This roundup revisits some of the most memorable seascape photography projects that we’ve featured on Feature Shoot throughout the years.
“The Australian ocean photographer Ray Collins almost stumbled into his profession as an oceanographer by accident. He and a few surfer buddies went to the beach eight years ago to take pictures. In his spare time, he began to take pictures of the seascapes and surfers.
A later injury to his knee led him into full-time ocean photography. Since then, he has found his passion and returns to his favorite beach each morning before dawn, to capture the breaking of the waves for his series and his recently published book found at sea.”
Warren Keelan’s seascape photography
makes the waves look like brushesstrokes.
“Having lived along the coast for his entire life in Australia, photographer Warren Keelan is never too far away from the ocean. Warren has always been fascinated by the ocean’s natural beauty, its ever-changing shapes and its unpredictable nature.
When he set out to capture images of the intricacies and beauty of ocean waves moving, what he captured with his camera were images that appeared as though they had painted by hand using a brush. His photography focused on the repeating patterns, textures, colors, and undulations illuminated by sunlight. This culminated in his ever-evolving Waves That Look Like Brushstrokes.