As 2024 comes to a close, I wanted to take a look back and do a year in review. Without going through a lot of pomp, I’ve selected what I thought were my 3 best photos from 2024. These are photos that I thought really captured where I was, but also needed a fair amount of working knowledge to actuality shoot. All 3 required more than just pointing a camera and clicking, not that there’s anything wrong with that.
If you would like to see more photos like this, most of my photo work ends up on my travel website here.
The photos are in no particular order.
Photo #1 – 2024; A Year In Review
This photo was taken at a rooftop bar in Manila, Philippines and shows a side of Makati that few see, one that looks much more like Japan than the Philippines.
The is an HDR (high dynamic range) photo. Basically the same scene is shot at different light levels in order to capture the deep shadows and extreme highlights in the setting. The photos are then merged together and edited. It looks like it would simple to capture, this type of photo is actually incredibly difficult to get right.
What would this scene look like if it were just shot as a regular photo?
Here’s a shot taken with the same camera I used for the HDR photos, but it only has the single exposure to get information from. I had taken it the night before I did the HDR and I didn’t have a tripod, which is a must for doing those types of photos. If you really want it done right, you will go back and do it over and over again until you get what you need.
The results speak for themself. It lacks the details in the shadows and the highlights bleed over the sky, creating an undesired hazy effect.
Technical Information:
Alpha a99ii; 35mm Sigma Art Lens/Aperture f5.6/ISO 100. This HDR has 8 exposures, ranging between 30 seconds to 1/4 of a second.
Photo #2 – 2024; A Year In Review
This panorama was taken at Yosemite Nation Park, around sunset. Space was limited, so I took a series of 17 vertical shots and stitched together in order to capture this breathtaking vista.
What would this photo look like if it were just shot one single shot?
Here’s a standard landscape shot taken with the same camera and lens I used for the panorama. The lens was fairly wide (35mm), but it was quite unable to capture the wide scope of the area. Instead of letting the limitations of the lens stop me, I used it to transform a fairly standard photo into something far more stunning.
Technical Information:
Alpha a99ii, 35mm Sigma Art Lens/Aperture f5.6/ISO 100/Exposure 1/60 of a Second. Comprised of 17 photos.
Photo #3 – 2024; A Year In Review
The photo was taken at Nabega Falls, in Kyushu, Japan. I didn’t have a tripod with so I laid down on top of a rock and did my best to hold the camera steady. A slow shutter speed is what makes a waterfall looks magical. I would have certainly benefited from having a tripod, but somehow found a way to make it work. Don’t let the limitations of what you don’t have get in the way of a good photo. Balance out the physical limitations, how stead you can hand hold the camera, with the environment.
Technical Information:
Alpha a99ii, 35mm Sigma Art Lens/Aperture f16/ISO 100/Exposure 1 Second
There they are, the 3 best photos of my year. I should well over 10,000 photos, but these 3 are the ones that stand out in my mind. All 3 had on location issues to solve and that certainly makes them memorable for me, but the end results are what really matter, and they are stunning.