Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Flinstones, Meet the Flinstones
Monday, February 26, 2007
Cellphones!
I went to UNL the other day and made it my mission to try to snap people using cellphones. Why? There is no why! (BTW --I was on the lookout for camera phone use, Darren -- but to be honest, outside of Times Square, I don't think I've ever seen people using camera phones in public!) I snagged some football pictures and some random candids too, but I'll put those in another post. Click any of the photos below to enlarge them.
The last one turned out to be an Ipod. Oops! :)
The last one turned out to be an Ipod. Oops! :)
Sunday, February 25, 2007
It's A' Me!
Saturday, February 24, 2007
Thundersnow
Good Lord, is it ever SNOWING outside! Flakes are the size of dollar coins and it's coming down at a ridiculous rate. To top it off, the sky has been rumbling with thunder -- only the second time I've experiend thundersnow.
Alleywalk
Today's photo is from an alley in Lincoln behind a parking garage (click to enlarge). It's been a while since I tilted a photo for no good reason. ;) A long time ago at work, we had a consultant from Poynter come and give a talk on all things newspaper. One of the things he pointed out is that, in the photojournalistic setting, camera tilt should only be used in instances where camera tilt actually makes visual sense or adds something to the telling of the story. I think for photojournalism, this really rings true. Often, a tilted camera is just an indication that the photographer needs a wider angle lens, as they're trying to squeeze more elements into the photo by turning it diagonal; I know this was true for me back when 28mm was the widest that I could go.
Friday, February 23, 2007
The Capitol at Sunset
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Sunset over Lincoln
Nerdgasm
Are you a geek? Here's one way to tell: if you think the below video is undeniably awesome and you would like to immediately copy this idea, then you, my friend, are a geek:
I wish I had some idea how in the world they were accomplishing this. The laser projector part seems pretty straight forward, but the laser pen interface has me stumped. I suppose they must have some kind of camera rigged up to a computer to track the green dot as input, which then instructs the projector to render along with the dot.
I wish I had some idea how in the world they were accomplishing this. The laser projector part seems pretty straight forward, but the laser pen interface has me stumped. I suppose they must have some kind of camera rigged up to a computer to track the green dot as input, which then instructs the projector to render along with the dot.
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Simulating the DOF trickery of a tilt & shift with Photoshop
I ran across a very interesting tutorial today:
How to create fake miniature environments
Essentially, this tutorial is simulating an effect that can be created by using a tilt & shift lens. (Or an effect that can be created by using a normal lens with a wide aperature to take a photograph of a very small area, or a 50mm lens the size of Tokyo taking a picture of Tokyo, or a telephoto lens several miles long)
I find this tutorial interesting because our brains immediately believe that the thing that is being looked at must be very small. Why? Because many years of photography have trained us to believe that an extremely shallow depth of field can never occur over large, distant planes. This kind of depth of field can only be found in very close macro shots of very tiny objects. We have, in essence, developed a sort of visual literacy when it comes to depth of field. Yes, of course, our eyes experience depth of field, but our eyes are roughly like 18mm lenses, and as such the depth of field is fairly large. The literacy has changed a bit, too, since we've shifted from large format photography (which had much narrower DOFs) to 35mm. Likely, the image below if shown to someone from the 11th century would not appear to be "miniaturized", it would simply appear fuzzy at the top and the bottom, assuming they could comprehend the idea of a photograph at all.
Here's my fun experiment, a shot of San Francisco at sunset from the Coit Tower (click to enlarge):
How to create fake miniature environments
Essentially, this tutorial is simulating an effect that can be created by using a tilt & shift lens. (Or an effect that can be created by using a normal lens with a wide aperature to take a photograph of a very small area, or a 50mm lens the size of Tokyo taking a picture of Tokyo, or a telephoto lens several miles long)
I find this tutorial interesting because our brains immediately believe that the thing that is being looked at must be very small. Why? Because many years of photography have trained us to believe that an extremely shallow depth of field can never occur over large, distant planes. This kind of depth of field can only be found in very close macro shots of very tiny objects. We have, in essence, developed a sort of visual literacy when it comes to depth of field. Yes, of course, our eyes experience depth of field, but our eyes are roughly like 18mm lenses, and as such the depth of field is fairly large. The literacy has changed a bit, too, since we've shifted from large format photography (which had much narrower DOFs) to 35mm. Likely, the image below if shown to someone from the 11th century would not appear to be "miniaturized", it would simply appear fuzzy at the top and the bottom, assuming they could comprehend the idea of a photograph at all.
Here's my fun experiment, a shot of San Francisco at sunset from the Coit Tower (click to enlarge):
Lincoln Skyline Abstract
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Streetlight
Sunday, February 18, 2007
Kenko Pro 300 1.4X TC test
Picked up an el-cheapo Kenko Pro 300 1.4X teleconverter the other day. Well, not so much picked up as received via Ebay from some vendor in Hong Kong. :) For as inexpensive as it is, most tests show that this teleconverter is equal to the $300+ Canon teleconverter in terms of image quality, though it's not weathersealed. (Not a big deal -- my 20D isn't weathersealed, so weathersealing is wasted on me, anyway.)
In keeping with tradition, I went down to the back-alley parking lot of my apartment and shot some pictures of a squirrel munching away at the feed that our superintendent likes to set out. This was tested with a Canon 70-200 2.8L IS and the 1.4X TC @ F4. (Basically, wide open, but the TC reduces the available light to F4) On a 20D, that's effectively about 450mm... quite a bit of reach at F4 for a lens that only weighs a few pounds! Click to enlarge:
The above is cropped in slightly from the original.
This is a 100% crop of the image to give an idea of the detail. It has been unsharp masked, so this isn't raw lens performance, but it gives you an idea what's possible with this lens and the 1.4X TC.
In keeping with tradition, I went down to the back-alley parking lot of my apartment and shot some pictures of a squirrel munching away at the feed that our superintendent likes to set out. This was tested with a Canon 70-200 2.8L IS and the 1.4X TC @ F4. (Basically, wide open, but the TC reduces the available light to F4) On a 20D, that's effectively about 450mm... quite a bit of reach at F4 for a lens that only weighs a few pounds! Click to enlarge:
The above is cropped in slightly from the original.
This is a 100% crop of the image to give an idea of the detail. It has been unsharp masked, so this isn't raw lens performance, but it gives you an idea what's possible with this lens and the 1.4X TC.
Monday, February 12, 2007
Josh
Here's an old picture of Josh from a camping trip we went on a few years back. This was taken at a place called "Indian Caves" in southeastern Nebraska -- quite a cool place to camp, at least for a state entirely devoid of mountains and the like. :) In the spring, they have old-timey stuff like blacksmithing and soap making. Click to enlarge.
Thursday, February 08, 2007
Some more fire pics
Tuesday, February 06, 2007
The End of 926 South 10th Street
So, I'm going outside at 3AM to pop something in the mailbox, when I look up at the capitol building and say to myself: "Self, why is there a great big deck of fog blowing past the capitol?". After a moment of groggy contemplation, it occurs to me that that's probably not steam, it's smoke. Smoke from a... structure fire! Holy cow, a structure fire within walking distance!
No, the capitol building wasn't on fire (phew!) I hopped in my car with my camera gear, and drove down to 10th street, where an apartment building was pretty well engulfed. Slinging my tripod over my shoulder, I walked down to the fire. Neat thing about owning a big camera: everyone assumes you're shooting for media. :) (In this case, I ended up shooting for media, as we're running one of the shots in the newspaper here at work.) Fortunately, everyone got out of the building safely.
The most startling moment was when the house, which had been slowly filling with water, suddenly blew the front door right off it's hinges, nearly into the street. A tidal wave of water maybe 2 feet high came pouring out of the place, washing over the street. Wish I had shots of it, but I was busy running away, since I thought the entire building was coming down.
For what it's worth, any doubts I had about spending the extra money on the 2.8IS lens instead of the 4.0IS lens went out the window last night. The few telephoto shots that I took would have been nearly impossible at f/4, as I was already backed to the wall at 800 or 1600 ISO at 1/30th of a second or below. Here are some photos -- click any of them to enlarge in a new window.
No, the capitol building wasn't on fire (phew!) I hopped in my car with my camera gear, and drove down to 10th street, where an apartment building was pretty well engulfed. Slinging my tripod over my shoulder, I walked down to the fire. Neat thing about owning a big camera: everyone assumes you're shooting for media. :) (In this case, I ended up shooting for media, as we're running one of the shots in the newspaper here at work.) Fortunately, everyone got out of the building safely.
The most startling moment was when the house, which had been slowly filling with water, suddenly blew the front door right off it's hinges, nearly into the street. A tidal wave of water maybe 2 feet high came pouring out of the place, washing over the street. Wish I had shots of it, but I was busy running away, since I thought the entire building was coming down.
For what it's worth, any doubts I had about spending the extra money on the 2.8IS lens instead of the 4.0IS lens went out the window last night. The few telephoto shots that I took would have been nearly impossible at f/4, as I was already backed to the wall at 800 or 1600 ISO at 1/30th of a second or below. Here are some photos -- click any of them to enlarge in a new window.
Sunday, February 04, 2007
Holy Moly!
This is a bit offtopic for my blog, but I found this video browsing around Youtube today:
And you thought skydiving was scary! This has to be one of the most spectacularly terrifying things I've ever seen anyone do, and this is coming from a guy who likes to get close to tornadoes.
You can read more about wingsuits -- the kind of garb this guy was using to "fly" over the mountain -- over at Wikipedia. Yikes.
And you thought skydiving was scary! This has to be one of the most spectacularly terrifying things I've ever seen anyone do, and this is coming from a guy who likes to get close to tornadoes.
You can read more about wingsuits -- the kind of garb this guy was using to "fly" over the mountain -- over at Wikipedia. Yikes.