The Suffolk Coast – Beccles

Old church in the background, with a window central to the image.  Three gravestones can be seen and the picture is framed by a trees and plants.

Beccles is typical of the slightly larger town you can find in Suffolk.

Old but colourful houses.  The main one in the centre of the image looks tired but is a pale pink in colour.

In places a little run down, as many places were post COVID-19 which accelerated the death of the high street, but places are opening up.

Old brick building that's now a coffee roaster.

I remember just a few years ago when all there seemed to be on the high streets was instant coffee or corporate Starbucks, there were few independent coffee roasters and few independent coffee shops selling quality, well sourced coffee.

Smart looking old building now an antique shop

But now coffee roasters and cafes seem to be springing up even in the most unlikely of places.

What the high street will look like in the future now on-line shopping dominates is unknown, but cafes and good coffee seems to one thing that we will be able to find.

Old traditional English church with a plain window in the centre.

Beccles is an old town with lovely old churches and building, well worth a walk around after you have refreshed yourself with coffee.

Old red brick building, a notice board on the wall and an old sign post in stone.  It shows Beccles to London 109 miles.

Reminders of its links to the larger towns and London are all around.

So if you on route to one of the larger cities try a visit, whether a quaint book shop, a delicatessen or locally roasted coffee there will be something for you.

Birds in Flight

Two Greylag geese in flight, a blue sky is the background and the tops of some green trees can be seen in the distance.

Nikon Z7 and birds in flight.

With autofocus modes today we have modes for everything. Currently Nikon are rolling out a bird in flight mode for there latest cameras.

But even without such modes you can get photographs of fast moving events even with an older body such as a original Nikon Z7.

Leica M11-P Safari

Advertising shot of a Leica M11-P Safari edition.  The camera is a black bodied rangefinder with a chrome lens attached.

Leica M series range finders always have a mid season refresh, usually a different paint job, sometimes more RAM and additions such as sapphire glass and missing the famous red dot to make them a little more stealthy on the street.

Cobbled street in Lincoln, there is a post office on the corner and a scooter rides past.
Scooters in the Bailgate – Leica M4

The M11-P was released a year ago, and now we have another new paint job with returns every few years. The Leica M11-P Safari is now out so if your in the market and still have a M9, M240 or even a M10 it might be worth looking at.

Out at sea, on the ferry to Orkney.  Looking down at a passager at the ships  rail looking out at the sea.
Leica M8 sample – Sea voyage

Nikon Summer Sales

High key studio shot of dark haired olive skinned model leaning on a white bed sheet. She is wearing green and black lingerie with black stockings.

With the new Nikon Z5 Mark II hitting the shelves of retailers Nikon have now launched there summer sale offers, and I am so tempted to pull the trigger on a Nikon Zf. I would be a spare backup body on professional shoots, and a every day fun camera when out and about.

Check your local retailer.

Nikon ZF Firmware v2.00 released

Screen print from Nikon showing the Nikon Zf in all its extra colours that it's available in.  Black, Grey, Red, Orange, Brown, Green and Blue.

A major firmware release appeared this week for the ZF. Features like Autofocus bird tracking mode has now appeared.

With the new Z5II, Z6III, all using the same processing engine as the flagships Z9 and Z8, and this the ZF we are seeing common features rolled across the board.

Its great to see Nikon not skipping advanced features on their cheaper models.

Screen print and weblink to Nikons firmware update page.  Shows the Nikon Zf and the two current firmwares available, v1.21 and the new v2.00

Film Simulations – Fuji

A profile view of a woman with grey hair styled in a loose bun.  She has a elegant neckline and appears contemplative, with her eyes closed and head tilted down.

Fuji camera are very popular and they have two key selling points. One is the more traditional ergonomics with lens aperture rings and a traditional shutter speed dial; and two is their film simulations.

It’s something that Fuji pushes a lot, but the truth is many cameras have profiles. Now I shoot 99% with a Nikon Neutral profile which I use as a base, but often use Nikon Standard Monochrome with an Orange filter for black and white. If you are using profiles and using Adobe Lightroom, remember to ensure on your import settings is using camera settings and not changing it on the import.

Screen print of the Apply During Import settings box for Adobe Lightroom Classic.  The camera settings option is selected but others are visible such as Black & White - Camera Orange and Contrast - Curve Medium.

As you can see here, with it set to camera settings you get your camera profile settings, I also have a number of custom ones I have created in Lightroom as well.

I see a lot of people selling presets for Lightroom on the internet but it’s very easy to create your own unique look and then create your own profile.