Archive for June, 2009

GSOTPANWASTOTZSS

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 by

One of the reasons I choose to do this project/training/exercise, is that it combines nicely with another exercise set out by Mike Johnston (years) earlier: GSOTPANWASTOTZSS ((I’m still working on memorizing that one.)). Being able to guess exposure is a skill that’s always allured to me.

This is one of those skills that I think will be incredibly useful, even if you’re using a top-of-the-line, auto-everything DSLR body. Knowing when to apply exposure compensation, selecting you base exposure when shooting TTL flash, there are plenty of aspects that will yield better results if the photographer knows what he’s doing.

It’s also an incredibly cool thing to be able to do ((To me that is. Some people may prefer owning a larger telephoto.)).

Unfortunately, this will make the exercise just a bit harder, as in addition to using a rangefinder for the first time and shooting dedicated B&W for the first time, I’ll have only the sunny sixteen rule and my knowledge of fluorescent-lit swimming pools to guide me in getting a proper exposure.

I guess Yoda was right: “You must unlearn what you have learned”.

Another rule should thus be added to the earlier post: No exposure meters of any kind.

Slate & leaves

Thursday, June 25th, 2009 by

This slate rock wall has been slowly sliding down over the years, with the loose slates mixing in with the old leaves and broken branches near the side of the road. Kautenbach, Germany, spring 2009.

Technical details

Shot on Velvia 100, with Canon 30 and Canon 17-40mm. Tripod was down to ground level and composed using an Angle Finder B.

Why I like it

The nice play of the black slate, the remaining red autumn leaves and the fresh green spring shoots. I also love this kind of wide-angle trickery, the rock wall in the read is in fact just four or five feet away from the front of the picture.

(Click on the image to see a larger version)

Flowers

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009 by

Another subject I like to photograph is flowers ((As another weblogger likes to call it: Flower pr0n!)). Catching the intricate detail and the magnificent colours on Velvia is a very relaxing experience in my opinion, and a good way to waste a day when on holiday in spring.

Please note that I am not a biologist, and have no clue whatsoever what kind of flower this is, nor do I really care ((As the Bard wrote: Would a rose, by any other name, (or its own name for that matter) smell any less sweet?)).

Technical details

Shot on Velvia 100, with Canon 30 and Olympus 50mm 1.8 on Panagor Macro converter ((Spending a day on holiday with this (borrowed) combination led me to buying the Canon 50mm macro and LSC.)).

Interesting tidbit: Camera was upside down beneath my tripod to take this one ((This is actually the first photo on this site shot with a tripod. I finally did justice to the name!)). That’s why a good tripod matters, it gets you into corners that would be impossible without.

Why I like it

Nothing special, just came out the way I envisioned it.

(Click on the image to see a larger version)

The rules

Monday, June 22nd, 2009 by

In this post I’ll set out the rules for the Leica Lessons year. Defining those areas Mike’s original suggestion left open for interpretation. If anyone wants to comment, feel free.

During the period of one year beginning on August 10th, 2009 and ending on the same date in 2010, I’ll only use
– One camera, which must be a Leica rangefinder.
– One lens, of fixed focal length ((Though not specified by Mike, I’ll define that the lens must also be a Leica.)).
– One type of black & white negative film ((Again, as not strictly specified, I have decided to allow myself the luxury of pushing/pulling it.))

I’m giving myself one escape clause: Should it happen during the year, that someone asks me to take pictures for them for a special event in their life, I can do so with the equipment they consider most reliable to allow me to take good pictures. The key here is that the event has to be important to the other person, not necessarily to me (so if one week into the exercise, I get back-stage tickets to a Genesis reunion concert, I just better bring lots of film and do the best I can). I’m setting this opening because this has happened twice to me (once a funeral, once a wedding). Should this occur, I’ll let the person asking decide whether to trust me or several thousand Euro’s worth of Canon equipment ((I fear I know the answer.)).

Why August? (Relatively) simple: When I decided to do this project, I did not own a Leica, so starting straight away would be a tad tricky. Furthermore, I am shooting a good friend’s wedding in July, who is counting on more than the badly exposed B&W shot’s I’ll undoubtly be making for the first few months of this exercise ((More on that soon)). Why the 10th? It’s my birthday, so easy to remember.
The two months in between will give me the time needed for selecting and buying a Leica with matching lens, get some filters, as well as selecting a film, learning to load it ((Which appears to be an artform all by itself)), etc.

Backstroke

Friday, June 19th, 2009 by

One of my favourite subjects is swimming. It’s also one of the subjects I’m, at the risk of sounding conceited, actually quite good at, probably by virtue of having practised the sport myself for the better part of my life.

One thing that never gets old is the look of the water-droplets frozen in time, always different, like a small rain of diamonds ((Poetic enough?)).

Technical details

Canon 400D with 135mm lens. F2.8, 1/3200 at ISO 100. Fill flash at -2 FEC.

Why I like it

How the water forms a nearly cartoonish `swish’ to illustrate the motion of the arm, while the rest of the picture is dead-still

(Click on the image to see a larger version)

The Leica as Teacher

Friday, June 19th, 2009 by

On friday May 29th, 2009, Mike Johnston posted a suggestion on his site named `The Leica as Teacher‘, in which he proposed that aspiring photographers seeking to improve their skill spend one year shooting with Leica, one lens and one type of B&W film.

My first thought was: “Let somebody else do it”, which is probably what most readers thought. I then realized that someone else doing it wouldn’t be a whole lot of use in making me a better photographer. My next thought was, again like most of the commenters on the post, to change the assignment in small ways. Like most people for instance, I wanted to substitute a camera I already owned. (My mother’s old Olympus Pen FT sprang to mind). Luckily, quite quickly, Mike added a simple paragraph to the original post:

no, it doesn’t have to be a Leica—except if you want to take my advice, in which case it does have to be. Must be, in fact.

At that point I was sold and started browsing Ebay.

This section of my log will chronicle my experiences during these ‘Leica Lessons’.

Note: This post was written shortly after the post on T.O.P., but was in draft for a while as this site wasn’t finished yet.

A photo

Thursday, June 18th, 2009 by

As this site is about photography, I’ll post a picture now and then. Most of these will be mine, but if I feel like it, I’ll post pictures by other people as well (with their permission of course).

This picture is a good example why I always carry a camera nowadays. My lab opened 5 minutes late when I wanted to drop off some film before work. To pass the time, I shot some snaps of the fountain across the street. This was among them.

Technical details

Shot on Provia 400X with my Miranda MS2 and Pentax 50mm f1.7. Note that this is just a quick scan, and my scan-fu isn’t brilliant to begin with.

Why I like it ((if you should care))

The colours mostly (as I said, not the best scan unfortunately), the way the tree acts as a natural GND filter, becoming nearly translucent in the process, the way the exposure is just right on the fountain (no droplets, no white haze). It just comes together.

(Click on the image to see a larger version)

Lights, camera, action!

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009 by

Well, time to get this show on the road. It seems I have a weblog!

Why, you ask? Good question.

Partially, to give me a place to dump my experiences, opinions and ideas regarding (primarily) photography.

Partially, because all the cool kids are doing it.

As of yet, I don’t really know which way I’m going. I’ll probably post pictures, I’m also quite likely to post lots of text. Feel free to let me know what you think of either.

Regards,

Bernard