FTD Photography

FTD Photography 📸 From service to lens: 26-year army veteran capturing moments.

📍 Andover Based

🇬🇧 Supporting UK Armed Forces Charities

Finally managed to get my first edit up from the  photo shoot. Meet Walter the Great Grey Owl ❤️
20/05/2026

Finally managed to get my first edit up from the photo shoot.

Meet Walter the Great Grey Owl ❤️

19/05/2026

One of my favourite lone trees on - a stormy sky, long grass swaying framing perfect symmetry. 🌳🌬️

11/05/2026

Before cameras existed, the only way to preserve what something looked like was to pay an artist to paint or draw it. Only the wealthy could afford portraits. Common people left no visual record of their faces. Entire generations of human beings lived and died without anyone ever knowing what they looked like.

Photography changed that completely and we have been so surrounded by it for so long that we forgot to be amazed.

The first permanent photograph was taken in 1826 by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce. It required an eight hour exposure time. Within a few decades exposure times had dropped to seconds. Within a century you could take a photo in a fraction of a second, develop it in minutes, and hold a physical record of a frozen moment in your hands.

Now consider what a modern camera sensor actually does. It contains hundreds of millions of tiny photodetectors packed onto a silicon chip smaller than your thumbnail. Each one measures the intensity of light hitting it at the exact moment the shutter opens. That data is processed by a computer, converted into numbers, compressed using algorithms, and written to a storage card in milliseconds. The entire process from light entering the lens to a saved image happens faster than a human blink.

And the lens itself is a marvel before any of that even begins. Glass ground to optical precision, coated with microscopic layers of material that reduce glare and color distortion, arranged in specific configurations to bend light rays onto the sensor in exactly the right way.

We did all of this from rocks pulled out of the ground.

Every photo you have ever taken of someone you love is a moment that would have been completely invisible to history for 99 percent of human existence. Gone the instant it passed.

Now it lasts forever. Pulled from sand and metal and the accumulated knowledge of generations.

That is not ordinary. That is one of the most profound things we have ever done.

Having a play around with my super macro and   kit capturing pictures of the rarely flowering Tradescantia Zebrina. Thes...
07/05/2026

Having a play around with my super macro and kit capturing pictures of the rarely flowering Tradescantia Zebrina. These rare flowers only flower during the day and do not last long at all.

02/05/2026
Last nights     rising over Fairways, Andover.Canon EOS 90dCanon 600mm TelephotoLuminar Neo
02/05/2026

Last nights rising over Fairways, Andover.

Canon EOS 90d
Canon 600mm Telephoto
Luminar Neo

02/05/2026

Last nights rising over Fairways, Andover.

Canon EOS 90d
Canon 600mm Telephoto
Luminar Neo
SwipeMix

Bluebells from my garden ❤️😎
24/04/2026

Bluebells from my garden ❤️😎

Last nights   over Fyfield rapeseed fields ❤️
23/04/2026

Last nights over Fyfield rapeseed fields ❤️

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