Panama Through Amador Marina: A Moving Perspective
Photographing a marina is always an exercise in patience and precision, but Amador hits differently. The light shifts fast, reflections wander, boats never stay still, and every detail ends up telling a piece of the story. I’ve been exploring this place with my Canon 5D Mark III, switching between my usual lenses: the Pentacon 29mm, the Canon 50mm f/1.8, the Canon 70-300, and the Praktica 135 f/2.8. Each one forces me to see the scene from a different angle.
The Pentacon 29mm gives me that vintage character soft contrast, gentle rendering—making the marina feel more human, more grounded.
The Canon 50mm at f/2.8 helps me bring order to the chaos, compress just enough of the scene, and capture the atmosphere of the sunset without losing detail.
With the Canon 70-300, I hunt for isolated details, life, gestures… even the sharp stares of the birds around the docks.
And the Praktica 135 f/2.8 delivers pure optical nostalgia: softer contrast, vibrant tones, and a background compression that plays beautifully with the masts and the reflections on the water.
This place is dynamic, clean, visually intense. Amador Marina forces you to think, to chase the light, to readjust every second. And that challenge is welcome.
Between anchored boats, shifting reflections, and Panama’s ever-changing weather, every shot feels like a small victory.
I’ll be uploading more images. I’m building a full series that captures this area from different perspectives and with a range of lenses. Amador has a lot to say… and I’m just starting to listen.









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