Bell-End

There are times where I am a complete twat.  This evening was one of those times.

Part of the reason I’m doing a really stupid week of driving and travelling is because I thought it was this week for the meeting of the local camera club we formed following on from the NCFE course. Which was tonight.

Except, um, it wasn’t. You see, there’s another Tuesday still to come in September. Which means that…

  1. I’m a twat
  2. My mental calendar is at least a week out of kilter.
  3. I’m a twat, and don’t know what day it is.

Missing Stuff

So. the first night in London went OK, thankfully.

Of course, I’d rather be staying back home, but them’s the breaks, there’s not a great deal I can do about it. And I really don’t fancy the commute…

The other downside of being here in London is that it means I’ll be missing out on other things, like the meeting of the local Camera Club tonight – slightly more frustrating, as it’s still all getting formed and we’re figuring things out.

Still, I’m sure I’ll find other things in London to be getting on with…


Photographer, Not Terrorist

As regular readers now, I do a fair amount of photography.  Over the last couple of years it’s become clearer that more and more photographers are getting stopped and searched in anti-terror searches and the like.

Amateur Photographer magazine is running a campaign about Photographer’s Rights, (Not that you’d know it from their fucking awful website) and there are a few sites now relating to this problem.

The latest one is “I’m a Photographer, Not  a Terrorist” – and while I’m not a great fan of the emotive title/subject, it’s doing a far better job than “Not a Crime”.

It’s going to be interesting to see how these campaigns work out – and hopefully get a bit of sanity back into life as well. We’ll see.


Thunderstorm

This small video is absolutely fantastic – a thunderstorm in Toronto.

It’s taken by Sam Javanrouh from Daily Dose of Imagery, one of my favourite photographers. (There’s also an interview with Sam here, although that’s not related to the thunderstorm video)

All told, the video consists of 347 15-second shots, with two seconds between each shot. (I suspect he used his Pclix for it – he’s obviously better at programming it than I am with mine at the moment)

Well worth the effort, anyway.

Toronto Lightning Storm from Sam Javanrouh on Vimeo.


Night Photography – Results

So, a couple of the results of my expeditions out to take photos in the dead of night…

They’re *very* long exposures – 10 minutes plus in some cases – but I’m really quite pleased with how they’ve turned out, although I’ve had to do some stuff in Photoshop with them to get them to this point…

As always, click on the photos to see a bigger version…

Hay Bales, taken at night

Hay Bales, taken at night

And the second one

Another long-exposure night shot of hay bales

Another long-exposure night shot of hay bales


Night Photography

For the last two and a half years, I’ve had a mental image of a photograph I wanted to try and get – basically, haybales lit by moonlight, so they’d be silver rather than gold. I know, strange but true.

Over the last two summers, events have conspired against that plan – there’s been no full moon when the bales are available, and conversely no bales when the full moon’s around. And on the occasions when there was a full moon + bales, the nights have been too cloudy to do anything with it.

Last night, I finally got the perfect circumstances – lovely full moon, clear skies (OK, a tiny bit of cloud, but nothing important) and bales in the fields.  So off I went.

And it’s been reasonably successful. I’m pleased with the results in general, except for one thing. They’re horrifically noisy as well as everything else. Now some of that’s my fault – the wrong ISO setting, for one thing – so I’m going to go out again tonight and see whether I get anything better while using a super-low ISO – 200 at most, but preferably 100. It’ll also probably mean I need to take even longer exposures, although the ones I got last night of about 2.5-3 minutes seemed to work OK.

Even at that point I think I’m still going to need to do some editing in Photoshop and/or Capture ONE in order to get the results I’m actually thinking of , as it turns out that my mental image is probably rather more “romantic” than the reality. Still, it’s fun to try.

Additionally, it also meant I finally got to use my PClix 100 properly for the first time since I bought it three years ago. It’s a nice bit of kit, but ’til now I haven’t really had the project and/or ideas that necessitated its use.  Long exposures though are one of the areas it specialises in. Without the PClix, I wouldn’t have had any real chance of getting a decent exposure at all.


Portraiture

I think that the photo accompanying this article is absolutely fantastic.

It sums up everything about the article in one image – you know what the person does straight away, and in my opinion it’s just brilliant.

Portrait of a bridge painter

Portrait of a bridge painter

Image (C) Guardian Newspapers 2009 and Murdo Macleod