It was the first summer of COVID. The beaches were opening (officially). We saw everything through the lens of the virus.
If a virus could see, it wouldn’t see well. Its vision would be fuzzy, impersonal.
I’d used a pinhole lens for many years, and I’d recently learned pushing my camera to its limits rendered something old-timey, pointillist.
The closer you got, the less you could see. We all knew the feeling.
The pictures really came alive when I graded them. They looked 160 years old, but the process was distinctly, inherently digital. It reflected the timelessness in the air.
Something ancient and inextricably modern.
Time Frame
August/September 2020
Camera
Canon 5D Mark IV
Lens
Thingify 50mm f/512
Techniques
High-ISO, Long-Exposure, Pinhole
Location
Salisbury Beach, MA
Software
Lightroom
Skills
- Attention to Detail
- Color Grading
- Culling
- Strategy
- Retouching