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Posts Tagged ‘It’s’

The Journey: It’s What You Can’t See That Will Thrill You

02 Mar

Photography is about a lot of things and other than “light” I’d say the “journey” is the most important. The fantastic thing about photography is that one’s mastery of the medium & artistic vision is a journey as much as the quest for each photo. Just as you never know what is over the next hill to photograph you never know how your view of the world might evolve. In both regards it pays to cherish the journey.

Foggy Treetops, Yosemite National Park

Foggy Treetops, Yosemite National Park

 

 

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

The Journey: It’s What You Can’t See That Will Thrill You

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The 2010 PCMB (St. Louis) Super Regionals Trip! – Part II: It’s Going to be Magical!

03 Jan

PCMB goes to the St. Louis Super Regionals for the first time (in a long time?). We scored 4th. This is my story told in the way of 3195 JPEG stills from my Nikon D300 DSLR. I had a 50mm ƒ/ 1.8D on 99% of the time. Part I: A Driving Force……………………..( youtu.be ) Part II: Practice Makes Perfect………..(NP)—\ Part III: Places Everyone…………………(NP)—merged Part IV: The Way Home…………………..(NP)—/

Colchicum ‘Lilac Wonder’ flower growing timelapse Filmed by Neil Bromhall for www.rightplants4me.co.uk These flowers bloom in autumn. Plant in well drained soil. If the soil is too wet the bulbs are prone to rotting. This was filmed in my studio over a period of 6 days using Nikon D300 camera, Ellinchrom studio flash, Exposure interval 8 minutes The damaged flower was chewed by an unknown pest underground before it emerged. It was probably a slug Music “Gently” by Debbie Wiseman
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
 

It’s Krrunch Time!!!

13 Dec

My entry for the Nuffnang Asia-Pacific Blog Awards. Took 8 hours to shoot and probably another 8 to edit. Shot on a Nikon D60, I love my little camera. It’s Krrunch time, get playful =)
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Shot 100% on the HD HERO2® camera from GoPro.com Finally, after being sick for two weeks, I managed to edit my new “Gymkhana4.0” video. I was planning to add more shots from the side of the car and from the top, but I couldn’t do it due to me getting sick. I still had a great fun filming it and even managed to have a nice talk with the people who run the place. They told me I should come there on Sundays when there are more kids to enjoy it. Because I have only one camera, there are some shots with kids and some without… I left it like that just to show, that there was quite constant audience. I hope you will enjoy this video as much as I did making it I also made this soundtrack to the video. If you like any of my music, you can download it from the address bellow. Feel free to use it as long as you give credit to MSPDawgs/Kezo sutros.com If you like my videos, please SUBSCRIBE!!! Thanks for watching and happy drifting to you all! Car: Chassis – Yokomo Drift package Basic with Stage 2 upgrade Motor – Yokomo 27T drift tuned brushed Yokomo’s Front One Way Body – HPI’s Mazda RX-8 Tires – SURGING SDT-002C D60 for carpet High speed steering servo (FUTABA BLS-451) Transmitter is also Futaba (4PL-2.4G) NO D box!!!! Original music by MSPDawgs/Kezo
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

The Overview Effect: Awe and It’s Lifelong Impact

11 Dec

Imagine being so far above the Earth that you see it in entirety. Odds are unless you’re an astronaut you’ve experienced this view as I have through photos from the Apollo missions of the 60′s and 70′s (ex. Earthrise) or through more recent images taken aboard the Space Shuttle & International Space Station. For those lucky enough to experience this view first hand it is understandably life changing. Author Frank White termed this impact the “Overview Effect“. The Planetary Collective put together 19 minute short documentary interviewing numerous astronauts describing this effect and its impact on their lives. I highly recommend checking it out. After viewing it I am incredibly grateful that I haven’t had to fly into space to understand and appreciate the interconnectivity we all share and the fragility of our floating island in space we call home. It’s that core aspect of the “Overview Effect” that keeps me focused on highlighting the special quality of our home in my nature and landscape work.

OVERVIEW from Planetary Collective on Vimeo.

Also note if you missed it the other week NASA released a high resolution image of the Earth at night, the Black Marble. The light sensitivity of the image was great enough to see a single boat in the ocean. Amazing to see.

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

The Overview Effect: Awe and It’s Lifelong Impact

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Posted in Equipment

 

Rain or Shine it’s Photo Taking Time

13 Nov
Check it out

The weather may have decidedly taken a turn for the grey, but our new Digital Time-Lapse Camera doesn’t mind. It wears a weather resistent jacket that lets it shoot time-lapse videos no matter the atmospheric conditions.

It’s true, the temperature might drop, but your camera sure won’t. The Three Way Camera Strap offers three camera slingin’ styles from one super-sturdy strap.

Click through to check them out in the Photojojo Shop (just don’t forget to bring your umbrella).

The Digital Time-Lapse Camera Tweet It!
$ 180 at the Photojojo Shop

The Three Way Camera Strap Tweet It!
$ 40 at the Photojojo Shop

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Focus on Chris Porsz ~ It’s All About The People

11 Nov

I’ve had the pleasure to shoot with UK street photographer Chris Porsz in London and, more recently, in Paris. He met up with my group during my week long Paris photo workshop last month and enjoyed sharing his love for street photography with my students. Chris has a true passion for people and for capturing the moment . He can roam the streets of any city tirelessly for days with his camera. Paramedic by day (or night), street photographer the rest of the time, let me introduce you to Chris Prosz.

1- When and why did you start photographing people in the streets?

Over three decades ago some creative urge drove me to roam the streets of my city, recording everyday life. I cannot draw or paint but found it very easy to a press a button and, by some magical process, capture posterity in a fleeting expression on a face.  I am not technical and not good at formal studio work with flash and posing people so I like  the blank canvas of the streets. I set my stage and wait for the right characters to walk on. You will rarely see a picture of mine devoid of people as buildings bore me on their own while people bring them alive and give a sense of scale.  I was a university dropout who became a hospital porter and found this a very satisfying and relaxing outlet. For over twenty years I have been a paramedic which involves approaching total strangers, engaging and reassuring them. Ideal for street photography.

2- You spend hours every week walking the streets of your hometown, how do you keep things ‘fresh’?

I think the very nature of street photography ensures that it stays’ fresh.’ I love the total unpredictability and spontaneity of people and never knowing what is around the next corner. You walk for miles and get average shots but just occasionally you capture something special. I am always looking out for someone unusual who stands out from the crowd, pink hair or the elderly battling against the elements with a Zimmer frame. I look out for situations with people interacting and wait to see what develops.

3- What other cities have inspired you the most photographically and why? 

Out of my comfort zone I visited many large English cities to be inspired and I was overwhelmed by the potential. I also wanted a more international flavour so I made a trip to New York City. It was also wonderful to be involved in Valerie Jardin’s Paris photo workshop. Amsterdam, Berlin and Prague are on the list to capture. Every city has its iconic buildings but the challenge is to capture them in a unique way and for me that has to be through its people.

4- What was your most memorable experience as a street photographer and have you had any close-calls, such as people becoming aggressive, etc.? 

I think it was at 2:00 am when a man called an emergency ambulance for help and, through his oxygen mask, he told me I had taken his picture over thirty years ago. This led to one of my reunion pictures which can be quite emotional and immensely satisfying.

A man in his seventies who looked like Santa Claus was sitting in an armchair in the middle of our Cathedral Square when he spotted me and my camera. Wearing only a white bath robe, boots and a red bobble hat he chased me down the road. What a picture and fortunately no one was around to take it.

In 1980 a recluse was murdered and the only picture available was one I took of him walking the streets. It helped to capture his assailants.

I have occasionally been threatened by drunks and accused of all sorts but usually a smile and an explanation go a long way.

5- Is there one shot you absolutely want to get and will continue hunting for until it’s in your memory card? 

I have my railway kiss picture but I am still searching for that Doisneau lovers’ embrace on say the escalators. Or some exclusive photo journalist type dramatic image. So always carry a camera and keep it primed ready. Nothing worse than capturing a great moment that is blurred and out of focus.

6- What #1 tip would you give someone starting out as a street photographer?

Take Robert Capa’s advice and “If your photographs are not good enough then you are not close enough.” I have ditched the artificial compression of telephoto and almost exclusively use a wide angle where the viewer feels part of the picture.

I also try to follow Dave Beckerman’s maxim “Street photography is 90% perspiration and 10% inspiration.” So walk miles, take plenty, be very self critical and post just the best. Back up your images three times as I have learned the hard way and lost precious memories.

7- You’ve exhibited your work in various galleries in Peterborough, England. What is your next project? 

My book New England is out this month and contains my favourite images from the seventies and eighties, many which have never been seen before. It reflects a typical English city of that era. I have been invited to record the life of a large country Park through its staff and visitors during the four seasons. I will employ my street style but with beautiful backdrops instead.

8- Which photographers have inspired you the most?

The list is endless but one of my heroes is Don Mc Cullin a modest, compassionate, brave, honest photographer with his haunting Vietnam images. I was a lousy printer and ruined many but his dark, rich, gritty monochrome printing influenced me.

His colleagues too, Eddie Adams and Phillip Jones Griffiths The ‘gentle eye’ of Jane Bown and the reportage of Chris Steele-Perkins

Over the pond the humour of Elliot Erwitt and Vivian Maier’s newly discovered treasure trove. Jo Wigfall, Dave Beckerman, James Mayer and Eric Kim. They are generous with their time, support and encouragement. Thank you too Valerie for kindly helping me and now sharing my work with your readers.

Find out more about Chris and his work by visiting his website.

Chris Porsz

 

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Focus on Chris Porsz ~ It’s All About The People



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Wedding Video It’s Judy Time | PART ONE | Sean Cannell Productions

06 Nov

Watch Part 2- www.youtube.com This is the Ceremony of our big day. Big thanks to Julieg713, Rissrose2, timothydelaghetto2, QueenofBlendingMUA, Iwillbot, and everyone who came to celebrate this special occasion with us. Watch the entire Wedding Series here www.youtube.com Sean…
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Deva is a photographer by profession his life changes when one of his model is killed the killers also kill Deva’s family asking for a diary but Deva is unaware of it but what does that diary consists and whose behind all this killings.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
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iFixit Tears down iPad Mini – finds it’s not easy to repair

01 Nov

ipadminiteardown.jpg

No-one takes gadgets apart quite like the guys at iFixit.com and they’ve just got their hands on Apple’s latest tablet, the pint-sized iPad Mini. Basically an iPad 2 in a smaller form factor, the Mini goes on sale tomorrow in the US. Thanks to a whole lot of glue holding the thing together and expensive battery replacement cost, the iPad Mini earns a low repairability score of 2 out of 10 on the iFixit scale. Click through for some sample images from the teardown and a link to the full, gory experience over at ifixit.com.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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It’s all About Framing!

30 Oct

A guest post by Sévrine Monnay, New York Photo Tours company citifari’s copywriter

How to make a great picture? What are the keys elements that help shooting pics successfully? What should we have to be careful about to get the most out of the scene we want to remember?

Why Framing?

Of course the camera settings and the subject choice play a role, but the framing is most critical. We don’t take pictures. We build them. Let’s take an example: on vacations and you may want to photograph a famous monument. You have chosen your topic and you are ready to press the shutter. Just few questions: have you paid attention to the elements around? Is there another way to approach the picture? Must the subject necessarily be at the center of the composition? Photography is not only to put in the box the subjects you want to remember. Photography is more about feelings, than things. Give life to your subjects! Retransmit sensations! Be the master of your pictures! In short, think out of the (camera) box!

20120428 IMG 2909

Framing or Composition?

However, basics framing rules must not be forsaken. There is a difference between composing and framing. Composing is an artistic process, while framing is about defining your creation. To put a strict frame will not harm your composition; on the contrary, it will give character to your pictures. Let’s take the picture below. The first rule of framing is not to cut your main subject, in this case, this magnificent cast-iron building and its timeless charm. But it’s interesting to play with the particular form of the subject too. That’s why the picture is shot from below to give the sense of depth. Then the second choice is about the subject size. The building is not shot from top to bottom to keep the length dynamic. The floor lamp, as the second subject of the picture, is taken in the same way. The last adjustment is made with the photo slightly turned to pass the feeling that the building is tilting forward.

20120325 IMG 1916

How to get it?

It is not that hard to pay attention to everything when you are taking your pictures. No panic! Remember to train yourself for your next pictures and it will rapidly become a habit that you don’t think about. Soon you’ll have the perfect picture in mind well before taking out your camera and you will produce next picture perfect candidates.

20120826 IMG 5078

How to Practice Framing?

Citifari offers photo tours in New York City. Structured as a 2-1/2 hour practical workshop, citifari tour helps you get comfortable with your camera settings and take great shots in New York City. They currently offer 3 photo tours: New York Landmarks, New York by Night, and Central Park. The new Soho tour will be launched on 29th September and will pay tribute to the timeless architecture of the famous Cast Iron District. For more information about citifari:

www.citifari.com
www.facebook.com/citifari
www.twitter.com/citifari
pinterest.com/citifari@citifari
citifari.tumblr.com

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

It’s all About Framing!



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At The Skylines “It’s Cherried” (Live Music Video)

25 Oct

SOONmedia and ApocoreTV Production Presents The Live Performance Music Video At The Skylines “It’s Cherried” Filmed with Panasonic Hpx500 and Hpx170 as wells as the canon 5d mkii Edited on Final Cut Pro Camera Operators: Christian Gonzalez, Francisco Gonzalez, Zack Moore Editor: Francisco Gonzalez, Christian Gonzalez LINKS: SOON MEDIA soonmediagroup.com http twitter.com APOCORETV apocoretv.com http twitter.com on.fb.me AT THE SKYLINES www.facebook.com www.myspace.com www.twitter.com

 
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