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Fraser
Johnston

Fraser Johnston is a filmmaker and Emmy-nominated Director of Photography based in Hobart. He specialises in natural history, science and documentary storytelling. He works commercially under the name Spectral Media and has worked on broadcast productions for National Geographic, Netflix and Terra Mater, as well as numerous online short form films and factual web series. Find Fraser's work online at spectralmedia.com.au and follow him on social media @Spectralpics (Instagram) and Spectral Media (Facebook).


Fraser Johnston is a filmmaker and Emmy-nominated Director of Photography based in Hobart. He specialises in natural history, science and documentary storytelling. He works commercially under the name Spectral Media and has worked on broadcast productions for National Geographic, Netflix and Terra Mater, as well as numerous online short form films and factual web series. Find Fraser's work online at spectralmedia.com.au and follow him on social media @Spectralpics (Instagram) and Spectral Media (Facebook).


TASMANIAN VOICES

Wild swimming – an introduction

by Fraser Johnston
08 Oct 2020

Fraser Johnston is a filmmaker and Emmy-nominated Director of Photography based in Hobart. He specialises in natural history, science and documentary storytelling. He works commercially under the name Spectral Media and has worked has worked on...

Tasmanian Voices

Fraser Johnston

by Fraser Johnston
08 Oct 2020

Fraser Johnston is a filmmaker and Emmy-nominated Director of Photography based in Hobart. He specialises in natural history, science and documentary storytelling. He works commercially under the name Spectral Media and has worked has worked on...

Wilderness

Push Day

by Fraser Johnston
31 Aug 2020

Push Day is the story of a cave diving expedition to an unexplored region of Australia’s deepest cave. Pushing is a term used by cavers to describe the act of going beyond the mapped areas of the cave to find new areas. These kinds of expeditions...

Wilderness

Deep, dangerous and unseen

by Fraser Johnston
28 Aug 2020

We are walking through the forest, along the ancient tramway where bullock teams once hauled the timber used to build colonial Hobart. Here and there, ghosts are visible through the undergrowth: we see a collapsed brick wall covered in moss; an old beer bottle, half buried in the forest floor; a giant tree stump, notches cut by the rough hands of convicts. Ferns reach out from the overgrown verges and brush our faces with the rain clinging to their fronds. My pack, filled with lead weights and diving equipment, pushes me down into the muddy hollows that will one day fall through to join the giant cave system beneath our feet.

We pay our respects to the Tasmanian Aboriginal people as the traditional and original owners and continuing custodians of lutruwita, and acknowledge elders past and present.

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