A Rope, a Tree, a Mirror of Sky – Myall Lakes at Dawn in Landscape Photography
The soft light of dawn at Myall Lakes (Worimi Country) offers a quiet, immersive palette for landscape photography—where reflections linger and forms lean into silence.
Paperbarks, sheoaks, and the edge of still water
This series was captured along the lakes’ edge in the early morning, where paperbark trees and she-oaks shape the shoreline. Calm waters, blurred by slow shutter speed, create an ethereal surface that mirrors branches, fallen logs, and soft blush skies. Each image captures a small, quiet moment—rooted in place and shaped by time.
The weight of stillness
A rope swing hangs from a leaning paperbark. A fallen tree rests gently across mirrored water. A ragged she-oak clings to the shoreline, silhouetted against a barely-there pink sky. These are portraits of a landscape shaped by wind, water, and stillness.
Seeing and feeling through the lens
For landscape photographers, this region invites still observation. Reflections become subtle impressions. Each composition is built not just from what’s seen, but from what is felt—the weight of silence, the lean of trees, the breath between tides.
Photographed on Worimi Country, where freshwater lakes, coastal forests, and saltwater meet—land cared for by the Worimi people for thousands of generations.