Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Make the pictures speak

"You are not going to be in the room when people look at your pictures. Your picture has to speak for itself"
Joe McNally

That's a quote from Joe McNally's book 'The Moment It Clicks'. I have just found that one out myself, but it took reading those words in a book for me to realize that realization. I had my first 'exhibition' few weeks ago. Lots of people came to see my work as part of the Hackney Wicked festival few weeks ago. It was a brilliant time - I never realised how self-obsessed I had become since I started calling myself a photographer. That's the main thing I noticed when frolicking amongst the guests in our improvised gallery.


The other - more puzzling - thing for me was that people were generally interested in different pictures than I was ready to tell a story about. It's McNally's little piece of wisdom that made everything cristal clear for me. It is not the pictures that have a strong memory for me that are interesting to others, it is the pictures that bring interesting memories to other people that are the most fascinating.


I am not sure how this 'heureka moment' will affect my shooting, but it is surely going to influence the way I think about picking the pictures that are going to be shown to others from pictures that mean a lot to me.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Photo Stock Agencies

Cambridge cycling kitch

I have joined PhotoShelter! Big deal - my first submission was 80% unsuccessful, but I did manage to get 1 out of 5 submitted images accepted to their ProCollection of stock. I am now officially offering my picture(s) for sale. It sounds as trivial as it really is - but somehow it feels like a milestone for me.

My camera has been broken after I dropped it from waist high onto a concrete carpark, so I have had time to think and research. There is actually a lot of agencies that might be more suitable for me than regular stock. Here are some of them (mainly found through lists such as this one):

There are more to be added to this list in the days to come.

Friday, July 25, 2008

Redscale Photography

JPG Magazine has a tutorial on a cool photographic technique. It uses film, so I am unlikely to try it out any time soon, but here it is: redscale photography.

It is about flipping your film so that the "wrong" (i.e. rear) surface is facing the light. That produces quite a heavy reddish cast and burned out colours. It looks very radical, yet seems really easy to try out.

Monday, July 07, 2008

Reflective vs. Shoot-through Umbrellas vs. Softbox

As all strobists do, I experiment with light modifiers. One that I have not tried yet is a softbox. Atlanta-based photographer Zack Arias has a great demonstration of the difference in light coming from a shoot-through umbrella, reflective umbrella and a softbox.

His 5-part tutorial on white backgrounds is great too.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

ProPhotoLife

These videos are really useful for relative beginners (like myself) to see the box-standard studio setups. The guy's website has links to images and text.

It's at least a weekend's worth of stuff to try out.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Sigma 50-150mm f/2.8

Sigma 50-150mm f/2.8 is my main lens when shooting sports. It is a handy reach for a gym (Roller Darby) or a dirtjump/BMX track. Aperture of f/2.8 means that shooting at ISO800 in a badly-lit gym will often enough give me acceptably short times to freeze action with shutter speed and/or use flashes at lower power (so they recycle quicker).

The focal range of 50-150mm on a Nikon DX camera is the same as a 75-225mm on a full-frame (35mm), which is pretty much the standard sports telephoto range all the way from film times - but with this lens it comes in a surprisingly compact package! The price you pay for weight savings is that the lens is DX-only (Sigma call it DC). The HSM version auto-focuses even on Nikon D40/x/60 cameras.

When buying this lens I was replacing the Nikon AF-S 55-200mm f/4.5-5.6 VR which I was disappointed with for a number of reasons. You get what you pay for with that lens, at least in build and physical construction. I dunno why I was expecting a pro lens at a hundred'n'fiddy squid. Aperture of 5.6 is useless for trying to freeze fast moving people with low shutter speed (VR or no-VR has no effect on that). I needed something with a tough build and f/2.8 or faster.

Looking at the options that I could afford and was willing to carry around, I chose this Sigma lens above the more expensive and heavier options. I played with the idea of one of the AF-S 70/80-200mm f/2.8 Nikons or Sigma's version of the same range. I haven't regretted this choice since I got the lens about 6 months ago.

Nothing external moves on this lens - it has internal focusing and zoom. The whole thing feels very solid; lot of the exterior seems to be metal - the two rings each have their own rubber pattern and turn very smoothly. The lens is not sealed against weather, but it does have a lot fewer "entry points" for dirt/moisture than other lenses in this price range. It is also affordable compared to (supposedly much better, but much larger/heavier) Nikon f/2.8 glass which costs 2-3 times as much.

The only thing I mind is no optical stabilization. It would have been useful in a telephoto lens combined with f/2.8 aperture. Focusing from 1m is OK but not great.

I also feel a lot of wrist strain (biking injuries catch up) when using a telephoto with the D40's small grip - although that's something that would be even more of an issue with the Nikon AF-S 70-200mm f/2.8 VR that I was thinking of as my first choice until I found this sturdy little thing at 50% of what I was about to spend.

There are some reviews at:
Pop Photo, ePhoto Zine,
and a Flickr Group

Sigma 10-20mm f/4-5.6

This is just such a fun lens!! You should get it. Proper write-up to follow.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Sigma 30 mm F1.4 EX DC HSM

If you own a Nikon D4o(x) or D60 there is no other lens like this one. Nikon is being a bit slow catching up with itself and are only very few AF-S prime lenses available at this point. Since the above bodies will not focus with lenses without an internal motor, one gets no choice when choosing a 'normal' lens for a D40.

The lens was launched by sigma in February 2005. A lot has been written on various forums about Sigma's quality control, good samples, bad samples and corner softness of this lens. I don't know much about these things. I picked my lens from Jessops and never bothered photographing a chart or even a brick wall. In real-life use I haven't noticed any problems. At f/1.4 the depth of field is really shallow, to the extent that focusing on the tip of somebody's nose will render their ears/eyes soft, but that's the price that has to be paid for being able to take pictures at reasonable shutter speeds in very dark places.
DSC_3859DSC_3860

Shallow depth of field: shot at 1/40s at f/1.4

Optically speaking it is excellent for my purposes. There is no distortion; there is no CA to speak of (anyway you don't really have to deal with CA in low-light shots). The colours are nice and when you stop the lens down a bit it is sharp and crisp. It has more than enough definition for my camera's chip and the bokeh is very acceptable. I haven't noticed much flare even with light sources in the frame; bright lights get a nice eight-pointed star.

Staircase

CA: 1/250 at f/5.6 - some (out of focus) CA is noticeable in the top part of the picture.

The lens belongs to Sigma's EX range - supposedly that means better quality. Personally, I can't say anything about non-EX Sigma lenses - however compared to the kit lens or to the Nikon 55-200mm VR, this lens is much better built. The barrel and the petal-shaped hood are both finishes in nice satin paint, the lens comes in a very good box-shaped cordura case with a belt loop. Although the lens thread is made of plastic, the bayonet and most of the outer barrel is metal and the lens has a reassuringly solid feel. I have knocked mine around a little bit (dropped it with the camera from about waist high on concrete, shot with it in mild rain) and it seems to be holding up very well, except for a few small places where I actually managed to scratch the paint and realized that the outer barrel is indeed made of metal.

This is the second lens I bought for my Nikon D40. It quickly became my every-day lens and I really love it. I would highly recommend it to anyone with a Nikon D40/x or D60 over the kit lens (which is slow and plastic) or the Nikon 50mm f/1.8 which won't auto-focus on those bodies. It is affordable (just about), fast, solidly built and compact. Don't let yourself be put off by a few vocal nit-pickers on certain forums, or look for a different lens if you do take pictures of well lit brick walls. There is no reason you'd want this lens for a Nikon D3 or a Canon 5D (in fact you could not even use it on a full-frame body - because it is a DC lens that does not cover bigger than APS-C size sensors). There is one fewer reason why get this over the cheaper 50mm f/1.8 if your body can auto-focus with non-HSM or non-AF-S lenses (Nikon D80 upwards), except HSM offers reportedly faster focusing. Ken Rockwell says :-) that if you shoot Canon the Canon 28mm f/1.8 EF is a better choice for less money. I don't know about Canon. I know that for entry-level Nikon SLRs it has no competition in its class, but it is very far from a "one-eyed king of the blind"; it is actually a really good lens.

Focal Length: 30 mm
Maximum Aperture: F1.4
Minimum Aperture: F16
Lens Construction: 7 Elements in 7 Groups, 2 ED elements
Angle of View: 45°
Diaphragm: 8 blades
Minimum Focus Distance: 40cm
Maximum Magnification: 1:10.4
Filter Size: 62mm
Dimensions (diameter x length): 76mm x 59mm
Weight: 406.7g

Links to other reviews:


Flickr groups:

Saturday, April 12, 2008

How To Achieve Your Childhood Dreams

This is an AMAZING lecture from an amazing man. It is unbelievable how strong and optimistic Randy Pausch is in this video, this man is dying and yet he is so upbeat and full of positive energy. Next time I think my life is not fair, I am going to re-watch this video.

How To Achieve Your Childhood Dreams by Randy Pausch of Carnegie Mellon University

EDIT: and this one is great too: Time Management by the same guy.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Sigma: 10-20mm f/4-5.6, 1.4/30mm & 50-150mm f/2.8

I have been thinking about posting my own experience on these three lenses by Sigma for some time:

There are some good reviews out there already, but the rest seems to deal with distortion when photographing graphs, chromatic aberration when shooting trees against bright sky or finding "a good copy" of the lens through shooting a brick wall - retuning the lens to the shop - shooting a brick wall... Not the kind of stuff that I like to do. Other thing that bugs me is that most of these reviews are written by people who only just got the lens, tested it over a weekend and did a write-up. Do their opinions still hold months after using the lens in real life? Who knows? Did they have to please the shop/importer of the gear? Not me - I paid for all my equipment.

Over the next three days I will post some real-life experience with the above three babies. I don't have a lab, charts or methodology. I have months/weeks spent taking pictures with the above three instead.

The Future of Flickr

Let's be honest about it: I am a big fan of Flickr. There are lots of sites like that: Picasa, Photobucket, Kodak Gallery, Photoblog, Zooomr and many others. I have used some of them and Flickr suits me the best.

About a year ago, David Hobby of Strobist published a couple of posts (part 1, part 2) on the future of Flickr. About a year ago, he was predicting some exciting changes and so was Dan Heller and a bunch of other folk. These changes are yet to happen. Right now, there does not seem to be much going on in terms of "monetization" of the Flicker archive, at least on the surface. It seems that Flickr turning into the Internet's biggest photo stock archive is more of a microstock site's worst nightmare rather than Yahoo's concrete plan.

It is interesting what other people from the photography business have to say about Flickr and 'serious photography'. One of my favourite blogs, A Photo Editor, had a post about the Flickr stigma earlier this year. It's saying that using Flickr as a portfolio is cheap and 'unprofessional'. I am in no position to argue about it. Flickr was not designed for that purpose anyway. Flickr was bought by Yahoo in 2005 and replaced Yahoo Images in their stable of web services - it was always meant as a photo-sharing tool, rather than a fancy display case. It has evolved since then and pros have been using Flickr as one of their tools, not their only tool though.

One site that allows its users to sell images online is SmugMug. They are a paid site (well, so is Flickr unless you are willing to put up with an upload limit) with impressive options in terms of page layout and presentation. They even offer to transfer your existing Flickr archive to them under the heading "Fleeing Flickr". Admittedly, it's $149 to be able to set your own prices and sell your stuff through them. Dan Heller has a long post about it here.

Why stay with Flickr:

  • it's cheap
  • it gets a lot of traffic
  • it is here to stay (although it's dubious in what shape and form)
  • its groups are a great platform to meet people and get (mostly positive) feedback
  • it is being trawled by (a certain kind of) picture editors every day
  • there is no limit to upload with the cheap "PRO" account, one can upload all sorts of experiments and failed attempts
  • your profile can promote your real portfolio
Why complement Flickr with a professional-looking portfolio
  • own domain name
  • better control over the presentation layer
  • tighter focus on your best images
  • it shows dedication and attention to detail
  • you may be able to sell images directly (but it will cost you)
How about microstock? Well, read this... Making money from pictures is not my main priority at this point, but I will start looking into solutions on making my portfolio into something more presentable and post my experience here.

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Slow Leadership

Success as a path - not a destination. Inspiring read.

It's a shame that some people will never get over the fact that doing anything for success is bullshit - doing something that makes you happy is important; success may be a nice bonus if you get real good at doing whatever you enjoy. Which is not so unlikely, because most people out there don't enjoy what they do for living. It's easy to progress doing something fun. If success does not come in the end, at least you will have spent your life doing things you enjoyed. Work to live - don't live to work!

Become a Sports Illustrated shooter!

This on-line game is great:

http://www.directdaniella.com/

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Krtecek fotografem

This is the stuff I grew up on - Krtecek. I don't remember this episode from back then, but there are over 50 episodes in this series. This one is about photography:



Film-making meets education. Zdenek Miler, successful Czech illustrator - the creator of Krtecek, was asked by the Czechoslovak Ministry of Education in 1950s to make a film explaining how linen was made. He produced How The Mole Got His Trousers (Jak krtek ke kalhotkám přišel) in 1956, which became an instant success internationally. Other episodes followed.

My mom grew up with Krtek, I grew up with Krtek and my kids one day will grow up with krtek. Fantastic.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

LRG: Riots of Spring

DSC_7753web

DSC_7520bweb

London Rollergirls are on: www.londonrollergirls.com/ You can also find them on Facebook.

The above pictures brought a lot of traffic to my Flickr profile. On most days I get about a dozen views, whenever I do a major posting I get a few hundred in the 24 hours that follow, when I posted a batch of 35 Rollergirls pictures I got over 1600 views in 48 hours and it's still counting.

I don't think that the Rollergirl pictures are my best pictures; I did not even tell that many people about them; still they generated about 50% of the number of views that all my other pictures managed to make over the space of 7 months. What's that? I am sure there is an important lesson to be learned here... somewhere. What is it? I refuse to believe that all this traffic is due to the subject (good looking girls in short skirts) - there must be something else to it as well!

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Eastbourne Train Station

This weekend I went to Eastbourne, Sussex to hike across the 7 Sisters Cliff. It was fun - well recommended as an easy day trip from London.

Eastbourne Train Station (DSC_7415)

This picture is just a quick over-the-shoulder grab shot. I was getting on the train and the colour of the sky was so good - so I just turned around and zoomed out very quickly during the 1/8sec at f/5.6 exposure (ISO 400). IMO: It came out amazingly! It was taken with Sigma 10-20mm; it is such a fun lens to play with. Note: this picture is 100% Photoshop-free.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Friday, March 14, 2008

:-)


Funny. That's me!

As seen on XKCD.

New Studio

London's full of warehouses converted to flats. They are surprisingly easy to find. I just moved into one and there is so much space...



Strobist Exercise: DSC_6283

Lighting info: no ambient light, 2 strobes (SB-24 and SB-26) one gelled blue, one with a DIY honeycomb.
Exposure info: Nikon D40 with Sigma f2.8/50-150mm at 50mm (1/30s, f/8, ISO 200), manual focus

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Composite shoot

This is a great post about making a very complex image. I always wonder how it's done for this type of picture. There are other great ideas on Brian Niven's blog.


There is also a really cool video on YouTube documenting Brian's workflow (well, sort of) on the photoshoot of Branden Steineckert, drummer from Rancid, and his dog.



Faces of Hackney??

I came across this website: Faces of Sunset Boulevard. It's amazing. I so want to make one like this about Hackney.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Lighting Schemes - pictures worth thousands of pictures...

I have got this irresistible urge to try and reverse-engineer all photos in glossy magazines that I see. I can't help it, but to keep on analyzing shades, catch-lights and specular highlights for ages, just to try and guess how a picture was made. It's a condition that was only to be expected after my first strobe arrived, but it is getting worse.

Websites like this one and this one make it a bit easier to get the few basic setups visualized.

Friday, February 29, 2008

Brand New Beat

DSC_5233

Surprise
Sigma 1.4/30mm
available light


DSC_5260

Ellen and Nicola
Sigma 1.4/30mm
off-camera strobe, bounced off low celing


DSC_5402

How do you switch this thing on...?
Sigma 10-20mm
off-camera strobe, bounced off low celing


DSC_5405

Staropramen
Sigma 10-20mm
off-camera strobe, bounced off low celing


DSC_5187

DJ @wrk
Sigma 10-20mm
off-camera strobe, bounced off low celing

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Studio in a box - Strobist style

My lightstands and umbrellas arrived today. It took just over a week from the US (mpex.com) and there was no import duty to cover. The total price including postage was about what I would have paid for identical stands in the UK + I got two collapsible umbrellas (that nobody seems to stock here) thrown in.

Wicked. Can't wait to go home and play.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Thinking Business.

Photography is a hobby for me, but I do think about making some side income from it in the medium term. I am not ready to leave my day job yet, but posts like this (part 2 here and someone else's thoughts here) make me think.

As much as I'd like to live the life of Chase Jarvis in 5 years time, I don't think it will be as easy as he describes (stop being a ski bum, make good pics, sell pics for a good price, get rich...).

Don Giannatti has an informative page on the subject too.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Nunhead Cemetery

Nunhead cemetery photoes - more to follow.

multiplicity


The above picture is a combination of 7 pictures that were taken off a tripod to keep the framing constant. There were two flashes pointed at Sara's face to avoid dark shadows. I am not completely happy with the whole thing, but it was a funny experiment.

Another Self-portrait - Testing the Honeycomb Snoot

King of my Castle

Monday, February 04, 2008

How far can you go...

Lesson #1: Stealing straws to make a snoot grid can get you chucked out of the Big Chill House in King's X.

I have never been thrown out from a club before. I am a nice guy, until I start drinking Guinness with whiskey. Then I turn reckless and irresponsible.

Lesson #2: It's totally worth it to suffer for your art. Think of Van Gogh!

Is this a bizarre post or what?

If you want some more pictures of how to make a honeycomb snoot - look here at Roland-Thor's Flickr page.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Good Weekend for Riding

It was a great weekend in London weather-wise. I am so glad I did not miss the opportunity and captured some of the moments. More on my Flickr BMX set.


DSC_4174


P.S. That Sigma 10-20mm lens is such a fun piece of glass and plastic!!! Full writeup of my experience with that later this week.

Critical Mass London - January 2008

Critical Mass bikeride swept through the streets of London last Friday (25/01/2008). It was great fun. Despite the freezing cold, about 300 people turned up. The police played their funny games (as per usual) using traffic lights to their benefit to breakup the group along the route. Nevertheless the vibe was very positive and I am pretty sure we all enjoyed ourselves. Nobody got hurt, nobody got into a fight, just a few cabbies got really pissed off.

More info about the London Critical Mass bike rides can be found at criticalmasslondon.org.uk. As usually there are some pictures on my Flickr page.

DSC_4027

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Colour your light

There is a great website that sells coloured gels for flashes and ball-bungee ties in the UK. My order arrived one day after placing it and the price was more than reasonable. Jason, the owner of FlasGels.co.uk, makes 3 sizes (2 strips + 1 circular) of all sorts of coloured gels for our strobes from Lee gels, with or without velcro strips. If you are into Strobist stuff and live in Europe/UK this is the best source of this kind of stuff - I could not recommend Jason's business more wholeheartedly.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Obey the Plagiarist...?

There is an interesting article on Shepard Fairey claimng that he is nothing but a bad plagiarist. I am not sure that one can discredit 20+ years (yes, that's right: the first Andre the Giant stickers appeared in 1986) of hard work on the basis that:

Obey "imagery appears as though it’s xeroxed or run through some computer graphics program; that is to say, it is machine art that any second-rate art student could produce."
That is a silly argument IMO. Nevertheless it is an interesting read.


Later update: JustSeeds.Org has a lot more thought provoking take on the issue. Fairey is probably more of a marketing person than an artist...

obey - logo


The reason I am interested is that lads of OBEY posters came up around Old Street and Hoxton just before Christmas. I later found out that Shepard Fairey was doing a couple of walls in Cargo in East London. There are a few more OBEY pics in my Flickr Streetart set.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Brighton Beach Grin

I have been neglecting this place for a while, because I have been extremely busy at work. I have been working on a "knowledge sharing solution" for my consultants. It seems to be coming to a conclusion at last.

This is a shot I took last weekend on Brighton beach near the West Pier. It taught me about the importance of keeping my mind open and experimenting. More on that later, but let's just say that my Flickr statistics went from a few dozen a day to almost three hundred a day after I posted this one:

brighton pier 03

P.S. Just to make it 100% clear: no photoshop, no combining of two exposures - just a bit of a long exposure combined with me jumping around with a handheld SB-26. I love this off-camera flash malarkey. Like David Hobby says: Less Gear - More light - Better pictures.

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Old Strobes - New Strobes

I've mentioned Strobist.com in my previous posts - that's because I absolutelly love that site. Its creator and owner, David Hobby, operates under the moto 'LESS GEAR. MORE BRAIN. BETTER LIGHT.' Unlike Ken Rockwell, David gives out advice that is applicable to a wide range of other people (not just him) and encourages his readers to spend less money on photography. I think this is really unique - most other photogs out there use their blogs to brag about their kit; David shows people how using your brain(!!), few bits of paper, elastic bands and old flashes can dramatically improve your pictures.

Therefore, when I was in the market for a flash I safely ignored Rockwell's praise for the tiny SB-400 and spent less on a much more versatile SB-26 (second hand on eBay). It goes without saying that I would love to have a bank of SB-800s. However, being able to go through a big part of my learning curve for a fraction of the cost is really cool. Do not believe Ken Rockwell when he says that: "Other flash features [other than those present on the SB-400] are gimmicks that get in the way of taking pictures." He could not be more wrong in my opinion! A flash that can only be turned ON/OFF is severely limiting to the photographer (me, you). Don't be fooled by simplicity - it is a double-edged sword.

Another website that I found really useful is the photography page on MIR (Malaysian Internet Resource). They list a lot of really useful information about components of the Nikon system including my 1980s Nikon SB-26. Thereby they are making shopping for old stuff on eBay a lot easier.

Thank you guys.

Saturday, January 05, 2008

Powerty Wizards

I have started experimenting with small-flash off-camera lighting late last year. For this, I am getting loads of ideas from Strobist.Com.

My 'Poverty Wizards' have just arrived from Hong Kong yesterday. Until this point in time, I have been using the built-in flash of my D40 to trigger old Nikon SB-27 flashes via their optical slave function. While this allowed me to add off-camera flashes to my picture taking at no cost - 'Powerty Wizards' from Gadget Infinity will allow me to take things a step further yet.

I decided to take (what I considered) a risk of not ordering the triggers from Kenro UK, instead going closer to the source and ordering directly from Gadget Infinity. It was cheap as chips, a set of one transmitter and two receivers cost circa GBP 30, compared to more than double that for an identical product branded/marketed by Kenro here in the UK. The delivery from HK took about 3 weeks (over Christmas) and since the package was labelled 'Gift' - there were no customs payments to be covered.

I picked the 16-channel triggers without a hot-shoe mount. Now, I need to get some
sync cables from Flash Zebra and batteries. I will post my experience here.

This is one of the first pictures I took with an off-camera flash. It's my longest friend Standa and his dog David Lyster:
Three dodos.

Christmas is over

Awright. Christmas is over - it's time for resolutions...

Nah, I don't do resolutions, but since it's January is the time to start new things. I spent the last few months looking around Flickr and blogs like Strobist, ChaseJarvis and A Photographer's Sketchbook. Now I want my own blog.

Last year was the year of major changes for me - moving to London, realizing that I AM going bold and joining the Nikon family by getting my first SLR. Let's hope this year is just as busy and challenging as 2007 was.

OK -this will do for a first post. Let's see what I come up with next time.