Category: Photo Geek

Snow Time

February 14th, 2010 Permalink

A view out my office window. Not a terribly engaging view, but this was shot over 27 hours. (Details below.)

Details: I put a Canon EOS 1D Mark II N with a EF 16-35 mm f/2.8 L USM lens on a tripod and pointed it out my window. The camera was powered with an AC adapter (so I didn’t have to worry about the battery dying) and tethered to a laptop running Canon’s EOS Utility. I programed it to take one photo every minute and left the camera in aperture priority mode. The only hiccup was the overnight time exposure grew to longer than one minute, so it started skipping minutes. The music is a generic loop created in Garage Band and the editing was done in Final Cut Pro.

Things I learned: I needed to shield the lens better, as it picked up reflections in the window’s glass. A little gaffer’s tape and some black cloth would have solved that. After the first few test frames I removed the screen from the window – with the wide angle view and extensive depth of field, I was seeing the pattern of the screen in the frames.

Casino Chaos

February 9th, 2010 Permalink

Last set … until I go again, next year.

Las Vegas, the little of it I saw, was just chaotic and depressing – hollow people chain smoking and hitting the play button, over and over. Visually, there was more that I didn’t see until I was gone, I think. The advantage of going somewhere for the first time is you see a lot and, if you’re committed to your visual mission, it’s all fresh and available.

My own disadvantage was wandering downtown with two new friends. Thankfully, they were extremely patient with my random pauses and diversions and never left me behind, though they probably would have seen more if they had. Next year I’ll either wander alone or prep them better. Maybe offer up a night-life-lights shooting lesson or something.

So on to the last two …

Canon PowerShot G10, 15.7 mm, ISO 200, 1/25, f/3.5

Even the Denny’s is fancy there …

Canon PowerShot G10, 6.8 mm, ISO 200, 1/13, f/2.8

Somewhere in those two frames is the photo I want to make next year. I got mentally close to it but didn’t make the image this time. It’s about light and opulence and grandeur and monstrosity and irony. I got some of the light, a little opulence, some grandeur and a touch of monstrosity, but I never got the irony. I need to find the irony.

I guess I’ll insert a little tech talk here … I had only one camera with me (okay, two if you include the cell phone camera) – a Canon PowerShot G10. It’s a great camera and I’ve been very happy shooting with it. It’s light, compact, durable and flexible. It gives me the controls I need to get the images I usually want.

The small sensor allows for very short focal lengths which allows for very low shutter speeds. But that small sensor is an issue for me – with those ultra-short focal lengths, everything has too much depth of field for me and there’s no significant lens compression. (You’ll note almost all of these were kept below an ISO of 200 – above that, the color saturation falls off as the noise goes up. It’s better than most of the other cameras in its class, but it’s no full framer, that’s for sure.)

So here’s my hope for next year … given why I’m going to Las Vegas (a convention), and the limited time I’ll have to get out, I don’t think I’ll haul all the big Canon cannons around. What I’m hoping to acquire is an Olympus E-P2, with the Panasonic 20 mm f/1.7 lens. (Why not the Oly 17 mm f/2.8 lens? I think I’d like the wider field of view – 17 mm vs. 20 mm – but the extra stop and a half – f/1.7 vs. f/2.8 – is what I’m really after.) To that I’d love to have a long, fast lens – maybe an old Olympus 90 mm f/2.0 Macro with an adapter (but that’s pretty pricey) or their 85 mm f/2.0. If I were to pocket a third lens, it’d probably be a Voigtlander – maybe the 50 mm f/1.5 or the 40 mm f/1.4, both would be great for low light portraits.

Every photographer searches for their right combination of equipment, the gear that disappears in their hand. I had those tools a few times (my Leica M4-P with a 35 mm Summicron saw the world the way I saw it), I’m not there right now.

So, see that grass? It’s greener …

Yellow Box, Blue Sky

December 9th, 2009 Permalink

When the Flip Ultra camcorder came out a few years ago, I made a comment that it was a good tool with great potential, but it needed one more feature. Flip has pushed out a few more generations of the camera, getting better with each revision, but not really pushing the envelope on what it could become.

A few months ago, Kodak (KODAK!) did what Flip should have done – they added a mic jack to the side of their version. They also added a few other things (removable memory cards, four video resolutions and even the ability to shoot a 5 megapixel still).  It took me a while, but yesterday a loaner showed up from Big Yellow up north so I could figure out if this is the teaching camera I’ve been lusting after for an intro to multimedia class we desperately need.

There’s a lot of testing to be done, but I popped off a few stills on the way to the car. Will this rival a 5D Mark II or a D3s? Uh, no. But it also costs less than 1/15th of the cheaper of those options.

And having been raised on Kodachrome and Tri-X, there’s a certain warmth to opening a Big Yellow box again.

More to come …

Kodak Zi8, 6.3 mm, ISO 50, 1/320, f/2.8

Kodak Zi8, 6.3 mm, ISO 50, 1/320, f/2.8

Kodak Zi8, 6.3 mm, ISO 50, 1/213, f/2.8

Kodak Zi8, 6.3 mm, ISO 50, 1/213, f/2.8

Many Messages

May 20th, 2009 Permalink

The folks who draw icons must have fun. They get assigned to illustrate something and then I imagine them sitting around on a Friday afternoon, creating icons for other random things … not that these are random, but it’s what prompted the thought.

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Spikes

May 16th, 2009 Permalink

This is an image I may have made before, in a previous blog-life. But I liked it then, so I did it again. With my earlier arrivals at work, I park in a different part of my lot so I don’t walk through the Ethno Botanical Garden much anymore. 

But what I really like about this photo is the RGB histogram …

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Fall of the Season

November 11th, 2008 Permalink

Aside from winter, fall is my favorite season. Spring is okay, summer, too, though not here in Georgia – too damned hot. And winter only if it’s a really good one – 175 inches or more of snow, deep cold snaps that send you huddling on the couch with cocoa. 

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Thanks to Khoi Vinh’s awesome blog, Subtraction (I read it just for the design of the page sometimes), for sending me to this image of a real-world Photoshop canvas.

Long Weekend Day

October 5th, 2008 Permalink

Every semester, I find a way to torture myself. Not in some metaphysical, psychological way (that I do daily), but in some truly pain inducing, sleep depriving holistic way. Saturday was this semester’s attempt.

I succeeded.

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Almost, But Not Quite

September 10th, 2008 Permalink

Given all the other stuff that I haul around, I don’t always carry one of my DSLRs. (I know, heresy …) But I always have something, usually this little Canon G9. It produces some amazing images and gives me a level of control virtually unmatched in the point and shoot realm.

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Waiting in the media room for the start of the Central Michigan-Georgia game, a student asked me where I got my credential holder. Was given out at the beginning of last season, I think. He nods, looking longingly at it. Seated across from me is the director of photography from the local paper, a guy I like and trust. He confirmed it was given out last year, but said he couldn’t use it. 

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