Archives for category: Expedition Photography

2008Explore01

For the second year running I’m delighted to be a panellist on the expedition photography panel at this years “Explore – expedition & fieldwork planning weekend” at the Royal Geographical Society which is always the most exciting event of the year for me.

The event runs 22nd & 23rd November, 2008 and the photography workshop is on Sunday afternoon.

Tom Ang, Who chaired the panel asked us to come up with our personal three golden rules. These are mine aimed at the novice expedition photographer:

1. Make sure your camera is accessible
Its no good if your camera is hidden inside your rucksack, canoe or vehicle. Be prepared that some of the best shots may be when you are most scared or in the worst weather.

2. Don’t get too hung up on kit
Its where you go, how you interact with people, your patience and how you use your camera that makes a good picture. However do backup your digital files and physically protect your camera from dust, moisture and impact.

3. Edit in camera and thematically
With digital its easy to return with too many pictures so edit in camera..before you press the shutter release.
Post-expedition the editing process can tell many stories, choosing themes can help make your editing more distinctive.

Greenland_Report_Quintin_Lake-1

Download the full expedition report as a PDF here

A printed copy of the report is also available to view at: The Royal Geographical Society, The British Mountaineering council, Tangent Expeditions, The Mountaineering Council of Scotland, The Alpine Club, The Mount Everest Foundation, Arctic Club, Scottish Arctic Club, and the Danish Polar Centre

Quintin_Lake_Architectural_Association_1

Three Arctic Greenland Landscape Christmas / Greetings cards by Quintin Lake.
Photographed during Anglo-Scottish Greenland Expedition 2006

Blank inside. All cards 10 for £5.00

Available from Valerie Bennett in the AA Photo Library +44 020 7887 4066

Light & Ice: East Greenland Landscape

The moon at night

Light & Ice: East Greenland Landscape

Wind-blown ice

Light & Ice: East Greenland Landscape

Shadow of clouds

Photography  © Quintin Lake, 2006

peruvian_orchids

An orchid, Telipogon peruvianus, found near the Interoceanic Highway in the Peruvian Andes.Orquídeas Interoceánicas Photographic Exhibition at Canning House by Quintin Lake


The Interoceanic highway crosses the Amazon Basin and Peruvian Andes linking the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of South America.

British photographer Quintin Lake joined an Oxford University Expedition which included Peruvian botanists to locate and identify orchids along two sections of the Interoceanic highway. The exhibition features a selection of the 98 orchid species recorded in flower, the construction of the highway and the lives of those for whom the road is their porch.

orchidexpedition.com

A full gallery of photographs documenting the Interoceanic Highway can be seen here, the Interoceanic orchids here, the Interoceanic flora here and the Peruvian Orchid Expedition here.

Exhibition at Canning House

Orquídeas Interoceánicas Photographs By Quintin Lake

Private View 12 November 2008 6.00PM
Exhibition 13- 21 November 2008

2 Belgrave Square,
London SW1X 8PJ

The event on Canning House’s website

canninghouse.com

Limited Edition Prints

A limited edition of 12 hand printed 41x41cm (16″x16″) Framed and mounted Fuji Crystal Archive prints of the orchids are available for sale here

RGS_logo
I’m delighted to be a panellist on the expedition photography panel on Sunday afternoon chaired by Tom Ang at this years “Explore – expedition & fieldwork planning weekend“.
The event runs throughout the weekend of 22nd & 23rd November 2007 at the Royal Geographical Society
Lesotho-Ha-Mokati

Ha Mokati Rock Art Site, Lesotho featured in the Sunday Times Magazine and the book Drawing Parallels. Photo: Quintin Lake

05 Final Lesotho Report
Suggested interpretation. Note that the reconstruction has been done with reference to Images of Power and other seminal works but remains tentative – above all the top left figure.

Lesotho Rock Art Survey 2000 is a Royal Geographical Society Sponsored expedition which discovered 10 previously unrecorded rock art sites in the remote Lesobeng Valley in Lesotho.

Ha Mokati is one of these sites and was featured in the Sunday Times Magazine April 15, 2001 under the heading “Eyeopener: Vanishing Dreams”.

Photography & Illustration © Quintin Lake, 2000

Lesotho-Rock-Art-Report-Quintin-Lake

Lesotho Rock Art Survey 2000: Expedition Report by Simon Aitken & Quintin Lake

Download the full expedition report as a PDF here

A printed copy of the report is also available to view at: the Department of Archaeology, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, the Cambridge University Expedition Society and the Royal Geographical Society

Text & Photography © Quintin Lake, 2000

High Cup Nick, North Pennines Day: 49   km: 949

Mid-point of Pennine way. By this point my body was adapting and things started getting easier.

Border of Scotland, Cheviot Hills, Pennine Way Day 54   km:1098

Bizarre sign on the border between Scotland & England. Gruelling final section of the pennine way, it really does feel like one is entering a different land

Glen Tilt, Borders Day 64   km: 1382

One of the things which surprised me was the difficulty of navigation when one has to proceed everyday no matter the weather. At one point continuous rain tapping on the waterproof’s hood and then on the bivi bag for 4 days.

The Lairig Ghru , Caingorn Mountains Day 72   km: 1459

838 m high – higher than many British mountain summits

Day 81: The End

Interestingly by the end of 3 months I was physically so used to the lifestyle I could have turned around and done it again. Nothing hurt any more and I felt fresh every morning.

After 81 days I arrived at the northern most point of Britain. Mentally I was so prepared for an anti climax looking out over towards Orkney, but in fact it was a quiet happiness I felt, of slowly getting to know this mysterious island.

I end with this image which reminds me of the simple pleasure of filling up a flask of delicious peaty water from a Scottish burn.

< Back to part two

Photography © Quintin Lake, 1998