This is not a blog post about Vivaldi's seminal work.
Some years ago when living in my previous apartment, I photographed the same view from my kitchen window during the four seasons, Spring, Summer, Autumn and winter.
At the end of the year, I combined them into one image using my image editing programme. It was purely a personal project and the people I showed seemed to like it.
After a two year break from thinking about it, I decided to do another. This time with an historical angle.
I am lucky to be living in a beautiful area that has several castles, forests and ruins all within a short distance from my apartment. This was important because I couldn't guarantee that the weather would be the same as I wanted when arriving there.
My partner and I visited several places over a period of weeks before deciding on a view halfway between my place and the town of Balsthal. There is a parking spot which affords a spectacular view of the ruins of Castle Neu Falkenstein.
My rules for the four seasons project are pretty much the same as for when I am documenting progress on building sites. I wrote about it here.
We picked a good vantage point and my partner , Sue, took pictures of where I was standing and which fence post I would be standing beside as an "aide de memoire" for later.
The exact fence post!đ
I took the first picture this year (2020) in February. We had a light sprinking of snow and I didn't know if there would be another*
After choosing a viewpoint, it is also of course important to use the same camera and lens setup for every picture. I settled on my Fujifilm XE-2s coupled with the 18-55 zoom, always set at 55mm. The focus point chosen was always the middle one and I had the "level indicator" always visible in the viewfinder in order to keep the camera level. Doing all this helps the final editing to go a lot smoother.
Guidelines showing the center of the image
The following images were taken using the methods and equipment desribed above in April, July and October.
April. Spring
October. Autumn
After the final picture was taken, it was a simple job to create a new document in Affinity Photo with a layer for each season. I then divided the image into four and erased any bits that didn't belong. This is the final result.
I am rather pleased with the end result and am currnetly looking for my next location(s).
This is a simple and very pleasurable photo project that gets you out of the house and exploring new (or familiar) places. It is interesting to view the changes over the course of a year. Of course, your final image doesn't have to be in the style that I did. You could display them separately or have all four in a frame.
Whatever you do, have fun and be safe.
Tom
*There hasn't been yet.(November 2020)