This is kind of a companion piece to a photo I shared two weeks ago–that of a lone windmill set against a deep blue sky in the middle of a field of grass in central Kansas. In the earlier post I went on at length about my choice to zoom out to 70mm and show the windmill as a relatively small portion of the image, leaving the rest of the frame to be filled by the deep blue sky and rich gold field in the foreground. This shot has some obvious similarities, sure, but also plenty of notable differences that make it well worth its own entry here on Weekly Fifty.
Something took place before I shot this photo that has happened many times to me over the years, and will probably continue long into the future. When I saw this scene out the east side of my car as I was driving down Highway 77, I just…kept on going. I thought to myself “Hey, I bet that would be a cool photo!” But was it really worth the trouble of pulling over, getting out my camera, framing the shot, and everything else? Could I really spare the five minutes it would take, when I still had several hours left on my drive? Would I even get a good photo?
Yes, yes, and yes.
One lesson I keep learning (or perhaps not learning!) as I continue with Weekly Fifty is that the answer to questions like these isn’t always going to be yes, but it usually doesn’t hurt to at least try. A mile later I stopped my car, turned around, drove back to the windmill, and decided that whether I was able to get a good photo or not, it wouldn’t be so bad to to take a few minutes of my time to see what I could capture. I shot this at f/8, 1/1500 second, zoomed in all the way to 200mm which is a pretty big contrast from the windmill picture I shared a few weeks ago that showed far more sky and grass than structure. I took about two dozen shots with the windmill positioned in the center at various focal length but, almost as as afterthought, I figured I might as well take one where it was positioned off to the side. Surely it wouldn’t look all that great, but as long as I was there…why not give it a chance?
As my wife and I were looking through the results in Lightroom a few days later, she kept coming back to this one–a shot that I initially ignored, but rapidly came to appreciate the more we compared it to the rest. It has a fun sense of playfulness that I’m not able to capture, almost as though the windmill and the brick-and-mortar structure (cellar? Tornado shelter? Drainage ditch?) are in the midst of a conversation, with the tree listening and waiting for a chance to interject its own thoughts. Other small details such as the metal water trough and weathered fence posts round out the rural setting quite nicely, without being too on-the-nose. The cloudless sky add to the expansive feeling of the image, and all in all I’m very happy not just with this photo but with my decision to delay my trip just a bit in order to take advantage of a picture opportunity. I’m going to try to remember this more on future drives, which I know I have said other times but maybe this time it’ll finally stick :)




