...working practices for Fuji's PR - they aren't a company that likes to keep its customers well/accurately informed. The bottom line is that this could be the start of the end for Fuji Velvia. The large format version of the film, used by so many iconic landscape photographers including our own Joe Cornish, still outresolves any commercial digital sensor and...
...me about this shot is the contrast between the lichen and the hard concrete. I think the farmers used to run pipes and hoses down in to these valleys, as you can even see in the first shot, but these have become unused and part of the landscape now. This trough is my equivalent of the Joe Cornish boulder because...
Michéla is a contributor to On Landscape (click to see her other articles), interviewing many featured photographers for the publication and she has just launched an exhibition at the Joe Cornish Gallery in Northallerton. Tim caught up with Michéla to talk to her about the exhibition and the project behind it. TP: You have an exhibition starting today (6th June)...
...because, typically, photographs are not one off prints. And people do often come back to you later - as I have seen countless times over the last couple of years, with my work on display in the Joe Cornish gallery. So I’m hopeful in that respect and, in any case, very much see this as the start of things. North...
...came across in all his images. Although this was not the type of photography I wanted to pursue, his work showed how photography could play a very important role and he was certainly an inspiration for me. As I started to change to taking more colour images, especially in the landscape, I looked to the work of Joe Cornish for...
...at the helm, the original four photographers, Jonathan Horrocks and Damien Demolder. Subsequent biennial exhibitions have displayed the work of Chris Friel, Steve Watkins, Antony Spencer, David Baker, with David Noton and Joe Cornish taking the lead exhibitor roles. Master of Vision 2015 Masters of Vision 2015 will be the fourth exhibition and we’ve witnessed an exponential rise in popularity...
...A lot of people say that the resulting system isn't particularly 'stable' and you have problems with parallelism etc. but Joe Cornish has used one successfully with both his Ebony 45SU and Ebony SW45 so it's certainly possible and the stitching possibilities make it very interesting. If you want a real budget way to get started in my personal opinion...
...is for b&w images, however, I do love good colour ones and some of my favourites are by Jim Brandenburg, Sam Abell and my friend Joe Cornish. There are others of course, just as I love many b&w photographs from many photographers. Consistency is something I enjoy with photographers rather than the one shot wonder which usually is attached to...
...you forward, directly or indirectly, as you developed? The first true landscape photographs that I took notice of were taken by Joe Cornish, of locations in Northumberland and Scotland. I related to these images because they showed a particular realistic style that I identified with. I discovered the photography of Joseph Hoflehner about a year ago – he is from...
...lens/camera combinations somehow - for the future possibly. We also tried the CamRanger on Joe Cornish’s D800 and although all of the functions worked as well as the 5D3 the resolution of the live view wasn’t as good by a long stretch but without confirming this you’ll have to wait until out until our follow up. At the moment the...