Sunday, 4 August 2013

The most beautiful places on earth

The most beautiful places on earth captured by world's most expensive camera: Photographer takes award-winning image with 50 megapixel Hasselblad

 

  • Self-taught photographer John Chapple has won the Hasselblad Owners Club Photographer of The Month for July
  • He took the winning image of the Colorado River on a Hasselblad H3D-50 - one of the world's most expensive cameras
  • Chapple also uses a panoramic Linhof Technorama 617 for many of his image to capture super-wide shots

A self-taught photographer has scooped a coveted award after taking stunning images of some of the most beautiful places on earth with the world's most expensive digital camera.
John Chapple has been awarded the Hasselblad Owners Club Photographer of The Month for July for his mesmerising image of the Colorado River  meandering around Horseshoe Bend, near Page, Arizona. 
It was taken on a Hasselblad H3D-50 - considered to be one of the best and one of the expensive cameras in the world. The basic camera price starts at £20,000 but can quickly soar higher once lens are added. 
The H3D-50 is a 50 megapixel camera - much, much higher than the standard eight megapixels found in the iPhone 5 camera and other digital recorders




   This image of the Colorado River meandering around Horseshoe Bend, near Page, Arizona, has won John Chapple the              coveted Hasselblad Owners Club Photographer of The Month for July


Stone room with a view: The underside of the Meca Arch in Utah glows from the reflected sunlight off the sandstone cliff just below it in this image taken on a super-high resolution Hasselblad 50megapixel camera

   Trick of the light: John captured this image of a man dancing in a shaft of light within Antelope Canyon in Arizona with the      Hasselblad 50 megapixel camera while on his road-trip across America


   The Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, can be seen in startling detail in this image taken on the    Hasselbald H3D-50

   John Chapple, self-taught photographer from Devon, took this image of the Perito Moreno Glacier in Argentina on a top of        the range 1DS Canon digital camera

   Chapple has travelled all around the world, including Queensland, Australia, pictured on the Linhof Technorama 617, for his      work as a news photographer

    Red sky at night: Venice Beach in California looks eerily red in this shot taken by John Chapple on a Linhof Technorama 617

   Wooden planks stick out of the calm waters surrounding Saint Petersburg, Florida, visible in the distance of this image          taken on a Linhof Technorama 617

    Chapple took this atmospheric image of the Tarr Steps in Exmoor with a panoramic view Linhof Technorama 617

   Special: Photographs on a Linhof Technorama 617, such as this onhe of a waterfall in Northern California, are taken on a        medium format film with a frame size of 6cm x 17cm meaning it can only fit four images on a roll of 120 film

   The Linhof Technorama 617 allows Chapple to take incredibly wide images that are beyond the range of normal visualisation    like this one of a ship-wrecked bot on the beach at Crow Point in Devon

    Chapple has travelled all around the world, including Queensland, Australia, pictured on the Linhof Technorama 617, for his     work as a news photographer
    This striking image of Bandon Oregon was taken late at night as the last rays of light fade on a Linhof Technorama 617

    The Linhof Technorama 617 has captured this beautiful sunset over the city of Los Angeles in all its glory

   Chapple was first inspired to become a photographer by the stunning scenery, such as Braunton Burrow, pictured, near            where he grew up in Devon

    The 6cm X 17cm Linhof Technorama 617 negatives means pictures like this one of Saint Petersburg, Florida, can be blown       up to huge sizes without the risk of blurring


   The Hasselblad H3D-50 - one of the best digital and most expensive cameras in the world, pictured left, and the Linhof          Technorama 617, pictured right, which takes 6cm x17cm negatives - meaning that it can only take four pictures per film roll 




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