Falls at Old Stone Fort

Jon Buffington

Well-Known Member
Last year in early fall, I hosted some members of the Lawrenceburg Photographic Society for an all day waterfall shoot. We were hoping for some early fall colors and good light. Did get some early color but the light was less than ideal. However, fun was had by all. They had not shot over in the highland rim region of TN so I was glad to show them around for some of our area waterfalls.

We started the morning off at Short Springs State Natural Area and would progress to Old Stone State Park for an afternoon session after a great lunch was had eating wood fired, brick oven pizza. As I have extensively shot in these areas, this was a fun trip for me and I elected to shoot film and leave the digital gear at home. I knew with the sun light, negative color film would be best. It just tames highlights so much better than digital sensors and makes harsh day light look, well, much less harsh. So some ektar and portra 160 films were brought along with my canon 7ne, 17-40L and 24-105L.

It was nearing the end of the day, the sun was setting and we were wading down stream shooting the cascading falls. Towards the end of the shoot, we ended at the location below. The sun was setting and illuminating the falls. The light was harsh but the portra 160 behaved admirably. I would have had a bearish time shooting my 5dmkii, bracketing and what not. I just metered for the shadows and let fire a frame. A CPL was used which created some slight ghosting but nothing absurd. I processed this at home and scanned on my Kodak Pakon 135+. Minimal adjustments made in LR5 with just a slight gradient mask, a little color correction, levels control and some mild sharpening. Fun was had by all and I was able to walk away with this keeper. Enjoy!

 

Ben Egbert

Forum Helper
Staff member
Welcome to the forum Jon, who I have met on other forums, glad you joined us. Great post here and beru nice scene. well shot and processed.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Interesting call on using film here - this would have been an impossible shot with a digital camera without multiple exposures for blending. I love the scattered leaves around the scene.
 

JimFox

Moderator
Staff member
Hey Jon,

Welcome to FocalWorld. What a great first post, it’s awesome to have someone of your talent joining us here!

I enjoyed reading about your days shoot, though you got my mouth watering for Pizza before I ever got to even seeing your photo!

This is a truly incredible shot, I do like how the film handled the highlights, it’s been so long since I have shot film, I have totally forgotten about how it can handle highlights. A very informative read, especially I think for our film guys.
 

Darcy Grizzle

Well-Known Member
All I can say is beautiful! Oh...and as long as fun was had by all, when I go on shoots, I don't even care if I get a good one (sorta). But really it is the experience I cherish. Again beautiful shot!
 

Jon Buffington

Well-Known Member
Ben, thank you for warm welcome and kind words.
Alan, yes, this would not work at all with digital. Portra 160 (what was used here) has a shoulder that just goes on forever.
Jim, thank you for the gracious welcome and kind words. The pizza was good!
Darcy, thank you and yes, the experience is most important. Formed and solidified some lasting relationships with some great photographers this day.
 

lionking

Well-Known Member
Love your capture Jon, its interesting how chemicals, beautifully deal with highlights, so once we had few alchemist, who made the decisions for the photographers, regarding the color render and light perceptions, these days everyone has the power to manipulate this, under their fingertips almost instantly...
:)

Cheers!
 

Martín el Escocés

Well-Known Member
Beautiful image, Jon. I love the golden glow caught by the water and the way you have tamed the highlights. Plenty of nice Autumn colour here too.
 
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