Tag: Lake Michigan

My 711th Moonrise!


On Monday September 12, 2011 I watched my 711th moonrise. OK, I haven’t seen all of them but based on a moonrise every 28 days this is my 711th moonrise. I was down at Lighthouse Beach in Evanston, Illinois, my favorite beach which you know if you’ve been reading this blog. Unfortunately, on this night the clouds were coming in once again which blocked the moonrise until it was high in the sky.

 

First shot

Luckily I had come down the night before, which is always the best night to shoot the full moon because it rises about 25 minutes before sunset giving you have enough ambient light to work with to illuminate the scene. As many of you know I have been shooting this scene for a long time. I have been waiting to get the angle of an old pier to line up with the moonrise in just the right way. In the past the moon has either been too far south or too far north and not directly where I wanted it. Then you have the weather which must be just right as well, so for months, maybe even years, I have been trying to get this shot. So on Sunday night I headed down to the lake front to see if this would indeed be the night. The sky was clear so my hopes were high. As luck would have it I was set up and ready to go well before the appointed time of moonrise, and yet I couldn’t find the moon on the horizon. There was still too much moisture along the horizon so the moon wasn’t visible until it was about 10 above the horizon. So my plan to use a long lens to pull the moon in tight against the pier once again has to wait.

Yet it was still a great night to be there as the sunset was a mixture of blues, reds and purples. With the polarizing filter on the colors were enhanced enough to match what it looked like to the eye. I also used my graduated neutral density filter once the darkness fell to balance the brightness of the moon with the rest of the scene. I found this time I didn’t like the results as it took the colors away from the sky around the moon. The darker it got the more the moonshine on the water came out in the shot. But at that point you tend to lose the detail in the moon. And as the exposures get longer than about ½ second you start to see movement in the moon with longer lenses. In the age of film you couldn’t work as long into the darkness as you can these days and still have usable images. With today’s digital cameras and post processing in Lightroom or Photoshop you can adjust RAW files in to get detail our of shadow areas of underexposed files which means you can expose for the highlights and bring back the shadow areas in post. Knowing this I kept making images well into the darkness, an hour past sunset. The two last images are my favorites from the evening.

Almost the last shot...

There are many moonrises in your life and each one is unique because of where you are when you see them. Each is to be savored. Enjoy them.

Peace,

Richard

PS: To see more images from this shoot follow this link: Moonrise at Lighthouse Beach


Lighthouse Beach Poster now available!

If it is summer in Evanston it means hitting the beach! And to commemorate this you can now get my new poster of 15 images from Lighthouse Beach. These images were done over a number of years as part of the Great Lakes Project and show’s the moods of all four seasons.

As part of this project I have spent a lot of time at Lighthouse Beach for many reasons. One, I live about a mile away and have been going to this beach since I was a kid. So for me there is a lot of emotional connection to this beach. It is where I have played as a kid, played with my kids and spent many hours alone looking out over the water. And for the last 30+ years have seen it through a photographer’s eye. The old pier, just to the north of the beach has provided many opportunities for images. Sometimes I am there at dusk alone, other times I might join another photographer or two shooting there as well. It has become a popular spot.

If you’ve been following this blog you know I have been trying to get a shot of the full moonrise with the pier in the frame. To date it has eluded me. Someday I shall prevail, I hope, and get the shot – which is so perfect in my head. Stay tuned.

In the meantime if you are a fan of the beaches around Chicago, and especially in Evanston or even Lighthouse Beach then you need this poster! Purchase it online at http://www.quietlightpublishing.com/ for only $45.00! The poster is 24”x36” and is printed on archival paper – the same as my fine art prints.

Enjoy!
Richard Mack


The "Super" Full Moon

почистване

Last night we all enjoyed the “super” full moon – ok a lot of us did- as the moon came close to the earth as it passed its perigee in its orbit making it appear about 18% larger than normal. Now here by Lake Michigan I went down to Lighthouse Beach to shoot the full moon over an old pier that is at the north end of the beach. Much to my surprise, and disappointment, I was not the only photographer there and sadly not the first even though I was a good 40 minutes before moonrise. If you have followed along on the blog and the Great Lakes Project you know this is one of my favorite places to shoot, partly because it is less than a mile from my home and partly because it is a great place to make images.

I took my time getting there and thought it was not going to be a great night because it seemed very cloudy and the chances of seeing the moonrise seemed slim to none. Some friends were also there and we talked as I made a couple of snaps of the old pier. Then as it got closed to moonrise time it just seemed really impossible. I packed up the equipment and we started to walk off the beach. I mentioned to my friends Donna & John that this went against every rule I go by – leaving before the event because you don’t think it is going to happen. As we started up the hill I stopped and said to them, hang on I’m going to wait a few more minutes. And sure enough just then I heard someone say, “Look at the glow!” I quickly made my way to a plot of sand which had an unobstructed view and started to shoot.

It did seem bigger, and more golden in color. Because it was about 40 minutes after sunset it was truly dark out by this time and trying to get a good image was almost impossible. The full moon should really be shot the day before it is officially the full moon. Then it rises about 20 minutes before sunset so you have enough daylight left to illuminate the setting without over exposing the moon. But last night was even cloudier.

As the night took over and the clouds moved back in I also thought, hey, there’s always a full moon next month. In the average lifetime we see about 1000 moons. So here’s to next month…and being the only photographer at the old pier!

Happy Spring!

Richard 


And now for sunrise on Lake Michigan…

Here is an update to last night’s post of the sunset, with images from this morning’s sunrise! I wasn’t planning on going out this morning but found myself wide awake about 5:15 so I decided that since it had been so clear last night that it might make fro a great sunrise. I was disappointed when I saw clouds overhead at the beach. I kept hoping the sun would pop through but it never did. Still all in all I found some interesting shots and the ice had actually opened up a bit it seems even though the temperature outside was only 2 degrees. 

Interestingly I did a custom color balance off the snow which in my opinion was way too warm (for those tech nuts it gave me 13450K!) In Lightroom I brought it down to around 9000K which may still be too warm, but is what I remember it looking like in real life. The first images from before sunrise where shot at 6500K and I left them at that color temp. This was my guess for color temperature before I made a custom image of the snow for white balance. Of course if you are not looking at a color calibrated monitor it might not matter.

Here is a link to my selections from the shoot: Sunrise

And Last nights image selection again: Sunset

Enjoy!

Richard