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The Future

Marine Photography

Learning how to understand natural light, when shooting on the beach:

1. Early mornings and late evenings work best.

2. Look out for reflections.

3.Use low perspective.

4. Rule of thirds.

5.Use a tripod (long exposure).

6. Consider aperture priority.

Andy Hughes

Andy Hughes photographic work explores the littoral zone and the politics of waste. He is one of the first artist photographers who explored plastic as metaphor, subject and pollutant. Through extraordinarily focused colour photographs of found waste objects, the viewer is offered tangible stilled moments of reflection on the nature of these objects and left to ponder their place in the world now that their original purpose has been washed away.

Clark Little

Surf Photographer Clark Little, will ride any wave to capture the perfect shot,who lives on Hawaii's North Shore which is renowned for its waves and great surf - has been taking photographs from the ocean since 2007. Larke waits for a mutant barrel that could fit a large school bus to fall. The wave breaks in water less than 2ft feet deep and the sand gets sucked off the sea floor and into the wave.

A shot from behind a breaking wave looking towards shore. Here the photographer is underwater and the curve of the wave distorts the beach scence, elongating the palm trees.

Wave photographer Clark Little, captured this image during a morning photo session from inside the tube at Teahupoo, Tahiti's most famous surf break.Breaking on a very shallow reef, this spot is known as one of the deadliest waves in the world.


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