Solitude: Notes on a Long Exposure of a Quiet Coastline. An open-edition print from the continued Slow Water series.

There is a particular kind of morning at the coast where nothing wants to be photographed. The light is even, the sky is a flat sheet of grey, and the sea does what the sea always does — it moves, constantly, distractingly. Most photographers pack up and drive home. I set up a tripod.

Georgetown II was made on a morning like that.

“GEORGETOWN II” ©David Butler 2026.

The making of the image

The frame you're looking at is a single exposure of roughly 3 minutes. A ten-stop neutral density filter cut the light to a trickle; the shutter stayed open long enough that every wave that entered the frame became an average of itself. What the camera recorded isn't what I saw with my eyes. It's a longer, calmer truth that only exists in aggregate.

Long exposures of water are usually described as smoothing the sea, but that undersells what's actually happening. The sea didn't smooth out. It accumulated. 3 minutes of tide and breath and foam layered on top of each other until what was left was a silver mist — the memory of movement rather than the movement itself.

The rocks, of course, didn't move. They were there before the shutter opened and they were there after it closed, and the white surf around them is all that remains of everything that happened in between. I like that asymmetry. The permanent things stay sharp. The restless things become atmosphere.


The print itself

PAPER: Hahnemühle Photo Rag 308gsm — 100% cotton, matte, archival. Printed with pigment inks rated 100+ years.

EDITION: Open edition.

SHIPPING: Rolled in an archival tube within 10 business days. Complimentary shipping in the continental US.

Designers working on projects — get in touch for trade pricing and custom sizes.

Georgetown II Georgetown II Georgetown II Georgetown II Georgetown II Georgetown II
Quick View
Georgetown II
from $85.00

Georgetown, Maine- Looking out over the Atlantic Ocean.

The long exposure in the camera captures the time passing with the tide, while transforming the violent crashing of the waves into a tranquil and calm scene.

*Listed price is for print only, frame is not included.

Custom sized prints and framing are available upon request.


A closing note

I don't think photographs need to do a lot. I think the best ones give you somewhere to stand for a minute, and then let you walk away.

Quietude was made to do that. If your home or a client's home could use a wall to rest on, I'd be glad to send one your way.

David Butler

Boston Product Photographer David Butler.

https://www.davidbutlerstudios.com
Next
Next

like the wave.