2009 – The Last Word

I am writing this during the afternoon of December 31st. 2009 is drawing to a close and I am not sorry to see it go.

As this blog is mostly about photography, that’s what I will concentrate on. There have been some highs this past year. The chance to spend 2 weeks in Venice, to be able to walk virtually the entire city and take time to photograph it; is an enduring memory. Out of this experience I have a beautiful book, produced by Momento, and an exhibition at Breizoz Cafe. I have sold two of the ten prints so far.

My small exhibition at Seddon Deadly Sins cafe was supposed to end in February. Several images sold and the owner asked me for some more. I seem to be a part of the permanent collection now.

I have spent a lot of the year, on and off, trying to learn more about portrait photography. As I don’t have access to, and can’t afford a studio; this has meant going down the Strobist path. For the uninitiated, this involves using ordinary flash units off-camera to stand in for studio lighting. It isn’t as easy as it looks.

And, it brings me to one of the bad parts of the photography year. Since switching to digital in 2002, I have relied heavily on a number of internet sources for sensible, sound, accurate advice. This might come as a surprise to some of you, but not everyone on the internet knows what they are talking about.

I have no illusions, not everyone is making this information available out of sheer altruism. Most use it to attract traffic to their sites so that they can advertise goods and services. And a lot of these are very worthwhile. However, having said that, many of them go above and beyond the call of duty to explain what they are doing, or to answer questions and give advice in forums.

This year seems to have been a very bad year for a number of these people. Several have given up in anger and/or frustration. There are many reasons for this. Two of the main ones complained about are:

Sense of Entitlement – some people in the forums seem to think they have a God-given right to demand information or answers to questions and get a little agitated if they don’t get what they want.

Criticism – some very experienced, talented photographers have been criticised heavily for producing work that isn’t up to a supposed standard, or doesn’t meet the accepted formula. Attempts to explain that there is a difference between work that you can sell to corporate clients and, well, crap get met with abuse.

I suppose I am surprised that any of them bother at all.

I have noticed a tendency for people to want to be told a formula that works, rather than learn anything. There were two posts within minutes of each other in one forum from people who got expensive flash units for Christmas and wanted to be told how to use them, because the manual was just way too hard to understand.

I am getting fed up with these seemingly endless discussions too. Maybe folks should read something, learn something, try something, practice.

The people who are being criticised are working photographers who spent years learning this stuff. It is embarrassing that they should be subjected to abuse for trying to share it.

So, in an attempt to redress this somewhat, I give you my 2009 Photography Roll of Honour (in no particular order):

David Hobby

Kirk Tuck

David Tejada

Michael Reichmann

Don Gianatti

Mike Johnston

Happy 2010

Back to Square One…

Well, not really square one, but back to where everything should be. A number of photographic issues arose out of and following our recent move. Not everything was caused by the move, but I decided it was time to sort everything out and get back to a known standard.

So, the camera and lenses have had a thorough clean, the camera’s forward focussing issue has been fixed and the body has been calibrated to the lenses. The camera’s software has been updated to the current version. The biggest issue was the scratch on the focussing screen, the screen has been replaced and the prism has been cleaned.

The printer has been in for a service and clean and is now back to factory specification.

The monitor has been re-calibrated and all colour settings in Photoshop have been checked.

All I have to do now is get some talent and I should be good to go.

Unintentional Flashing

As I have previously mentioned, we have just moved into a new house. When we did the initial condition inspection, we noticed a few things that weren’t on the condition report. I thought I would be clever and photograph the defects so I could email them to the renting agent.

As the folks who have been trying to keep up with my ramblings know, I have been trying to learn the skills of using a speedlight (flash) as an off-camera light source. In some circles, this is called ‘Strobism‘. There are some people who have mastered this arcane art and who produce stunning work as a result. David Tejada, and Mr Strobist, David Hobby are two of my heroes.

As a result of all this Strobism, I hadn’t used the Canon 580 EX II on the camera for a little while.  I got it out, dusted it off and put in on the trusty 5D and started photographing.

All went well for a few minutes, until I moved to take the second shot. The flash started firing constantly when I put pressure on the shutter button. I quickly turned everything off, took the flash off the camera and began to check settings and connections. All seemed OK so I continued.

After a couple of shots, it happened again. More inspection, more testing and back to shooting. And it happened again.

Then I realised it was only happening when I shifted the camera from horizontal to vertical.

And a little while later I realised I was pressing the ‘Test’ button with my nose.

The Moon via iPhone

Chase Jarvis has just posted a fabulous photo of the moon and brief description over at his blog.

For those of you who haven’t wandered off to take a look; it is a neat photo, taken through a telescope using an iPhone (whatever that is).

The photo is sharpish and clear with quite a good amount of detail. All in all, a nice piece of work. But how much is down to the iPhone and how much is a result of a good telescope isn’t mentioned.

And it wasn’t enhanced in Photoshop, a good thing apparently.

Hang on Mr Jarvis. I just noticed something. You pointed out that there was no photoshopping involved, but there is a sneaky little mention there of some work done in Aperture. Correct me if I am wrong, but isn’t Aperture a photo-enhancement program too. But just not from Adobe, right?

So tweaking in Aperture is OK but for some reason tweaking in Photoshop is wrong? Can someone please explain this to me? How come using Photoshop is now a bad thing?

I often see this statement in posts and hear it from smug individuals: “Oh I don’t use Photoshop (sneer), I do all my work in Lightroom”.

Well, you people, I use Photoshop, and for your information, Adobe Camera Raw, supplied with Photoshop, is pretty much Lightroom. And that is what I use to do my “adjustments”, OK? Are we straight on that now?

Well, Kiss my Pressure Cooker

“…go kiss my pressure cooker in the evening!”

What is this? I was extremely puzzled to read this early today. My friend and colleague the Labcoatman, suggested that it might be a koan. And there is some merit in that, it certainly has aspects that defy conventional understanding.

I was concerned that maybe this was a French euphemism for some strange practice, and I was hesitant to ask.

But no, it was a Google translation of a comment in French at my favourite photography site, Ipernity.

Another friend, colleague, Ipernity member and more importantly Frenchman, Benoit, tells me that a more correct translation into English would be:

“Well, kisses of the evening my love”

But I prefer “go kiss my pressure cooker in the evening!”. So much more romantic.

And don’t believe every translation you get from the interwebs.

2008 in Retrospect

I have just finished laying out my 2008 photo book and have uploaded it to Momento for printing.

I decided a while back to make a photo book for my best photos of each year. 2007 was the first year I did this. Up until then I had just made prints of the images I liked.

I also had a habit of printing out the best photos from overseas holidays and making an album. I have albums for two New Zealand trips and the visit to Malta and Sicily.

Shortly after the Malta and Sicily album I discovered Momento and worked out that having a Momento book printed was only marginally more expensive than buying a good quality album and printing the images myself.

I have been very happy with the quality and it is rather pleasing to have a nice little coffee table book of my images.

Now that the 2008 book is out of the way, I can start work on the Venice holiday book. Only 875 more photos to go through!