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Archive for August, 2013

Faces of Water — Making Photograms of Water

14 Aug

Moses Hacmon came up with one of the best photographic riddles we’ve ever heard.

How do you make a photogram of water if it’s clear? Light would just pass through it!

Moses spent years studying water and developed a photographic process that let him photograph the best part about water: its movement.

By working with a liquid film made up of nanoparticles, Moses is able to capture a moment in water’s movement. He layers this film over paper, and once water runs over it, the nanoparticles are absorbed into the paper, creating a negative image of the water’s flow.

The final image is a captivating still of the water’s twists and turns, overlaps, and shapes as it flows. You might even say you can see faces.

Moses’ most recent experiments include photographing what music looks like resonating through water. You can also help fundraise an exhibition.

More water play ideas: Aquatopiary Water Sculptures and Tim Tadder’s water wigs.

Faces of Water by Moses Hacmon via NotCot

p.s. We’re hiring for an amazing opening at Photojojo. Apply and learn more to be our Editorial & Community Lead.

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‘Film was never this sharp’: Breaking Bad photographer interviewed

14 Aug

fo3_bb_main.jpg

Commercial photographer Frank Ockenfels III has worked on several high-profile blockbusters like Harry Potter and Men in Black 3, as well as a number of TV shows, and his most recent work is currently being used to promote the season five finale of Breaking Bad on AMC. PopPhoto has published an interview with him, in which he explains how he got started in the TV and movie business, the equipment he uses, and why he bases his career around the concept of ‘never having just one idea’. Click through for a link to the full article. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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10 Pictures from 2013 Missouri River 340 Race

14 Aug

Sea Wind canoe on Kaw River
My Sea Wind canoe on the shore of Kaw River 20 minutes before the race start.

Missouri American Water MR340 is a paddling race across the entire state of Missouri – 340 miles nonstop in less than 88 hours from Kansas City to St Charles. The 8th edition of the race took place July 23-26, 2013.

It was my 7th MR340 race, and the third one paddled self supported in Sea Wind canoe designed by Verlen Kruger. This year it took me 62:21 hours to finish – 38th place overall and 19th place in men’s solo division (142 boats), see race results. I had a pretty good race. Sea Wind allowed me to to run long river sections up to 12 hours of paddling without any stops.

Here is a selection of 10 pictures from the race, all shot with Pentax Optio WG2 camera. I will be writing more technical reports and commentary in my Fitness Paddling blog where you can find a lot of information on previous MR340 races starting from the very first one in 2006.


solo boats start of 2013 Missouri River 340 Race
A few minutes before the start of solo boats at 7am on the Kaw River with a cityscape of Kansas City.

solo boats start of 2013 Missouri River 340 Race
Tandems and all other boats are starting at 8am.

solo boats start of 2013 Missouri River 340 Race
One of 3 SUP paddlers is standing up above kayaks and canoes.

sunrise on Missouri River
First sunrise on the river (Wednesday morning) a few miles above Glasgow.+

Old Katy railroad bridge at Boonsville1
Old Katy railroad bridge at Boonsville. 170 miles. Already half of the race or only half …

Old Katy railroad bridge at Boonsville
Approaching Boonsville bridge. Traditionally, I am shooting some pictures here.

foggy sunrise on Missouri River

foggy sunrise on Missouri River

foggy


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Is the snapshot dead? Seattle collector thinks so

13 Aug

TS520x0~cms_posts-2495219465-Screen_Shot_2013-08-12_at_10.58.07_AM.png

Is the snapshot dead? Seattle-based photo collector Robert E. Jackson believes so. In an interview with National Public Radio, Jackson argues that today’s snapshots, stored digitally rather than printed out, are about self-promotion: ‘creating an identity about who I am and that’s what you want to transfer to Facebook’. You can read extracts from the interview, and watch it in its entirety over at our sister site, connect.dpreview.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Penthouse Mountain: Stone Villa Tops Chinese Condo Tower

13 Aug

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

mountain on condo tower

Over six years, one dedicated man has constructed his dream house, complete with boulders, trees, gardens, pools and ponds. It is the kind of luxury home you might expect expect to set into the side of an actual mountain … rather than perched atop an urban apartment building.

mountaintop penthouse on roof

The Daily Mail  reports that Chinese eccentric Zhang Lin slowly assembled this structure in Beijing despite disruptions and dangers caused to those residents below, apparently without planning permission and in defiance of zoning laws (not to mention common sense). The many tons of material required were hauled up the building, then transformed into a faux mountaintop. In turn, the industrious top-floor owner tucked his unique private penthouse retreat into the resulting rock face.

mountain rock condo sprawl

A number of residents have complained about the noise from construction, and one has experienced flooding, either from fake mountain pools and ponds above their place, broken drainage due to displaced infrastructure, or perhaps both.

mountain condo in context

Meanwhile, the penthouse – originally slated to be a small shack added to the top – has sprawled in all kinds of creative and (to those below, at least) unexpected ways. There are various outdoor decks, viewing platforms and winding paths that make their way through and around the stone mountaintop and its outgrowths of greenery.

mountain shaped carved apartment

And what comes next? Well, no one in the city has stopped the project so far, but as complaints mount from other residents, and as the weight loaded on the roof grows, one has to wonder what will happen first: government intervention or a tragic structural collapse.

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13. August 2013

13 Aug

Ein Beitrag von: mmanfred

Tete-a-tete ©  mmanfred


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Portrait Photography: How to Photograph People in the Harsh Midday Sun

13 Aug

By: Oded Wagenstein

Great tips and tricks on overcoming the harsh mid-day sun to create beautiful portraits on either side of the “golden hours”

The Golden Time

The best time to take almost any kind of  picture, is in the “golden hours”: around one hour before sun down and one hour after sunrise, because that’s when the light is at its softest, lacking hard shadows, rich in colors, bathing your subject in even light, which entering from the side and that gives your subjects face definition.

-Uzbekistan-  Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8  Fstop of 3.5, shutter speed@10 ISO 160

-Uzbekistan-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 3.5, shutter speed@10 ISO 160

-Tajikistan- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 5.6, shutter speed@15, ISO 200.

-Tajikistan-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 5.6, shutter speed@15, ISO 200.

-China - Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 2.8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 400 Natural light (sunrise) entering the frame from the right

-China –
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 2.8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 400
Natural light (sunrise) entering the frame from the right

-Tajikistan- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 5.6, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 Natural light (sunrise) reflecting from the mountains, which are about 45 degrees to the woman (you can see it in the window).

-Tajikistan-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 5.6, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100
Natural light (sunrise) reflecting from the mountains, which are about 45 degrees to the woman (you can see it in the window).

Once this time (golden time) has passed, we are left with harsh, unflattering light that is low in saturation and makes the images look dull and flat as you can see in this photo:

-India- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 The harsh mid-day sun is just above him.

-India-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100
The harsh mid-day sun is just above him.

The Problem

In order to provide solutions, first let’s understand the “problem”: Your camera doesn’t see as well as your eyes.  The “problem” is the camera’s dynamic range.  In plain English, the dynamic range is the distance between the brightest and darkest points in the frame.  Let’s say you take a shot of a man wearing a hat in the middle of the day, when the sun is at its highest and harshest. Your eyes will be able to make out his eyes even under the shadow of his hat, as well as his chin in the strong daylight. That’s because your eyes have the ability to see a large dynamic range.

Your camera however has a far more limited ability to see the dynamic range .If you we go back to our man in the hat, your camera will see his eyes, which are in shadow under his hat as black, while his chin which is in strong sunlight will be blown out and very white.

You might try to “fix it” by changing your aperture/shutter or ISO parameters but, this would only make your image lighter or darker as these actions have no bearing on the dynamic range. Even if we try to use an ND filter, again, this would only make your image darker and would not solve the problem or alter the range.

The Solutions

Move to the shade
Try moving the subject to the shade, or perhaps indoors. When I asked Steve McCurry, the creator of the “Afghan Girl” image, how he works in the mid day sun, he told me that he prefers to work indoors with the harsh light coming in through a window so that it turns to soft even light, and that’s really change my way of “seeing” the harsh light as an opportunity of creating great images by moving to the shade or indoors.

-Thailand- Canon EF 24-70 mm f/2.8L Fstop of 3.5, shutter speed@10 and ISO 160 This woman is sitting in the shade with strong light coming from the street (to her left). A small piece of paper was held above her head to block the light (flag).

-Thailand-
Canon EF 24-70 mm f/2.8L
Fstop of 3.5, shutter speed@10 and ISO 160
This woman is sitting in the shade with strong light coming from the street (to her left). A small piece of paper was held above her head to block the light (flag).

Try turning your subject 45 degrees to the light source (exp: window) by doing so you will be able to create a nice 3D effect.

-Uzbekistan- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 2.8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 500 Natural light (only) coming from the window on the left side of the frame (about 45 degrees)

-Uzbekistan-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 2.8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 500
Natural light (only) coming from the window on the left side of the frame (about 45 degrees)

-Laos- Canon EF 24-70 mm f/2.8L Fstop of 3.5, shutter speed@100 and ISO 1000 I used the soft light coming through a red robe which was on the right side of the frame, in order to "sculpture" the light on his face. It also gave the whole image some sort of orange glow.

-Laos-
Canon EF 24-70 mm f/2.8L
Fstop of 3.5, shutter speed@100 and ISO 1000
I used the soft light coming through a red robe which was on the right side of the frame, in order to “sculpture” the light on his face. It also gave the whole image some sort of orange glow.

Create a Silhouette

Expose your image from the background, so your subject becomes a silhouette in some cases it makes for a wonderful image.

You can do so by using the manual exposure (M mode) or by changing the metering mode to spot and measure from the background.

-Thailand- Canon EF 24-70 mm f/2.8L Fstop of 5, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 (on spot metering) Natural light only

-Thailand-
Canon EF 24-70 mm f/2.8L
Fstop of 5, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 (on spot metering)
Natural light only

Burn it Down

Burning the background is not always a bad thing. On the contrary it creates a unique portrait that’s different and interesting

-India- Assistant: Hardik Pandya Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 4.5, shutter speed@10 and ISO 200 Natural light only

-India-
Assistant: Hardik Pandya
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 4.5, shutter speed@10 and ISO 200
Natural light only

Reflector

By using a reflector, you can minimize the light range by bouncing light back onto your subject, which will add light to the dark areas. Like this image below.  I used a small folding reflector, which I held in my hand while taking the photo.

-Tajikistan- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 8, shutter speed@10and ISO 100 Natural light+ Reflector (gold color) I held in my hand on the lower left side of the frame + warm natural light bouncing off the mud wall

-Tajikistan-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 8, shutter speed@10and ISO 100
Natural light+ Reflector (gold color) I held in my hand on the lower left side of the frame + warm natural light bouncing off the mud wall

-India- Assistant: Hardik Pandya Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Fstop of 2.8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 This nice lady was sitting in the shade of her house + silver color reflector, coming from the right upper side of the frame.

-India-
Assistant: Hardik Pandya
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Fstop of 2.8, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100
This nice lady was sitting in the shade of her house + silver color reflector, coming from the right upper side of the frame.

External Flash

Like the reflector, the flash will add more light to the dark areas in turn creating a smaller dynamic range.

-India- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Assistant: Hardik Pandya Fstop of 9, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 Natural light of the background sky + fill light flash (off camera and inside a small soft box) coming from the right side of the frame, about 1 meter in front of the man's face.

-India-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Assistant: Hardik Pandya
Fstop of 9, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100
Natural light of the background sky + fill light flash (off camera and inside a small soft box) coming from the right side of the frame, about 1 meter in front of the man’s face.

HDR

Taking 3 (or more) exposures of your subject and using this technique in post processing could come in very handy.

-India- Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8 Assistant: Hardik Pandya Fstop of 11, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100 Natural light of the background sky + fill light flash (off camera and inside a small soft box, coming from the left side of the frame) + HDR effect in Photoshop.

-India-
Canon EFS 17-55mm f/2.8
Assistant: Hardik Pandya
Fstop of 11, shutter speed@10 and ISO 100
Natural light of the background sky + fill light flash (off camera and inside a small soft box, coming from the left side of the frame) + HDR effect in Photoshop.

I would like to thank Hardik Pandya and Linda Burnette for their help on making this article.

Do you have any interesting techniques or methods to overcome the harsh light? Please share in the comments.

Oded Wagenstein is a Travel photographer and writer. He is a regular contributor to the National Geographic Traveler magazine (Israeli Edition) and he is known for his intimate culture portraits. You can join his Portrait & Travel Photography blog and continue to discuss on travel and people photography and get more amazing tips!

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Portrait Photography: How to Photograph People in the Harsh Midday Sun


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Embracing Sturgeon’s Law as a Photographer

13 Aug

Theodore Sturgeon, a science fiction writer, had it right when he stated:

“Using the same standards that categorize 90% of science fiction as trash, crud, or crap, it can be argued that 90% of film, literature, consumer goods, etc. are crap.”

One could say Sturgeon’s Law, based on the quote above, was equally observant as it was prophetic seeing that the statement is applicable at most any time or about any artform. Sturgeon’s Law is good to keep in mind as you think about photographic projects and photo edit your work. While it may seem a bit harsh at first read, the more you take it to heart the pickier you’ll become about what work you share.

Sturgeon's Law: 90 Percent of Everything is Crap

No critic can be harsher about your work than you. The tougher and pickier you become the better the odds the work you show will be your best. Personally I think 98% of what I have in my library is “crap”. I find I sit and stew on my work more than ever. Given the flood of photographs that make it onto the web these days I consider it a social grace as much as a personal goal of mine to show only my best.

Sure it may sound a bit pompous, but to actually be super selective takes discipline and challenges you to strive to produce the best. Take the Sturgeon’s Law challenge. Are you up to it?

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Embracing Sturgeon’s Law as a Photographer

The post Embracing Sturgeon’s Law as a Photographer appeared first on JMG-Galleries – Landscape, Nature & Travel Photography.

       

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13 August, 2013 – Sony DEV-50 Review. The Year’s Best Gadget

13 Aug

Does anyone really need a 12X pair of digital 3D binoculars with built-in HD camcorder? Likely not. But the new Sony DEV-50 is an absolute blast to use, and is my suggested best gadget of 2013.

"Having been to Antarctica with Michael and Kevin, I would say after having traveled the world and shot nearly my entire life as an exhibiting photographer,  it was one of my highlights in my life and I talk about it, all the time.  The images and experience of seeing something visionary and nearly extinct from the world, to see and experience the wildlife and scenery that does not fear humans is amazing.  The images I shot there won me two Smithsonian awards and nearly 18 other international awards". – Tim Wolcott

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These Expeditions Will Sell Out Quickly. They Always Do

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These Expeditions Will Sell Out Quickly. They Always Do


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Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ70 Sample Images

13 Aug

Screen_Shot_2013-08-12_at_5.07.02_PM.png

We’ve just posted a 39-image gallery of real-world samples shot on the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ70 zoom compact. Spanning the equivalent of 20-1200mm the FZ70’s lens is the largest zoom available in a consumer compact, and we’ve spent a few days testing it out in a variety of situations, to see what this new superzoom can do. Click through for a link to our gallery of real-world samples. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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