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Posts Tagged ‘2010’

Big air photography at Air and Style – Red Bull Illume 2010

02 May

Getting the right shots at a high profile event requires more than just turning up and snapping away. The Air & Style, one of snowboarding’s oldest and most prestigious competitions, is one such event where capturing the winning stunt in the best possible manner is crucial. We spoke to German photographer Richard Walch who was at the most recent Air & Style in December 2009, about how to prepare, which lens to use when and how to make sure you get everything covered. redbullillume.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Happy August everybody!!!!!! This is the 8th installment of my Photography Tutorial series. It is actually an abbreviated version of Chapter 2 from the DVD I slang. It is a introduction to some core concepts of composition. Enjoy, the next one of this series will be posted first week of September……..
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

31 March, 2010 – Arca Cube, Take 2

30 Apr

If you’re a serious landscape photographer better lock up your Visa card before reading our latest review. It is titled Arca Cube – Take 2.

In my experience everyone that reads about the Cube says "Oh, ya, nice, but too expensive". Then when they see and handle one they say, "Why didn’t you tell me about this before? Damn; I have to have one."

You’ve been warned.

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If you’ve been looking for a 56MP medium format back that will fit almost any camera system, and which has the ability to rotate the sensor internally, have a look at the just-announced Leaf Aptus II 10-R.

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The winner of this week’s Lightroom 3 contest draw is Larry Rezka, Ontario, Canada. Congratulations Larry.

Maybe next week it’ll be you.

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"Video Journal 19, one of the best. Interesting and relevant topics, knowledgeable engaging guests, and a host that gently guides the conversation through terrain I want to explore. And more, it’s beautifully shot in a clean, no tricks style that keeps the conversation in focus. Well done all! This one is worth twice the price".

– paul b. kramarchyk

 


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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7 April, 2010 – Constructing the Composition: Angkor Wat

29 Apr

Our new columnist, Art Wolfe, provides us today with an essay titled Constructing The Composition: Angor Wat.

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The Apple iPad arrived this weekend along with the Easter Bunny and chocolate eggs. Rabbits and eggs are pagan fertility symbols that have somehow become intertwined with the Christian holiday, but there was something of an appropriate irony in Apple choosing this particular weekend to launch the iPad, since it is in many ways a harbinger of things to come.

I’ve been becoming familiar with mine for the past few days and continue to believe that it’s going to be a game-changer, especially for professional photographers, because of what it implies for the publishing industry. Print media will never be the same again.

There are also some new iPad specific apps that are either paticularly cool, or that may appeal to nature and landscape photographers, and one of these that I quite enjoy is Emerald Observatory.

Whether you’re an astronomy buff, a time freak, or a photographer looking for information about sunrise and sunset times, as well as the moon’s phase and position, Emerald Observatory will be the best .99 cents that you’ll spend this week.

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The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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Nasco Yankee Meet 2010 oder fast ein “bad camera day”

15 Apr
Jens Herrndorff fotografiert seit 2008 als dilettantischer Autodidakt Menschen und Mode. Er lebt und arbeitet in der Nähe von Hamburg. Mehr Infos über ihn findet Ihr auf seiner Portfolio-Webseite oder seinem Blog.

Wenn wir Deutschen an Schweden denken, fallen uns in erster Linie IKEA und Volvo, Elche und rote Holzhäuser ein. Klar, dann auch noch Astrid Lindgren, ABBA und, ja … noch mehr rote Holzhäuser. Dass Schweden aber auch in Sachen Ami-Straßenkreuzer eine echte Hochburg ist, wissen nur wenige.

Ihren Ursprung hat diese Leidenschaft in der “Raggare”-Jugendbewegung der 50er-Jahre. Rock ‘n’ Roll, US-Cars, Bier und eine gehörige Portion “White Trash” sind die wesentlichen Merkmale dieser Szene.

Während der Sommermonate treffen sich die “Raggare” und Liebhaber von US-Fahrzeugen (vornehmlich der 50er, 60er und 70er Jahre) auf unzähligen sogenannten “Meets” im ganzen Land, die von tausenden Zuschauern besucht werden. So auch vergangenes Wochenende im südschwedischen Falköping. Auf dem kleinen Flugplatz der Stadt waren beim “Nasco Yankee Meet” mehrere hundert meist hochglanzpolierte Fahrzeuge versammelt.

Grund genug für mich, meine Kamera zu schultern und nach brauchbaren Motiven Ausschau zu halten. Dabei hatte ich meine Zweitkamera – eine betagte Canon EOS 20D mit einem EF 75-300mm 1:4-5.6 III USM Zoom sowie das Canon EF-S 17-85mm 1:4-5.6 IS USM. Beides Objektive, deren Abbildungsleistung mich bis heute nicht recht überzeugt hat, die aber solide und verlässlich sind und zusammen einen großen Brennweitenbereich abdecken.

Da ich nicht alleine unterwegs war, waren die Möglichkeiten der Motivsuche aus Gründen der Rücksichtnahme und Höflichkeit ein wenig eingeschränkt. Zudem bemerkte ich nach dem Prüfen der ersten Bilder, dass ich munter im M-Modus mit den Einstellungen des Vorabends fotografiert hatte (1/200s bei ISO 800 – da kam Freude auf) und ich meine ersten Versuche also gleich wieder löschen konnte. Ein wunderbarer Start …

Also gut, alles noch mal von vorne: ich stellte auf den AV-Modus mit Blende 5.6 und ISO 400 um. Damit hatte ich die größtmögliche Blende auch im maximalen Telebereich des 75-300mm-Objektivs mit einer hoffentlich schönen Tiefenunschärfe und zugleich eine schnelle Verschlusszeit, da bei 300mm Brennweite die Gefahr des Verwackelns doch recht groß ist.

Im Brennweitenbereich von 200-300mm machte ich einige Aufnahmen der gestaffelt stehenden Fahrzeuge sowie einige Detailaufnahmen, aber irgendwie wollte sich das rechte “Feeling” nicht einstellen. Als dann die Wagen zum Cruisen auf die Rollbahn des Flugplatzes fuhren, brachte ich mich mit dem Tele am Rollbahnrand in Position und versuchte, einige Fahrzeuge im Heranfahren und beim Vorbeifahren einzufangen.

Die Autos fuhren nicht schnell und mit einer kurzen Verschlusszeit sollten scharfe Bilder kein Problem sein. Ich knipste auch noch ein paar Heckflossen im Vorbeifahren, war aber beim Blick auf den kleinen LCD-Schirm der 20D nicht wirklich zufrieden. Ich hatte den Eindruck (wieder mal) nur Mist zu fotografieren.

Zurück also zu den parkenden Fahrzeugen. Ich schnallte kurz noch das zweite Objektiv auf die Kamera, um ein paar Weitwinkelbilder zu machen, aber auch da wollte sich kein gutes Gefühl einstellen. Meine Kompositionen kamen mir bei einem weiteren Blick auf den Kameramonitor langweilig vor, die Motive mies, kurz: es war nicht mein Tag – nicht schön, aber kann ja mal sein. War halt ein “Bad camera day”. Kamera eingepackt, ab nach Haus, abhaken.

Aber wenig später ging’s dann doch noch an den Rechner. Lightroom geöffnet und siehe da: so schlimm war’s ja gar nicht! Da waren doch einige ganz ansehnliche Fotos dabei. Merke: lass Dich vom ersten Eindruck der Bilder auf dem Kameramonitor nicht gleich beeinflussen! Am Computermonitor sieht die Fotografenwelt doch gleich ganz anders aus.

Und mit ein bisschen Experimentieren und Herumspielen an den Einstellungen stellte sich allmählich das Gefühl für die Bilder ein, das ich beim Fotografieren die ganze Zeit vermisst hatte. Jetzt merkte ich plötzlich, wohin die Reise ging und wie sich die einzelnen Bilder zu einer homogenen Serie fügten.

Ich versah die Bilder mit einem relativ starken Retro-Touch, indem ich eine deutliche Vignette verwendete und mittels der Farbtemperatur einen wärmeren Look erzeugte. Zudem erhöhte ich die Schwarzwerte und verschob einige weitere Farbwerte. Plötzlich ergaben in diesem Look auch viele kompositorische Einstellungen einen Sinn, da die Bilder insbesondere durch die Vignettierung einen ganz anderen Charakter bekamen. Und auf einmal sah das alles gar nicht mehr so langweilig sondern wirklich spannend aus. Viel mehr kalifornischer Highway als schwedischer Provinzflugplatz.

Wow – der Tag war gerettet und ich war froh, dass ich mich nicht von meinen Gefühlen und vom Kameramonitor hatte leiten lassen, denn wäre es danach gegangen, hätte ich alle Bilder am liebsten sofort gelöscht – und das wäre wirklich schade gewesen.

Zum Abschluss gibt es die Lightroom-Einstellungen als Preset zum Download. Außerdem kann man alle Fotos des Tages in Jens Blog anschauen.

***
Werbepause: Buchtipp – Vom Alltäglichen zum Besonderen!


KWERFELDEIN | Digitale Fotografie

 
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19 April, 2010 – Photographing the Aurora

04 Apr

Have you ever photographed an aurora, or even seen one?

Mark Dubovoy travelled to Northern Canada a couple of months ago for just this purpose, and came away with shots of a quite spectacular display.

As a physicist by profession he can’t resist explaing what causes the aurora, as well as how best to photograph one when you have the opportunity. His new tutorial is titled, naturally enough, Photographing The Aurora.

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Fancy a photographic workshop in Tasmania this coming December? If so consider this one being put on by my friend (and frequent contributor to this site) Nick Rains. Nick is the Editor of one of Australia’s leading photographic magazines, and a very fine photographer and teacher.

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"If a picture is worth a thousand words, a video must be worth a thousand pictures.
 
Just to let you know that I found your Lightroom Tutorial most helpful in understanding, not only which buttons to push, but the gestalt behind the program.  Especially helpful was the orgainzation.
 
All in all the best .00 I have spent recently".

– Jim Cassatt

 


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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WP Plugins March 20, 2010

04 Apr

New Plugins

Custom Image Sizes

Causes WordPress to create custom sizes for your images when you call wp_get_attachment_image() and related functions

Hello in all Languages

Hello in all Languages displays a “hello” word translated to the official language of the country the visitor’s IP belongs to.

Chibipaint for WordPress

This plugin integrates the java applet “Chibipaint” with WordPress. This allows the user to draw and save their drawings directly to the server. Features included are editing and mass deletion, editable preset and user-defined templates and canvas sizes.

NdB_UserHidden

Ndb_UserHidden hides parts of wordpress posts for unidentified end users. By surrounding private text with [hide] and [/hide] tags you can force guest users to register and login to view member-only content. This plugin is interesting for webmasters that want to expand their user base for newsletters and other purposes. For download sites it will force users to identify themselves before downloads are shown.

WordPress Tweeter

WordPress Tweeter is a plugin that will update your twitter account every time you make a new post on your blog. You will be able to use your own tweet template.

Updated Plugins

WP Minify

This plugin helps you easily integrate the Minify engine into your WordPress blog. Once enabled, this plugin will combine and compress JS and CSS files to improve page load time.

GD Star Rating

GD Star Rating is post, page and comment rating and review plugin for WordPress. Plugin supports different image sets, rating moderation, vote rules, time restricted voting, templates, trend calculations, multi ratings, templated rendering, has a widgets build in and extensive shortcode support. Plugin can be integrated with comments for making a review website.

Table of Contents Creator

Table of Contents Creator (TOCC) automatically generates a highly customizable dynamic site wide table of contents that is always up-to-date. All entries are navigable making your site very SEO friendly. TOCC can be configured to display static pages, blog entries and forum comments.

NextGEN Gallery

A photo gallery management plugin

Hikari Email & URL Obfuscator

Email and normal links are obfuscated, hiding them from spambots. It automatically encodes each link, then uses JavaScript to decode and show them. Disabled JavaScript users get access to obfuscated links too.

Hikari Titled Comments

Hikari Titled Comments enables each comment to have a title, so that commentators can give a subject meaning to their comments

Any suggestions, ideas? Feel free to comment on this article!

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14 April, 2010 – Imageprint 8 Review

02 Apr

It’s been a while since I’ve had a review of the Imageprint RIP on this site. Two version ago, in fact. Now, Imageprint 8 is here, and contributor Markus Zuber has his exclusive review available.

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Looking for your next great photographic adventure? How about a NAMIBIA PHOTOGRAPHIC SAFARI with John Paul Caponigro.

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The great convergence is now starting to gather steam. Both Panasonic and Sony, two major forces in the broadcast as well as prosumer / consumer video fields, announced large sensor video cameras at the NAB show this week.


Panasonic AG-AF100

Panasonic’s AG-AF100 is based on its Micro Four Thirds still camera format while Sony’s as yet unnamed entry has a full 35mm sensor and and Alpha lens mount.

Let’s hope that Panasonic’s design engineers are better than their illustrators – because what they’re showing above looks like a camcorder from 1975.

What both of these entries (due late 2010 / early 2011) bring to the market is cinema style depth of field because of their large sensors, something that current 1/4" , 1/3" and 1/2" video cameras can’t offer.

One of the reasons that movie makers tolerate the horrendous ergonomics and woeful feature set of today’s video DSLRs is the wonderfully shallow DOF which they offer. I believe that once this new generation of large sensor cameras become available over the next 6-12 months, the days of Combocams being used in professional production will be numbered.

Speaking of which, if you’re a fan of the popular Fox TV series House, you might want to watch the season’s finale episode on May 17 as it was shot entirely with a Canon 5D MKII.

And on the subject of Canon, with the Panasonic and Sony large sensor video camera announcements this week, Canon is left as the only major company in the field to not have announced an entry. Let’s hope that they don’t take as long as they did with their first solid state video camera offerings (3 years late), the just announced HPX 370/371.


Sony’s 35mm Alpha Camcorder

Update:

FreshDV has an interview with the Pansonic product manager, shot on the floor at the NAB show. It provides insights into the new AF100 Micro Four Thirds video camera (delivery December – ,000) and a better though still brief look at the camera’s design.

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"Video Journal 19, one of the best. Interesting and relevant topics, knowledgeable engaging guests, and a host that gently guides the conversation through terrain I want to explore. And more, it’s beautifully shot in a clean, no tricks style that keeps the conversation in focus. Well done all! This one is worth twice the price".

– paul b. kramarchyk


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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23 April, 2010 – Ricoh GRX. Where Does It Fit?

02 Apr

Ricoh has always made fascinating if somewhat quirky cameras. Today, Sean Reid gives us his take on where the GRX-A12 fits in the current camera taxonomy.

Sean has also just published a comprehensive user review of the GRX-A12 on his subscription site, which I can highly recommend.

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The most recent winner in our Lightroom 3 contest is Jenny Sampson of Berkeley, CA . Congratulations Jenny. She wins a boxed copy, once it ships, of LR3 worth 0.

How did she win? Simply by purchasing one of our tutorials or Video Journals. Find out more.

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Readers who purchase our current Lightroom 2 tutorial
will be eligible for a discount on our future Lightroom 3
tutorial.

 

 


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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25 April, 2010 – Leica S2 Review Update : iPad Reads Raw Files

29 Mar

My friend, and well known Australian photographer, educator and magazine editor Nick Rains, has just completed his tests of the Leica S2.

Leica has also just announced a firmware upgrade for the S2, and Nick kindly provides us today with his brief impressions of the S2, what the firmware upgrade has accomplished, as well as what has been left unresolved.

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Another friend, well known London photographer and lecturer Drew Gardner has just completed working with kids in the townships of South Africa, teaching them about photography. Drew asked if I would link to his blog, which I am more than happy to do, as this appears to be a very worthwhile undertaking.

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A small number of iPad Camera Connection Kits (USB adaptors and SD card readers) became available over the past few days, and to everyone’s amazement (at least mine) the iPad is able to read all raw camera files that the Mac (OSX / iPhoto / Aperture) can handle.

This is great news, and makes the iPad an ideal travel / storage / backup / review device for photographers working in the field.

The only bad news is that the main shipment of these adaptors won’t be available for another couple of weeks.

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The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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28 April, 2010 – Canon X300 Printer Review

28 Mar

Canon has a new series of high-end photo printers on the market, called the X300 series. How do these stack up against the best from Epson and HP?

Scott Martin is widely experienced with all three brands, and today gives us his in-depth review of the new Canon printers and how they compare.

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Care to see what else is coming in Lightroom 3 when it ships? Have a watch of this video from Lightroom Product Manager Tom Hogarty. I think you’ll be both pleased and impressed.

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"If a picture is worth a thousand words, a video must be worth a thousand pictures.
 
Just to let you know that I found your Lightroom Tutorial most helpful in understanding, not only which buttons to push, but the gestalt behind the program.  Especially helpful was the orgainzation.
 
All in all the best .00 I have spent recently".

– Jim Cassatt


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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