I lived in London in the 's. These fantastic pictures bring back fond memories and make me want to return. Did I miss something in these spectacular photos? I've been looking for the dome of St. How did you do take these? I'm moving to this city in 11 days and you've somehow managed to make me more excited about it than I already am. I find it funny that a guy spending the resources to have a helicopter fly him around doesn't take the time to first learn to use the camera.
Half of the pics or more are grained and poorly structured. But bravo for giving it your best try, even if it was only mediocre. If you've ever been Beijing or Shanhai, you would know it's nothing. Probably like a middle size city in China. Dirty air, though, but the Londoners are ultra-friendly and helpful. As for food, do aim for the "pub grub", as the food at the many pubs is great with a tall pint or two of beer.
Do be careful of the traffic, as there is no mercy for pedestrians! The shopping is terrific on Oxford Street, and don't miss Harrod's. Gorgeous statuary and the Houses of Parliament are beautiful. But none of them compare to the international city which is London and which these photographs show to be so amazing Absolutely incredible,congratulations to Jason Hawkes on his wonderful photography.
I have emailed these images to our friends in,New Zealand,and Ausrtalia. I have a Canadian friend coming to London for the first time in November and have sent him this link - he was very excited already, now he'll be champing at the bit to get here! Joe - St Paul's still has several legally protected sight lines so it will never be totally obscured. You cannot see it here simply because none of the photos are of that area. But one of the photos on Jason's site which is well worth a look features it. For reference, here is one of my own sorry shots taken from 5 miles away that shows how St Paul's Cathedral still stands out on the city's skyline:.
Bjartur - I disagree with your comment about them being poorly structured. As apparently it seems do many major corporations around the world who hire his services. But as for the grain, what do you expect? Even with a wide aperture you are still only going to get a slow shutter speed, and despite using stabilizers on the camera a helicopter is still going to be in motion. So it would surprise me if he did not have to use a high ISO. It'samazing the different things people pick up about London.
Some see it as dirty and old, which is fair enough. It's a old city and there is a lot of polluiton, like all big citys London is very clean compared to most US cities, largely due to the road network being very old and thus cars are not the main mode of transport. Other people look at the history of the place, the amazing buildings, old and new and the huge variety on offer.
I wouldn't swap that for anything. These pictures really capture the highlights of the city. I just returned from 4 days in London with over pictures and I'm glad I have a link now to these. It would have been nice to add an aerial view of Portobello Market to this collection. This made me miss London even more! I really need to get back to that wonderful city asap! I'd like to go there to see London with my own eyes, wonderful night pictures!! I congratulate the photographer and the pilot who made possible taking those nice pictures! Some of the nerds on here look as if they've swallowed a copy of new hart's rules.
He must be on a helicopter so cant use the tradtional method you would expect of tripod and a long exposure as the vibrations would cause a blurry photo.
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In any case the cars in all the photos are sharp - no light trails on the break lights ect Can someone tell me how he has managed this effect? Never seen this done before and would like to give it a go. Wonderful, incredible, beautiful -all those words. Brought back memories when I lived there in the 50's. It would be great to see comparative pictures especially the West End and the City.
If I remember correctly Picadilly circus was a round-about. I remember circling it on the back of my boy-friend's motorcycle! Back in the 50's if you stood waiting for someone at Picadilly in the evening you invariably met a fellow Canadian you didn't even know was in London.
Thanks for a fantastic trip around London with the most beautiful pictures I've ever seen. Whatever it took to get these photos was well worth it. I visited London in , and fell in love with it. Thanks for these photos. They really took me back. I now see I have to make the trip back there. I lived just by the left hand side of Tower Bridge. My mum comes from South London "Sauth" in the local dialect and like any other big city, it is not all bright lights and breathtaking pictures.
It is still a magnificent city though and I still visit the sights. Camden Market is still worth a days visit. Last time I went on a "Jack the Ripper" tour at Whitechapel. A nice cosey story, yes I suppose our capital city still has its redeeming features. Absolutely mind-boggling - i mean the way the pics have been taken. The pics themselves are all awesome, the finely etched details look amazing, especially when you know that the photographs have been taken at night. I hope the team that carried out this stupendous task will be inspired to do more such adventures in other cities of the world.
Looks like London can contribute to global warming all by itself, not to mention light pollution. How many Londoners have ever seen the milky way , the spiral arm of the galaxy we live in, a far more awe inspiring sight than the indiscriminate use of earths resources. London's a great metropolis. And you recorded so well its greatness with these nocturnal photos. I'm curious what time of exposure you have used in general I'm an American living in London.
I immediately recognized the huge roundabout in picture 6. I live a two minute walk from that intersection. Someone mentioned earlier that it's Apex Corner and that was correct. It's in Mill Hill, North London. Such a shame so many silly anal people on here feel the need to nitpick and criticise!! Luckily the beauty of these photos far outweigh the negative comments, which incidently, should be about the photos and not anything else!
You should feel very proud of them Jason, and the nitpickers really should get a life! Thank you for allowing us to view these wonderful pictures. Nice to see the atmosphere at the Emirates is as dead as ever Someone asked why they had the lights on. The practice goals suggest that it's not a match night, but there's a fair chance there's a corporate event going on there. After all, if you've paid a lot of money to stage an event at a football stadium, you'd expect to see the pitch! It's also possible that the ground staff are working on it after a daytime match.
Presumably Wembley didn't have its lights on - would probably be rather more impressive. In reference to previous comments - what would be the life expectancy of an undefended British helicopter hovering over any part of Iran with a large gyro-stabilised attachment hanging off the side? Could 1 and 12 be a picture of any city in North America?
Cornhill and the other streets coming out of the Bank junction in 1 look like the legs of a Louise Bourgeois spider. I'd guess that one or more of the big theatres nearby has just finished for the night, and they are theatregoers heading home - Shaftesbury Avenue is the equivalent of Broadway. The fact that Big Ben reads 9: And yes - you will never win the arguments about Big Ben and Eros, no matter what the pedants say.
It was first christened the "Erotic Gherkin", and then shortened - an interesting building, worth looking up about it. Bizarrely Wikipedia has a surprising amount on the theory of road junctions, if you want to know more, but the magic roundabouts would surely make a great subject for Jason. It's the headquarters of PriceWaterhouseCoopers, the accountants. At the top of the picture, the lit-up building is the National Gallery, on the far side of Trafalgar Square. Nelson's Column can just about be seen vertically up from the axis of the Eye, Canada House is to the left.
Guess it's a comment on how crowded this corner of Britain is, we seldom waste land on cloverleafs. Has Jason done Spaghetti Junction by night? You can tell how much of Docklands is still docks if you look in the foreground. The Britain from Above TV series which Jason was involved with had a lot of "before" and "after" photos from above taken by the Luftwaffe - presumably you guys will get to see it on BBC America at some point.
The building with the green light is 25 Bank Street mostly Lehmanns , the building with the red light is Citigroup Centre. I really like 15 for the way it shows my way into town, the sinuous dark artery of the railway through London Bridge station. Guy's Hospital is the complex on the right of the station. Canary Wharf is just visible at the top centre. Just down from the right-hand end of Tower Bridge you can just about make out the sloping form of London's new City Hall, or the "glass testicle" as its first resident Ken Livingstone described it.
You get a nice sense of the buildings facing off against each other across the river - in the foreground King's College London, Somerset House and further up the Strand, the Savoy contrast with the modernist National Theatre and Southbank Centre, the PWC accountants stare across at Shell Centre, and in times past our national politicians in the Houses of Parliament had to endure their London equivalents strutting their stuff at County Hall now an aquarium and gallery among other things.
It must be pretty soon after a Waterloo sunset - you could almost write a song about that I laughed at 5, which shows my office, Baynard House the big lump top right. At least I had turned my lights off! Baynard House is a BT communications centre and has been called the ugliest building in London.
The tall white building bottom right is Faraday House, London's first main telephone exchange. It housed the Citadel, a concrete bunker protecting critical telephone services during World War 2. The building was designed by Lutyens - in the days when the world's greatest architects worked on telephone exchanges.
The church is St. Benets, a Welsh Anglican church. On the far left is the City of London school. This is probably one of the least attractive main streets in central London, partly because the area was heavily bombed in WW2 and redeveloped in the s. However, even where London is ugly, there are lots of things of interest. Mediaeval street layouts might be hell for motorists, but they are good news for pedestrians. I've done quite a bit of traveling, but never to London. These pix make me want to call my travel agent right away!!! I would like to see Paris done the same way! Wow, we definitely need to visit London soon for some episodes for http: Excellent photo's of London.
Never what I expected it to be like at night time. Well done and keep her clicking Brilliant Photography, though I'm sure I would appreciate the beauty of London more if I had a helicopter and it had not rained for the entire month of August. I was just there! Great to see it again and bring back the memories, the traffic is mysterously missing from the pictures, it was bad. Brilliant photos, all of them. Can't wait to get back to see them soon. I visited London 10 years ago when I was still a university student, everybody called me Young Lady in London, hehe.
That was my first time out of country, I was so impressed by the beauty of London architetures, the Thames, even the flowers in front of the Buckingham Palace, and so excited about the museums, threatres, even the tea house show and the crowd in Piccadilly line. Thanks for sharing the photos, Alan.
New York is much more better than this sleepy town. Much more "city" and better everything. For me, it was nice to find out London from another point of view, the quality of pictures is perfect but it should be an idea to take some pictures from closer angles. Please let us fight to keep London clean and tidy as the view on streets is different! Do not litter - do not spit!
Much much more beautiful!!! I live here, and have never seen photo's of my home city look so good! Thank- u for sharing these wonderfully breath- taking photos. I appreciate beauty whenever and where- ever it takes me There is already too much negativity surrounding all of us Firstly, i see your grasp of the English language is about as good as your understanding of London, "much more better!? You of all people should know, without London, there would be no New York. I am no fan of London and I spend most of my working life there but it is without question one of the and some would argue the greatest city in the world.
Now that is of course subjective but to call it awful I believe does it a disservice. Brilliant work and thanks for sharing. Tom - Actually there is a 'z' in 'recognized' in British English. It is the main form in the OED, which lists the French influenced -ise suffix as a variant. Please do not get people arguing over spelling too.
These are so incredible, they're going straight into my screensaver! Day or night, London is the greatest. I'm living a good life and saying all my prayers so I'll go there when I die. Man you are only an Island Not even yours ther is Scotland man that is a country.. What a shame we have to endure some of the comments like the above. This includes Scotland and Wales. Scotland have a devolved parliament but the overall parliament of all British countries is London. Of course I wouldn't expect you to know that our Prime Minister, as well as many leading politicians are Scottish.
Where are they located? Anyway Getting away from politics. The first time I visited London I was awe inspired. There is no other city I have ever been to that keeps revealing more and more every time you visit it, not in the same way. I remember walking past the Royal Courts of Justice amazing building on a main road and seeing a small alley way, I walked down and was confronted by a totally complete and still working 12th century chuch of the 'Knights Templar', knights of the crusades!
It was a crisp and beautiful Christmas night you should see London at Christmas! I came across a beautiful theatre there are so many and an American a New Yorker stopped me and said 'you must see that play' and with a real misty eyed look honestly he said contentedly 'I love this City'.
At that moment I knew I would always love it too. Why so bitter Walt? Whether you're a fan of our beautiful city or not you have to admit that the photos represented here are simply stunning! Born and bred Londoner and I still walk around Westminster and marvel at the architecture.
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I love this city and I love these photos - Thanks for sharing. As to Walt, I'm American, and embarrassed by your comments. NYC is great in it's own way, but London is too. Regards for sharing this beautiful pictures of this lovely city. Having left my home town of London 8 years ago, your pictures were wonderful to see. Please sir, can we have some more? You should try also Paris and Rio de Janeiro!
London is my favourite city; well, I am a Londoner. Thank you for these fantastic images. I really need to find out where the un-named roundabout, roads and M25 junction are! Please give me some important tips to be noted while taking photographs as my dream is to bcum a photographer!! I'm just back from London and I'm amazed by all the things u can see in this city! Great work u did! From London living in Florida, makes me miss home alot. Great job in catching the essence of London. London is my favourite city. Thanks for these fantastic images and for sharing your incredible talent.
Truly beautiful pictures, a selection of probably several thousand taken and then hours of work in Photoshop per picture. There is a huge amount of art involved in these photo's and I am not having a go in any way. What can be achieved with a good eye and imagination as well as excellent skills as a photographer with a program like Photoshop is here for all too see. Yes, great camera and equipment but it's useless without a fantastic photographer. Jason, not only are you a wonderful photographer but a true artist. What a wonderful representation!!!
Thank you for sharing you brilliant work with us. All the cars are on the wrong side of the road!! And the cars are going the wrong way in the circle round about. In America, we go counter-clockwise as opposed to those cars in the pictures going clockwise! Or maybe the clocks in England go counter-clockwise too. One can now understand why there are not many astronomers in London. What is one persons beauty is another persons pollution. MJBose, here in the UK we drive on the Left hand side of the road not the right so that is the reason we go clockwise around roundabouts.
Will be awaiting the jigsaws at Christmas as many have the Vista for being used for that purpose. I actually have one of Jason Hawkes books 'Arial'. It's definitely work looking at. The nerve of 'P-a in Montreal'! Montreal is the unfriendliest city it has ever been my misfortune to visit. I spent three nights there one new year and had to eat at the same restaurant each night, as it was the only place they would speak to me in English.
These are so wonderful. You are truly talented for your eye and your abilities. For me you brought me right into a remarkable city with all of the riches and delights that can only be seen by someone who likes, no loves what he is looking at. If that is not the case then you have us all fooled. I am still thinking and will be for the day long about your 1 photo The quiet picture 5 is truly haunting for me. I have been on a street at night all alone and with it's winding way it took me right back to that time in my life I actually peered in to see if I could possibly see a lone figure walking all bundled up somewhere in that shot.
Thank you, thank you so much for sharing this with us. You and this beautiful city have truly made my day. I can see my office floor on photo number 10!!! Excellent photos, I'll be buying a few of these mate. I have always loved London, and yes, I have driven the roundabouts. Just close your eyes and go. Lovely pictures by a talented artist. I ask that you do not compare and judge cities. New York was founded in , or , or , or something like that.
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London is so old, nobody really knows when it was founded. Some remains have been found to be 3, years old. London was one of the largest cities in the world while New York was still farming land. Paris once followed a similar pattern to London, but was deliberately rebuilt. You have to appreciate that many of our streets still follow the same paths they did in Medieval times, and that many of our major roads were paths between farmer's fields.
London is a truly organic city, and out of all of the world's major cities, almost the only one. New York was not bombed every night for 8 months. Paris has never been the world's largest port, as London used to be. New York and Paris are but beautiful in their own rights, and I have visited both on many occasions. But they are different cities. London is a special city, and incomparable to any other. I'm very jalous about your talent of making perfect compositions. Really nice pictures overall! Have always wanted to visit London I currently live in London but a Bostonian at heart- go Sox!
I especially love the picture of Piccadilly Circus- it is so quiet and peaceful at night, in such contrast to the throngs of people always there during the day. Mate, forget the negative comments and focus on the bright and positive ones, cause all I can say is that you did an amazing job and, on top of it all, picked the most beautiful city in the Old World. Got back from London 2 weeks ago, had a great time - these photos brought it all back. Wonderful night shots of the Eye. Amazing photos , congratulations to the photographer. It does make you wonder if we really need to use all that electricity?
No wonder the World is becoming short of resources. And you never see the stars in London with all the light pollution! Jason, Your photography is superb and I used to be a professional photographer didn't have the usage of a Helicopter so used other means. Now I try to do the same with the cooking of food. Can't please everybody but still try. Have been all over most of this World and you have done an excellent job on London.
My Warmest Wishes for your future. Thank You for sharing. London was the capital of the largest empire the world has ever known, although a 3rd of it was destroyed in WW2 in a time known as the blitz, it is so huge that enough survives to this day. What i'm saying is that despite the losses over the years that massive history resonates somehow on many streets. Think of the history that was lost, heartbreaking. However London always survives, always reinvents, always evolves. Bill Bryson once said that he wonders why Londoners fail to see that they live in the most wonderful city in the world.
People call London ugly, people call it beautiful, but that is the point of London and it is the very point they have missed. London defies these terms because London is all of these things, that is what makes London special. When you see an ancient street with B. C ruins, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th 20th, 21st century architecture all living together your senses are bombarded with the sheer fascinating juxtaposition of it.
You can have a drink in 'Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese' a pub REbuilt in after the great fire of London. It has a list of the kings and queens monarchs that it has outlved on the outside. You walk out of this pub and the alley and down the road and come to trafalgar square. Now this is how you do squares. London has it's flaws of course it does, nothing in this world is perfect, even me, but like any person you love you take those flaws as part of the whole package.
There are always negative comments, but you have to ask yourself one thing; If so many people say it is so great there must be something in it. What you do reveal as a valuable contribution , as mentioned above, is how much, not only in our Wonderful City of London, but in cities all over the globe , we are contributing to global warming.
Thank God the Goverment here increased the Road Tax on high poluting vehicles to contribute to this waste!!!! Not surprised by the amount of comments on these pictures; they are very inspiring and really makes me want to get better. They are beautiful; thanks for sharing them with us! Just a short note to "Maybe it s because I m a Londoner"; people are here to share their passion for photography not English literacy Lovely Lovely My friend, James want is the man, he sent us this nice link to see lovely town like this cheers.
Breathtaking compilation of beauty. Too bad sodium yellow permeates the landscape so overwhelmingly. We need lighting to enhance the natural beauty also colorful accents which are starting to appear in recent years. Amazing, I have lived in London for 15 years and have never got bored of it!!!! I travelled to NY a few years back and although I did like it I have to say it doesn't approach London for sheer excitement, energy, culture or diversity.
I hate to break it to our American friends but London is SO much more a world-class city than NY, which, like the rest of the US is on a slow, steady, decline from being a world power. Sure there are more beautiful cities in the world than London, such as Paris, but then again the French surrendered pretty quickly in WW2 so Paris never endured the bombing that London did and remained mostly undamaged.
I have live there before, These pics Makes me want to move back. You can never get bored with London. There's just too much to do. Having taken many photographs from a helicopter of Bafin Island. I know it's the only way to go! Quite beautiful photograph's - I don't like London particularly - except for the theatres,but from above it is quite beautiful. Fortunately for London, there is the city! Beautiful pictures but nothing very nice in London.
I was born here, but moved to America 25 year ago I loved these photos's! Most cities in America had planning - the British have had to work with old buildings and limited space Hats of to them London has changed so much and you captured it wonderfully! Looking at these photos only strengthens my belief in the city, I love my city I'm a Londonder today and forever! No other city today comes even close. Just Smashing makes me home sick, but so much has changed since i was their last makes me want to go back for a last look. These are fabulous photos. I just am curious to know what settings you are using to get these?
Besides the giro thing mount for the heli, what ISO, shutter speeds, ect. I also noted 1 comment from somebody in the mix asking how much post work was required in photoshop. My belief of these are that you are one talented individual to have captured these picts and the post work is only secondary to your brilliant initial captures.
We all have to dive into photoshop for a few corrections no matter what the occasion but the actual capture cannot be ever underestimated. Obvious some sort of pic editing or photoshopping happening there. I visited London in and adored it inspite of adverse comment before I left NZ I also have a book on London from the air but in the day time taken many years ago.
Well done keep up your great talent and Best Wishes. Whilst i do agree that the images are indeed impressive I dont beleive they truely capture London What makes this city soo great is it's soul. I know I romanticise about London and from other peoples comments so do many others from around the world. The great thing about this city is that wherever you come from and whoever you are you'll always feel right at home here, it really is a city that is all things to all people, there is soo much character and history here but unlike Paris and Rome namely it is looking to the future, its an organic, growing city steeped in history but building for the future.
As many travellers to London know, London more than a collaboration of buildings it really is an experience like no other I love London and I'm going there this Thursday for my masters! These images made me even more impatient I think it is very unfortunate that many people feel the need to be critical in such a blatant and jingoistic fashion. I have lived in many cities in the world and visited even more.
Each city has its strong points as well as its weak points. London is no different to the rest but please, this isn't a competiton. Let's just glory in the good things that the world has to offer. For what its worth, I agree that in many parts, London isn't the most beautiful city in the world.
Many of the reasons for this have already been given, but at least the Brits are doing something to clean it up. Compare it now to twenty years ago. There is no comparison! By , I hope it will be something even more special. London does have many good points that make it one of the most important cities in the entire world.
Oh, and Cris comment , I think it is rather disingenuous of you to dismiss London as a one or two monuments, parks of which by the bye, Paris has virtually none and a medieaval steet pattern. Whilst I agree that Paris is one of the most beautiful cities in the world, London has as many places of interest and of international importance if not more. I have been to London only once very briefly on my way to the Middle East. It is absolutely gorgeous.
It is time to go to London and truly appreciate the beauty of London. The English people should be proud of their city. Oh yes but Vancouver Canada is not far in its own beauty. Not interested in the spelling or grammar of the information, just REALLY impressed with our capital city, and the talent of the photographer. I was concerned about the olympics after Bejing's effort, but if this is part of what we can show the world, Bring it on!!!!!! I only wish my parents could have seen these pictures. They were both born in England and had been to London many, MANY years ago and although the city is 'old' I'm sure it is also much larger now than whey they were there.
However, I enjoyed the aerial pictures very much If you think the city is looking good now, wait until the Shard Tower Bridge tower has been built! The Eieffel tower will be put to shame.. As a video engineer and having spent some time in London many moons ago! Social comments are a giggle and they are out there!
Super pics,,bit what a load of "nit pickers!! Thanks for sharing this! The picture of river Tames remember me my first viw of london from the plane. Technique,photography and subject - par excellence indeed. What about the Carbon Footprint???
I've tried taking photos from the air at night and never got anything nearly as good. Perhaps they should stay home!!!!!! I haven't been since I really need to go back and soon Detroit Michigan should take a lesson from these pictures and try to improve their image accordingly. I'd forgotten how lovely it is at night, especially with such stunning photography! Best night photographs from a helicopter I have seen. As a photographer I would be interested in the equipment you used.
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Again, one word "stunning". As a trophy winning amatuer photographer myself, I can appreciate the beauty of a big city by night, and your wonderful compositions and clarity of them. From one brain to another via a small round ground piece of glass and a few well positioned wires, to another soul sitting in front of a computer screen thousands of miles away. A joy to see. Many many thanks for sharing all your years of effort to bring technology into an Art form.
Could you please let me know if it would be possible to buy your prints and if yes, how much would they cost? Really liked the photos, I am from London originally now live abroad , I was surprised at how modern the city has become with all those sky scrapers. All very different when looking down. These are totally beautiful and awesome photo's. Thank you so much for sharing them. I apologize for all my ugly fellow Americans to make such tacky remarks.
These are the kind of people that can't see beauty in anything. And comment , well the mention of so many American places, it took that many to make up for ONE London. I have been to each place the person mentioned and they are beautiful and I am proud to be an American but come on people, see the beauty, the work it took to take the pictures, the dedication.
How many of the people that made ugly comments have done the same. Shame on each of you. Comment , take some pictures of the places you mentioned and send them to Jason. I have been to London once and would love to live there for awhile. I have lived in London all my life and had no idea it was so beautiful.
I paid good money to go on the London Eye to get this sort of view, all I ended up with was a very steamy capsule, to think all I needed to do was link into Jason Hawkes. Thank you for sharing these magnificent photos with the world. Re comment 54 I have never heard before that London is ugly. Most of our cities are not built on a grid. I think the writer of this comment must like grids, we don't! All the photos are excellent, thank you. Super pics, nice to see our great citys in a good light.
We're knocking our citys far too much in this day and age, And who, to be quite frank gives a stuff about the "Carbon Footprint" with all these lights left on. Get a life and go hug a tree. The river runs along the top of the picture.
Can we have some more shots like these? Nice pictures, just a bloody shame about all the wasted electricity lighting up all those empty offices!! I wish I had these in my office on the wall I simply loved the photos and thank you. My oldest son has been there but not I yet While stationed out side Oxford England with the U. I thouroughly enjoyed my stay. In the past few years I took my wife on a nostalgic trip to london ,foolishly expecting to find the same England I knew in the past.
The old saw says you cant go home. I found the same people but a completly different City. Even the pubs are so changed. A pity, but life goes on.. But all in all it is still a great city to visit. Un like many U. It is a very spendy city but I would recomend a visit to all Yanks. Amazing pictures of an amazing city by an amazing photographer. I visited London in 07 and had a wonderful time. While these photos are stunning, I saw some photos of Tokyo at night in HDR and really, nothing can compare. It'd be lovely to see them up on the site here, although I suppose you'd have to contact the artist.
In any case, I'm sure most of the readers here would love it:. From NZ I must sent your amazing photographs to my son and friends. It's is really a beauty photos I did enjoy it I have never been out of NZ and we are 72 yrs old My son and his wife been over to London 15 years ago for 2 years and they went back to London with their daughter was about 2years old and year later they came back home to NZ, From Jackie and Ray Spencer.
Congratulations to the photographer. How i wish I could visit London someday. Stunning pictures of London Shame on you city slicking, cappucino drinking yar yar's! I think that the M25 pic makes the road look like a throbbing artery - and reminds me how being stuck on it in congestion is a very real pain. All of the photos really make the city look like a wonderful living creature and we should take as much care of it as we do ourselves more, in most circumstances. Thank you for sharing the beautiful pictures! Missing from your photo's are the endless streams of drunks from Thursday to Sunday evenings, showing each other what a fine line there is between love and hate in the UK by having intercourse in door ways, abusing vagrants, mugging tourists, fighting or projectile vomiting, missing are the thousands of eastern european refugees currently plagueing our once beautiful city, whom cannot speak a word of english but expect you to give them money.
I love you guy's but London is not as fantastic as portrayed in the photographic works you all seem to love. As a life long amatuer photographer I can only say I have seldom seen photographs of such high quality , in colour, sharpness and photo arrangement. The arrangement of each photo was paramount to the photographer to obain the best view to the viewer later, and this is also enhanced by the sharpenes of each excellent photograph.
Too bad they are so affriad to offend all the muslims. Too bad there are so many of them there. I hope it returns to the England that was so strong. Don't listen to the overly cynical guy on No city is perfect. When you have one of the worlds greatest cities like London, if not the greatest you get a city where everything happens, this can be good and bad. What does this guy actually think?
That London is supposed to be a total utopia with no faults. That all those people can live together and problems never occur? Do not listen to him, you are not being mislead in the slightest, hence the great comments from people who endure the stress but point out the positives also. HDR photos of Tokyo of course look amazing, and it is one of the big four.
It is however not one of the World Alpha top 2, which is London and New York, due to a number of factors. Have youy seen Tokyo during the day? An amazing city but it isn't London. Its been 8 years since we visited London Magnet for every would-be benefit claimant from every third world dump imaginable, bringing all their problems to our streets. And we let 'em What a shame to the people whom choose to leave comments at the end of this presentation whom spend more time bickering with each other than concentrating on what an amazing accomplishment the photographer had in capturing these images.
The point of this set of photos was to illustrate the beauty of London, and Jason Hawkes pulled it off brilliantly. Thanks for sharing them. The photographs are wonderful. They speak for themselves. I'm glad Jason Hawkes shared them with us. Traveled through London by train from Liverpool to Southampton during WWII; we coudn't get off and the shades were drawn so we didn't see a thing!
Finally I got to see what I missed! I've got to go back to that amazing city! It's been over 30 years since my last visit, which lasted all of 4 days, and it is definitely time to reconnect with the charm of London. And now this time I can spend a couple of weeks to really absorb the city and countryside. I knew London is awesome, but this is really mind blowing I live not more than 25 miles way from London, and have been to London several times over the years.
I have always classed it as a dirty place compared to other cities around the world. However the views from the sky are beautiful, and any imperfections hidden, how lucky are the birds, and Jason to see the City as a work of art. Being a Londoner who lives 30 miles from the Capitol I really appreciated these awesome photo's. London or Londinium as the romans named it is the Southern hub of England-It can be approached by the Air and Sea via river and airports and as such has been here for a long, long time.
Please don't rubbish such a place that historically has been around longer than many places in the world. Yes it has it's faults but heck it is ours. I went to live in Australia in the 70's but got so homesick I came back and I'm glad I did. Thanks for taking these photo's as there are places I would never have seen day or night without them.
Now looking forward to , God willing I'll still be here to enjoy that spectacle as much as I have enjoyed the Beijing offerings. Why do the Yanks think they are the best at everything? But I am derogatory about their country? So keep your nasty comments to yourself and just love these wonderful pictures for what they are. London has been a residential place since time immemorial - New York is a recent upstart!
I think the pictures where magnificent only one picture i got disapointed ,is the picadily centerit does not have it's full appiarance. Thank you for the show. I'll take the scenes out West in the U. A great source of light polution and energy waste is illustrated. Brilliant as an oap it took me back to the days of working in London it brought back many happy memories. I love the round about. We have one here that is smaller and it's hilarious to see people drive it that has no clue how. I'm an amateur photographer and being originally from England i really appreciate your stunning work. I would also like to succeed in my night photo's but for some reason cannot get the lighting down, any suggestions.
I now live on the wonderfull island of Bermuda. You keep repeating the same aerial views - a pity - though they're very good and very different shots - shame you don't go into the rest of London - most people's London. I'm so awed of these night scenes and find myself speaking in whispers I love these many views London. Makes me want the eyes of a bird, angel or spirit. It is so uplifting I can almost hear music with these images! But then so they should be after hiring a chopper and flying above London at great expense Not to mention using some extremely expensive equipment of course - a great camera fixed to a giro to keep things nice and steady, and top-notch prime lenses that cost as much as a big car.
Having said that, photos from the air will always have a magic about them and attract many appreciative viewers like me, who, apart from understanding the technical problems and skills involved in getting them, will look at them with admiration. Though I would think a 39mp Hasselblad with prime optic set at infinity would cope fairly well with night photography noise levels issues at high ISO ratings, by allowing some pretty fast shutter speeds. Spectacular photos of what has to be the greatest city in the world Excelent presentation of a city I visited in Breathtaking views and lighting of motorways.
A few churches could be included. Ariane - the junction in photo 6 is Apex Corner in north west London. See my comment 31 for details of where the less obvious locations are. John - is the problem you are having with night photography the metering or the dynamic range?
With the former it is to some extent a case of learning to be able to read the light and know what to meter. But a digital trick to be able to take test shots while shooting long exposures if to set you aperture to its widest and ISO to its highest so you can get reasonably fast shutter speeds. This way you can try an exposure and quickly see the results and make adjustments. Once you have the exposure you want you can then set the aperture to give the required depth of field by increasing the shutter speed for each stop you remove.
Like wise with bringing down the ISO to give the best quality results. The other option is to bracket, which is also a solution where it is the dynamic range that is the problem. This is where when you expose for the shadows the highlights are totally blown out, or if you expose for the highlights too much gets lost in shadow. It can be a big problem in night photography because you have a generally dark scene but containing bright light sources.
Unfortunately that is a limitation in the technology of your camera's sensor or film. How do differences across visual features combine to determine visual search efficiency in parallel search? Factors that reduce grouping also decrease the collinear masking effect in visual search Open Access. Compound statistical learning of target selection and distractor suppression Open Access. Long-term learned values of visual objects guide involuntary gaze bias in no-goal condition Open Access.
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Materials and methods
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Modeling perceptual grouping in peripheral vision for information visualization Open Access. The perceptual capacity of concurrent grouping of colored dots by similarity and by dissimilarity Open Access. Contrast dependency of Gestalt proximity principle Open Access. Is configural superiority associated with a cost in processing spatial information? Testing Levelt's laws for interocular grouping using contrast- and luminance-modulated stimuli Open Access. The role of perceptual and contextual information in social event segmentation Open Access.
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Does this grab your attention? A comparison of attention and memory resources deployed during search for artificial and real world objects. Display repetitions do not improve search efficiency in parallel search tasks. Is there a relationship between object recognition ability and visual search efficiency?
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Endogenous oscillatory activity modulates category tuning in ventral temporal cortex Open Access. The balanced act of crossmodal and intramodal plasticity: Enhanced representation of auditory categories in the occipital cortex of early blind people links to reduced temporal coding Open Access. One shot learning of novel object classes Open Access. Building a representation of newly encountered faces: A role for context?
The effect of practice with inverted faces on behavioural and ERP horizontal bias. Does categorization training change the encoding of face identity? Does face-drawing experience enhance face processing abilities? Evidence from hidden Markov modeling of eye movements Open Access. Neural sensitivity to face animacy in childhood Open Access. Categorization of face race and sex in preschool-aged children by means of fast periodic visual stimulation.
Seeing morphing faces of own- and other-race: Recognition of approaching walkers in infancy Open Access. The development of emotion perception strategies in children. Processing speed and fluid intelligence contribute towards decline in facial emotion recognition ability across the adult lifespan Open Access. The Eyes Have It: The effects of aging in neural processing of facial threat cues via magnocellular and parvocellular pathways. The role of response inconsistency in older adults' face discrimination ability Open Access.
Recognizing Faces Despite Variability in Appearance: Any double representation of the fovea? If there are ipsilateral connection from the eye to the LGN, why is there no cortical representation? Population receptive fields in V1 enlarge as luminance is reduced from photopic to scotopic levels Open Access. Why are hV4 maps incomplete in the left visual cortex but complete in the right hemisphere? Dynamics of contrast adaptation in central and peripheral vision Open Access. Examining the effect of context on the watercolor illusion Open Access.
Rendering natural chromatic aberration drives accommodation effectively Open Access. Changes in the pupillary and accommodative responses of the human eye under different illuminations Open Access. Perceptual effects of delayed cone-opponent signals from an extended surround network: In memory of Daniel J.
Ambiguity contributes to grouping of color objects Open Access. Separate color systems for different spatial scales Open Access. Am I going fast enough to enter the traffic circle? Judging the relative velocities of moving objects Open Access. The relative contributions of area MT and the frontal eye fields to the latency of smooth pursuit Open Access.
Humans compensate for the angular acceleration of an approaching ball-in-flight by coupling movement of the gaze vector to the ball's rate of optical expansion. Judgments of a target's speed are more precise when the eyes pursue the target Open Access. Cristina de la Malla; Jeroen B. Reinforcement contingencies affect pursuit target selection in healthy and Parkinson's disease participants Open Access. Anisotropic gaze adaptation in reflexive and voluntary blinks Open Access. Spatial frequencies for accurate categorization and discrimination of facial expressions Open Access. Spatial frequencies for the visual processing of the facial expression of pain Open Access.
Perceived gaze direction affects basic cognitive and affective theory of mind processes — an ERP study Open Access. Are face identity and expression processed independently or interactively? A study controlling stimulus and decisional factors Open Access. Serial reproduction of faces reveals that angry faces are represented as more masculine Open Access. Short exposure duration reveals a smooth transition from priming to adaptation Open Access.
Capacity limitations to extract the mean emotion from multiple facial expressions depend on emotion variance Open Access. The eyes react to emotional faces in the absence of awareness Open Access. Does the composite face illusion modulate breakthrough of eye-regions from CFS? Negative facial expressions are seen as more intense when viewed in the evening Open Access. I See What You Mean: Co-circularity aftereffect in texture perception Open Access. Estimating number from dot displays relies on a visual sense of number — not on size or spacing Open Access.
Binocular integration of simultaneous density contrast Open Access. Different symmetries, different mechanisms Open Access. Modeling visual sensitivity to spatial correlations in gray-level textures Open Access. Interaction between form and motion processing contributes to habituation to distortions of the natural visual world Open Access.
Optimal binocular disparity estimation in the presence of natural depth variation Open Access. Ideal observer for detection of occluding targets in natural scenes in the fovea and periphery. Why do people use suboptimal attentional control strategies? Mechanisms behind learned distractor suppression in visual search Open Access.
Stronger top-down control due to preview visual search produces distractor suppression Open Access. Not Worth the Effort: Distributed displays and larger set sizes encourage efficient deployment of attention in visual search Open Access. A secondary task leads to poorer selection of attentional control strategies Open Access. Feature integration across the dorsal and ventral streams in childhood Open Access.
Visual search slopes are not caused by increased distractor numbers: Insights from visual foraging Open Access. The Flux Capacitor Account: Abolition of Search Asymmetry Open Access. Distractor specificity leads to contextual cueing effects in target-absent search condition Open Access. Task relevance affects the context-dependency of implicit learning Open Access. When does implicitly-learned spatial context bias attention?
Active response inhibition impairs subsequent search efficiency Open Access. The influence of temporal structure on visual search: How prediction shapes top-down and bottom-up attention Open Access. How optimal strategies evolve in memory-guided visual search: Exploring the utility of incidental fixations in dynamic real-world visual search through mobile eye tracking Open Access. The influence of distractor features vs. Detecting and localizing prostate lesions within half a second Open Access. Examining the effects of task-irrelevant emotional scenes and individual differences in personality characteristics on performance in a visual search task Open Access.
Sequential Effects in Confidence Open Access. Serial dependence for discriminating grating orientation at threshold contrast is driven by perceptual decisions Open Access. Perceptual explaining away in depth judgements Open Access. Understanding the accuracy-RT relationship: Model-free approaches and limitations of the drift diffusion model Open Access.
Full distribution over possible choices or information about the most likely choice only? Prospective decision making for dynamic visual stimuli Open Access.