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Everyone knows that statistics will not be all the time dependable however many sources recommend that 57,000 images are taken worldwide each second and 93 per cent of them are taken on a smartphone, writes Andy Kirby, secretary of East Sutherland Digicam Membership.
It’s also a well known saying in pictures circles that one of the best digicam is the one you’ve gotten with you and most of us all the time have one with us – the smartphone. East Sutherland Digicam Membership got down to show this proper of their latest competitors.
Any subject material was allowed so long as it was taken with a smartphone. Submit processing was additionally allowed as it is a widespread function of smartphones which have each built-in apps and a few very subtle ones that may be downloaded from an app retailer.
The competitors additionally aimed to stimulate dialogue concerning the options now accessible on smartphones and the way finest to make use of them. With greater than 50 photographs submitted, members amply demonstrated their smartphone abilities.
Within the color class, new member Christine Brodie from Golspie took first prize with Stunning Colors of Luskentyre. A really effectively composed vast display picture which captured the delicate colors of a Harris seascape.
Jan Cost, Culrain, got here second with one other panorama, Mountain Excessive, a fantastically peaceable shot of Loch Torridon, and third was Tessa Palmer, Dornoch, with 2nd Inexperienced, a graphic picture which had simplicity at its coronary heart. The one color was the yellow flag which stood out from the threatening sky.
Duncan Meechan, Milton, got here fourth with New York College Bus – a really hanging picture the place the bus crammed many of the body however the avenue added perspective away into the gap. It additionally demonstrated the power of smartphones to work effectively within the metropolis at night time. It will have been fairly tough to seize the identical ambiance with a standard digicam.
Within the monochrome class, first prize went to Andy Kirby, Dornoch, together with his Creature of the Sky – a momentary seize of fantastically lit storm clouds over the Dornoch Firth. A second that would not have been deliberate or repeated and required a few fast pictures earlier than quickly heading house to keep away from getting moist.
Jan Cost once more took second place with Pathfinder which informed a winter story of farming and the widespread sense strategy of sheep. Like all good monochrome photographs, it had a superb tonal vary from black to white with particulars within the snow that may so simply be misplaced.
Third place went to Jen Holdsworth from Tain, who selected a sq. crop for her smooth sepia toned portrait, Shoulder to Cry On. The entire picture had mild and applicable lighting.
Emma Deeth from Tain got here fourth within the monochrome class together with her detailed shot of a mushroom. This picture confirmed how low angles from closed to the bottom might be simply achieved by turning the cellphone the wrong way up. She had additionally chosen a sq. crop which additionally labored effectively.
East Sutherland Digicam Membership meets in Dornoch on the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month and likewise runs fundamental digicam ability coaching by way of Zoom on different Tuesdays. All are welcome.
Extra particulars concerning the membership could be discovered at www.eastsutherlandcc.org.uk and www.fb.com/EastSutherlandCameraClub the place you can too view the successful photographs from the competitors.