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Posts Tagged ‘Iceland’

Video: iPhone records its dramatic fall from a plane over Iceland, is recovered a year later

05 Oct

Iceland Photo Tours pilot and photographer Haukur Snorrason has shared a video showing the descent of his iPhone 6S Plus as it fell from a small plane located about 60m (200ft) over Iceland. The incident happened more than a year ago; given the height and frozen tundra beneath, Snorrason had assumed at the time that his tiny iPhone hadn’t survived the fall.

Around 13 months after the phone was dropped, a group of hikers discovered the device in a patch of moss, which had cushioned the blow and enabled the phone to survive the drop. The device powered on when tested, revealing Snorrason’s name and making it possible to reunite him with his lost device.

In addition to being nearly entirely functional (only the microphone was damaged), Snorrason discovered that the iPhone had recorded and saved a video of its rapid descent from the plane. The device landed face down on the moss, protecting the display from the elements while leaving the camera exposed to record the bright blue sky and Sun until its battery died.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Nature Sets the Scene in Hot River, Iceland

27 Sep

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Capturing the ‘Cape’: A beautiful piece of Iceland you probably haven’t seen

10 Aug

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In 2013 I was accepted for a one month artist in residence at the Baer Art Center in northern Iceland. After a wonderful month the other four artists and myself were taken on a boat trip up the coast, right past where we were staying, to the see “Cape” just north of Hofsos, a large land mass of mostly stone with a huge cliff at one end. I don’t know that I’ve been the same since.

Although I’d been told to bring what gear I had I was totally unprepared for what we saw that day. The geological phenomena of these rock columns of basalt being thrust up in ancient times from a violent volcano was just unbelievable, both beautiful and horrific at the same time.

I am writing this for DPReview while back in Iceland, as I was asked back by Baer to teach a photo workshop. Last week we repeated the boat trip up the coast of the fjord and I found myself again in front of the remarkable cliff face of the “Cape”. It was magic once again.

The job was, vey simply, not to screw up. Working to hold the camera steady on a rocking boat, to keep shutter settings fast enough, to make sure I was focused best for my subject and aperture setting and to “get everything”, as there was no going back that day.

To get to the Cape you’ll need to hire an excursion boat in the harbor in Hofsos, in northern Iceland.

Not to be missed.


Neal Rantoul is a career artist and educator. After 10 years teaching at Harvard and 30 years as head of the Photo Program at Northeastern University in Boston, he retired from teaching in 2012. You can find out more about him and see more of his work by visiting his website.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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‘Ethereal’ takes you to Iceland in 4K

16 Dec

‘Ethereal’ was shot by Evosia Studios in the remote Icelandic Highlands and took two years to put together. This video brings aerial cinematography together with time-lapse (a combination you don’t see too often) to produce some pretty darn amazing footage. Each frame was shot as a Raw photo with the DJI Inspire 1 drone. The individual photos were then processed using LRTimelapse, Lightroom and After Effects. The film was then edited in 4K/60p in Premiere Pro.

The end result is spectacular to say the least – turn off the lights and check this one out in HD to really take in the full experience.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus E-M1 Mark II real-world samples gallery and Iceland gallery update

13 Nov
Straight-out-of-camera JPEG – check out the Raw processed image in the gallery. Olympus 25mm F1.2 Pro, ISO 1600, 1/250 sec, F1.2. Photo by Carey Rose

As Olympus’ top-end flagship, the OM-D E-M1 Mark II isn’t small for a Micro Four Thirds camera, but it’s built to be incredibly tough and has room for some impressive technology on the inside and abundant, customizable controls on the outside.

We soaked it at a frisbee match, cranked the ISO at a rock show, took it to the streets and the studio, and tried out the new High Res Shot mode (we even tried it with a live subject with questionable success). Take a look at how the camera’s handled a variety of situations as we continue to work through our forthcoming review.

We’ve also gotten preliminary Adobe Camera Raw support, and have updated our previous Iceland gallery with some new Raw conversions.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Olympus E-M1 Mark II Iceland sample gallery

02 Nov

From waterfalls to the Northern Lights, Iceland is full of natural beauty. And, in October, lots and lots of rain. We’ve put together a sample gallery of photos taken over four days with Olympus’ new OM-D E-M1 Mark II on a company-sponsored trip.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Drone footage captures the raw power of Iceland

18 Oct

Bjarke Hvorslev and Kristian Kettner shot the above film entirely with a Sony a7r ii camera mounted to a DJI Phantom 4 drone during a 6 day trip to Iceland. The film really does an amazing job depicting the raw beauty and power that Iceland has become so famous for. Turn down the lights, crank up the sound and be sure to watch this in HD.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Drone footage of aurora over Iceland is just what your weekend needs

27 Aug

Maybe it’s unreasonably hot where you live, like it is here. Maybe you just smashed your phone screen on a sidewalk (and you KNEW you should have paid for that Apple Care). It’s none of our business why, but if your troubled mind needs soothing, we found just the thing for it: this video of the Northern Lights shot from a drone soaring over Iceland. 

The footage comes from OZZO Photography and a Sony a7S II with Sigma 20mm F1.4 strapped to a DJI Matrice 600 (that’s a $ 4600 pro-grade drone, for those keeping score at home). It all adds up to one sweet, nerve-calming minute and a half.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Take a look around: traditional stills versus VR in Iceland

13 Jul

Introduction

Time to relax – does VR capture lower the barrier for creating memorable vacation content? Let’s take a look. Nikon D810 + Nikon AF-S 35mm F1.4G @ F2 | 1/8000 sec | ISO 200. Photo by Carey Rose

Back in April, two friends and I took a trip to Iceland, spending eight days circumnavigating the island via its famous ring road. Happily, around that time we were looking for some updated content for our review of the Nikon D810, so I took one along and wrote up a shooting experience.

In general, though, I enjoy documenting my travels even when I’m just traveling for fun. I find it to be a nice creative recharge, simply photographing for myself, in my style, with my choice of equipment. Of course, the D810 I borrowed wasn’t my personal equipment, but it was near-ideal for the sorts of situations I found myself in (plus, handling-wise, it isn’t quite so different from the D700 I was originally planning on bringing).

But now we’ve got VR technology beginning to make waves in the consumer electronics industry. What’s more, capture devices are getting more accessible: the Ricoh Theta S retails for just $ 349, making it a cheaper proposition than most DSLRs, as well as my secondhand X100 and Ricoh GR, which are my usual go-to cameras for casual photography.

The Ricoh Theta S carries an MSRP of $ 349, and offers full 360 stills and video capture as well as smartphone integration.

At its core, the act of taking a photograph requires some translation of the 360-degree setting in which the photographer stands into a two-dimensional window, for viewing on the web or in print. But 360-degree VR capture changes that. When you’re literally just capturing the entirety of a scene around you, is there value in it for other viewers? When you’ve removed one of the most basic creative tenets of capturing a photograph, what are you left with?

During our time in Iceland, my friends and I were lucky enough to have the opportunity to borrow a Ricoh Theta S as well. Without any prior experience, we tried to use it as we did our DSLRs – to see if and how it could offer value to us above and beyond our traditional camera kits.

Click-and-drag on a desktop or laptop to view the 360 footage. All ‘traditional’ photographs by Carey Rose, and all Theta S 360 images by Jordan Stead.

360-degree viewing methods

Spoiler alert – when viewing the Theta S footage on a 2D viewing device, such as a laptop or smartphone, I find the results somewhat underwhelming. And throughout this article, you will, of course, notice that the files from the Ricoh are a little low-res, and lack some ‘pop’ that you can see in files from the D810. This shouldn’t really be a surprise given the dramatic differences in hardware, so I’ll be focusing on the viewing experience concerning the 360-stills rather than outright image quality.

Here’s a collection of stills captured on a D810 from a black sand beach outside Vik, in southern Iceland.

The top two images are shot with a 35mm prime, and the bottom two with an 80-200mm F2.8 zoom. Now, as I alluded to in my shooting experience, these may not be your standard picture-perfect postcard images from this setting. But that’s okay, because that’s not generally how I shoot when I’m shooting for myself. I like to use several different photos to focus on several different aspects of a scene, as opposed to shooting wider-angle ‘overall’ photos that get more of a sense of place in a single image. Something approaching the latter is what you get when you use the Theta S. 

I find viewing the 360 as you see it above in a web browser or on a mobile phone to be somewhat ‘distant.’ The distortion is strong, and therefore distorts the sense of place, even though you can see everything in the scene. Everything also feels very far away, which ties in with an overall sense of detachment I feel looking at it, even though I know that I’m just a little ways down the beach in the image. You can zoom into the 360 image to reduce the distortion somewhat, but then the experience becomes even less immersive.

The overall feeling I get is of a person quickly taking an eye-level wide-angle photograph of something in front of them (not a criticism of my friend Jordan who was shooting with the Theta – the 360’s I took on this trip also had the same feel). Also, if you happen to view it on a phone, by default you ‘look’ around the scene by reorienting your phone in 3D space, which makes you look very silly if you are looking at it in public.

But then I looked at it through a Galaxy Gear VR headset, and everything changed.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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SmugMug Films: Climbing Ice – The Iceland Trifecta

13 Nov

SmugMug’s latest film follows photographer, filmmaker and Camp 4 Collective co-owner Tim Kemple as he explores Iceland’s Vatnajökull glacier with world-leading ice climbers Klemen Premrl and Rahel Schelb. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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