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Snowy Coniston Water
Posted: Tue Jan 11, 2022 9:29 am
by WorldInFocus
Hi Everyone,
A few pictures I took of Lake Coniston back on Boxing Day (26th Dec 2021) from the Monk Coniston Car Park and Bank Ground Farm.
20211226_005 by
Ian Cramman, on Flickr
20211226_014 by
Ian Cramman, on Flickr
[url=https://flic.kr/p/2mWCodi]
20211226_016 by
Ian Cramman, on Flickr
20211226_019 by
Ian Cramman, on Flickr
Hope you like the pictures.
Cheers,
Ian Cramman
Re: Snowy Lake Coniston
Posted: Tue Jan 11, 2022 11:32 am
by James Cutting
Lovely shots

Coniston's beautiful and always lovely to visit when in the Lakes.
Thanks for sharing

Re: Snowy Lake Coniston
Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 3:00 pm
by iainpeden
Very atmospheric.
Being pedantic I think it’s actually Coniston Water and I can’t think of a body of water in the Lake District with “lake “ in the name; all waters, meres and tarns.(another bit of useless info for the pub quiz)
Edit - maybe just one, Bassenthwaite Lake (bing maps)
Re: Snowy Lake Coniston
Posted: Fri Jan 14, 2022 3:29 pm
by daggerfan
Yes, likewise being pedantic, I was always led to believe that Bassenthwaite was the only proper lake in the Lake District.
Re: Snowy Lake Coniston
Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2022 9:02 am
by Rugbyref
Ian, if you are happy to receive some critique... the first picture works best as it follows the ‘thirds’ regime. Putting the horizon one third or two thirds of the way down the frame is somehow more pleasing to the eye than halfway.
Re: Snowy Lake Coniston
Posted: Sat Jan 15, 2022 1:23 pm
by reheat module
Lovely detail in these images Ian. I like the foreground interest in No1.
I tend to use a centred horizon as a starting thought for a reflection shot, pending on any water movement or sky detail.
Have you considered a panoramic format for 2-4? It sometimes removes some negative space, (unless that is also your intention), whilst concentrating the eye to remain on the detail and your intended points of focus. The bonus of a panoramic is that the format can be fluid to suit the subject, rather than a regulated 4x3 or 3x2...
Just my thoughts, they are great images regardless.