on landscape The online magazine for landscape photographers
Issue 316
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End Frame: Autumn Delta by Magnus Lindbom
Brian Pollock chooses one of his favourite images
Perpetual Motion: The Changing Faces of the Sea
Interview with Madeleine Lenagh
Any Questions, with special guest Theo Bosboom
Episode Eleven
Boring Postcards
Or how boring must an image be before it becomes interesting
On Labels and Limitations
The Importance of Creative Freedom
Learning to See Again
Through the Practice of Nature Photography

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Viewpoint Editor’s Letter editor@onlandscape.co.uk
Tim Parkin

You might have seen mention in our recent podcast that Joe Cornish had an accident on Cul Mor recently. While descending after co-leading a workshop with Alex Nail, an eddy gust knocked him over, and he tumbled 10m down the hill. Mountain rescue was called, and a search and rescue helicopter airlifted him to the hospital in Inverness. Cracked cervical vertebrae meant a brace and rest for a few days, but he was out with a camera shortly after.

Since then, Alex and Joe announced a print sale fundraiser for Assynt MRT, which we were going to mention here, but it sold out within a few hours, raising over £20,000, one of the team’s biggest donations.

It’s reiterated to me how amazing our Mountain Rescue Teams in the UK are. Like lifeboat staff, they’re wholly voluntary, but unlike many lifeboat stations, some teams receive very little funding. The Assynt team covers one of the biggest areas, four times the size of the Skye, but it only has 36 members.

And it’s not just mountaineers, Munroists or climbers that need rescuing; casual walkers or photographers often get lower limb injuries and can’t walk back on rough terrain and need help, and MRTs get called for any ‘rough terrain’ medical recoveries.

We’re going to write a little article on the role that Mountain Rescue or Search and Rescue plays as a safety net for when photographers are spending time in the landscape, so we’d love to know about anyone who has had to call them as part of their landscape photography adventures.

Joe is back hosting our podcast next week, where we’ll be talking with Matt Payne, so if you have any questions that you’d like us to ask Matt - please send them to submissions@onlandscape.co.uk.

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Tim Parkin

Content Issue Three Hundred and Sixteen
On Landscape Issue80
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Issue 316

Click here to download issue 316 (high quality, 58Mb) Click here to download issue 316 (smaller download, 33Mb) more

Magnus Lindbom Autumn Delta
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End Frame: Autumn Delta by Magnus Lindbom

The photograph I have chosen as the subject of this article, “Autumn Delta” by Magnus Lindbom, speaks to us as much of its creator as the ephemeral beauty of the landscape he has captured. more

Spindrift
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Perpetual Motion: The Changing Faces of the Sea

The book developed pretty organically, taking its shape from the collection of images I was building. It gained focus once I’d decided to limit the scope to the Dutch coast and the theme of changing moods. more

Any Questions Square
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Any Questions, with special guest Theo Bosboom

This Eleventh episode features Theo Bosboom, and we had questions about pre-visualisation, trends in landscape photography, book making and editing and what makes a 'stand out' image. more

Sarine Bp7
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Boring Postcards

I already had an idea for an article on boring postcards in mind when I was writing the last article on The Collecting of Images, having a vague memory of having seen books of boring postcards for sale. more

Turk's Cap Lily, 2024
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On Labels and Limitations

For the longest time, I have forced upon myself a label, a classification, specifically revolving around the type of art I create. Even calling what I make “art” places a name upon my creations and differentiates my work from photography, writing, etc. more

Tree Branches In Frost
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Learning to See Again

It has immense potential as a modality for delivering healing to the human soul and bringing humanity back into harmony with the natural world, which, in turn, brings us back into harmony with our deeper self, and each other as a result. more

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