khung hình, và bản thân mình nghĩ mình cũng nên chú ý hơn đến bố cục khi chụp nên mình đã mua 5 cuộn XP2, đây là film trắng đen nhưng dùng C-41 để develop như film màu, giúp mình tiết kiệm và đỡ nhức đầu research về hóa chất cho film trắng đen 🙂 Ảnh trắng đen của mình không đẹp như mình mong nhưng mình xin chia sẻ ở đây để ghi lại quá trình chụp của mình.



Một điều các bạn nên biết về chuyến đi này là mình đi trong lúc cháy rừng đang diễn ra trên diện rộng ở California. Tuy không quá gần khu vực mình ở và hiking nhưng khói từ đám cháy theo gió đã phủ lên bầu trời 1 lớp bụi than mỏng làm bầu trời ngả màu vàng nâu trông khá u ám. Đây không phải là điều kiện lý tưởng để chụp hình nhưng mình vẫn cảm thấy thích chuyến đi lần này.


Tấm hình đầu tiên mình chụp khi đang dừng xe trên đường để ăn trưa trên xe. Đây vẫn còn là khu vực rìa của Sequoia National Park nhưng cây cối đã phủ xanh um tùm, một điều mình rất thích. Mình đang ngắm để chụp thì nghe tiếng xe moto từ xa vọng lại, thế là mình đã đợi chiếc moto chạy vào khung hình rồi bấm máy. Dĩ nhiên là mình đã canh bố cục và lấy nét sẵn để khi xe chạy tới đúng khoảng lấy nét thì mình sẽ bấm máy. Mình để khẩu độ 11 nên dĩ nhiên là phần lớn khung hình sẽ in focus. Một điều đáng tiếc trong bức ảnh này là mình đã bấm máy hơi sớm, khi moto còn đang khá xa mình cho nên chiếc moto và người lái bị nhỏ và chìm vào background. Nếu moto chạy tới mình gần hơn thì bức ảnh sẽ tốt hơn nhiều. Tấm hình tiếp theo mình chụp windshield xe của bạn mình, như 1 tấm ảnh ký sự về chiếc xe và đi chơi thời Covid, với thú bông và khẩu trang giấy 🙂 Tiếp đến là 1 thân cây bị cháy đen ở bên trong. Tuy tấm ảnh không xuất sắc nhưng đây là lần đầu tiên mình thấy 1 thân cây cháy đen bên trong nhưng vẫn còn sống và bên ngoài vỏ cây màu cam rực rỡ nhìn rất thú vị. 2 ảnh kế đến chỉ là cảnh landscape bình thường nhưng cũng đủ để thấy bầu trời trông như thế nào những ngày mình ở Sequoia.

Ảnh tiếp theo [6] mình đã chú thích ý đồ trên hình. Rất tiếc mình đã không thể hiện được điều mình muốn trên ảnh. Còn lại là các ảnh [7,8,9,10] mình chụp trong ngày thứ 7. Mình thích ảnh [10] vì đó là chủ đề ưa thích của mình, những ngôi nhà nhỏ trong town nho nhỏ với nét retro và tĩnh lặng. Nếu được chụp lại mình sẽ nâng máy cao hơn để lấy phần cột đèn nhiều hơn, dĩ nhiên tâm điểm bức ảnh không phải là cột đèn nhưng ảnh lại cắt ngay lúc dây diện rẻ ngang ra làm mình có cảm giác mình cắt vật thể ngay mép, rất khó chịu khi nhìn. Mình đã được học về trang trí và bố cục rằng hoặc là mình lấy trọn vật thể hoặc cắt ngay lúc vật thể không có biến chuyển gì thú vị, tuyệt đối không cắt vật thể ngay mép (như mình đang làm) hoặc ngay góc. Nhưng nhìn chung mình vẫn rất thích ảnh này vì cảm giác nó mang lại. Ảnh [11] cũng là 1 ảnh mình thấy khá thú vị, mình thích màu xanh trong hình mang 1 cảm giác lành lạnh và mơ hồ rất đặc biệt.

11

Mình vừa mua pro mist filter 1/4 để chụp thử vì mình thấy công dụng của nó khá hay. Pro mist filter dùng để giảm highlight xuống và đồng thời làm highlight glow 1 chút, như có thể thấy ở 2 tấm hình bên phải. Đây là trưa Chủ Nhật khi mình và các bạn dừng lại trước 1 nhà hàng trong ski resort để ăn trưa. Dĩ nhiên ski resort khá vắng vẻ mùa này, như trong hình là 1 sự trống trải và âm u trong phòng ăn không 1 bóng người.


Ảnh bồn gas này mình chụp theo 1 bức ảnh của photographer Scott Enlow đăng bên dưới. Mình đặc biệt thích tấm ảnh này của Enlow vì nó chứa đựng tất cả những gì mình muốn nhìn thấy trong 1 bức ảnh, tiền cảnh, trung cảnh, hậu cảnh, cỏ xanh, ánh mặt trời trong và vàng ấm, bầu trời hơi u ám nhưng toàn bộ hình lại không có cảm giác u ám nặng nề. Mình thích sự cũ kỹ và hơi hoang tàn nhưng cũng rất “neat” và tươi mát mà bức ảnh mang lại. Mình đặc biệt thích cây cột gỗ ở tiền cảnh, mình cảm thấy cây cột gỗ làm tấm ảnh rất sống động và thú vị. Các bạn nên xem thêm ảnh của Scott Enlow qua Instagram như trong hình bên dưới. Mình rất thích Scott Enlow vì ảnh của nhiếp ảnh gia này rất retro và dreamy.

Quay trở lại với ảnh của mình, mình nghĩ ảnh bên phải tốt hơn ảnh trái bởi vì ảnh trái có chiếc lều nhỏ khá kỳ cục trên bồn gas làm mình không thể nào chọn được 1 bố cục đẹp cho ảnh. Hình thứ 2 khá hơn vì bồn gas màu trắng, dễ tách biệt giữa chủ thể và background hơn. Thật ra cũng không phải là tấm ảnh mình ưng ý 100% nhưng mình cũng thấy nó khá thú vị. Nhất định lần sau gặp 1 bồn gas mình sẽ thử lại.


Tấm ảnh mấy tấm ván bị bỏ lại trên hồ nhìn khá buồn và cũ. Không hiểu sao 2 tấm này màu scan ra nhìn hơi ám tím và trầm dù mình chỉ dùng Fuji 400H, có thể là do cảnh quá tương phản giữa highlight và shadow nên khi scan máy cố tone down highlight để giữ lại chi tiết ở highlight (thật ra mình không rõ lắm, cũng có thể do mình chưa biết cách chụp, scan trong điều kiện tương phản mạnh). Nhưng mình nghĩ nó khá hợp với nội dung của ảnh, về đồ vật bị con người bỏ lại vội vã nằm chơi vơi bên bờ hồ giữa đám cỏ mọc lố nhố không ai chăm sóc. Tấm thứ 2 có bố cục đẹp và nhiều lớp (tiền cảnh, trung cảnh, hậu cảnh) hơn ảnh thứ 1. Nhưng mình nghĩ 2 ảnh đi chung sẽ mang nội dung mạnh và thuyết phục hơn.

Ảnh [18] mình chụp vì ánh nắng rọi xuống chóp của những cành thông khô nhìn rất bắt mắt, Đây cũng là 1 cảnh tương phản mạnh về độ sáng cũng như màu sắc, màu vàng cam của chóp thông khô và màu xanh thẫm của cành thông dưới bóng râm làm cảnh nhìn rất thu hút. Rất tiếc lên hình mình không thể hiện được vẻ đẹp đó. Ảnh [19] mình rất thích, vì đó là chủ đề ưa thích của mình, những cảnh bình thường hàng ngày của cuộc sống nơi xa cách chốn thành thị hiện đại tấp nập. Ảnh này chụp ở khẩu 5.6 nên không có nhiều vùng in focus, là 1 điều mình rất tiếc, nhưng cảnh khá thiếu sáng nên đây là những gì tốt nhất mình có thể làm.

21

Cuối cùng là những hình chụp casual trên đường hoặc lúc đi hiking. Thật ra mình có thể chụp nhiều hơn trong lúc hike nhưng mình không thể cảm nhận được vẻ đẹp của đá nên mình không chụp nhiều dù trong lúc hiking có đi quang qua 1 đoạn đường toàn đá xanh, chỉ có 1 khe nhỏ đủ để 1 người chui qua, cảnh nhìn rất Thập Diện Mai Phục vibe vì thật ra bạn không thể thấy gì xung quanh mình ngoại trừ đá, và mình luôn có cảm giác ai đó có thể nấp đằng sau 1 tảng đá và nhảy ra mai phục mình[?!] lol. Nhìn chung, mình nghĩ nó khá thú vị nhưng không nghĩ nó photographic cho mình.

Cuối cùng là 2 hình cuối của 1 thác nước nhưng đã cạn nước vì đây là mùa khô. Lần sau mình nên kiểm tra thác nước trước khi mang theo tripod đi hiking 🙂 Không có nước cảnh chỉ toàn đá khô khốc nhưng mình cũng thấy vui vì chuyến đi này.


Sau đây là ảnh từ cuộn film trắng đen duy nhất mình chụp trong chuyến đi này.

Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi đến đây. Mình biết bài viết khá dài nhưng mong hữu ích cho các bạn. Chúc các bạn chụp ảnh nhiều hơn và hài lòng về ảnh của mình. Cheers!