Locations
The following is a Google Map of places where my photographs were taken:
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A statement of intellectual property (IP) rights, copyright and licensing terms for my work
Copyright Statement All the images and media on this site, unless otherwise stated, are created and owned by Tim Haynes. By default, in the UK and other jurisdictions, all rights would be reserved. However, I am choosing to release these works under the terms of the Creative Commons "cc-by-nc-nd (Scotland)" license. This gives you the right to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work subject to the following conditions: Attribution: you must give the original author credit;Non-Commercial
Photographs I have taken, mostly intimate landscape, mostly around Scotland.
Gallery Here I showcase what I consider to be the best of my work. I have several ongoing art themes: abstract closeup boots trees submerged stuff on my scanner Hasselblad and other square-photo landscapes landscape on film Some images are already available for sale; all may be made available on request. Please respect my copyright.
Causes I support
Causes I'm interested in the following causes and charities: British Hedgehog Preservation Society R.S.P.B. John Muir Trust say no to ID cards! Cairngorms Revolt Against Pylons the Campaign for Dark Skies
Photos taken with a camera on one or other of my mobile phones
This is a rapidly changing section, intended to be a memory of artistic views of mundane moments encountered whilst out and about. Photos in this section have been taken on my Android phone, an HTC Hero.
Essays on aspects of Photography On the effects of camera settings
Work I'm prepared to showcase
Portfolio: Fine Art Landscape Photography
Videos made of the natural landscape
A recent departure for me has been the making of short timelapse videos of the landscape. I wrote a Python script to interpolate from a set of still photographs, applying a handful of effects (blur, gamma, masking), to a set of output images to combine as frames into a movie (e.g. using ffmpeg). The project homepage is at timelapse.py and sources available directly from github. Currently my favourite example using this script is Morning at Glen Affric.