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    Category Archives: Photography

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    Fireworks from the Fourth of July

    This is for all you haters who think I only shoot pictures of my dogs. You know who you are. I’ll get you. When you least expect it, expect it. I’m going to rain down on you. You’ll rue the day. Start ruing now, you’ll need all the rueage for I am the walrus. Now I’m just saying random words. Stop me before say pumpernickel log. D’oh, too late.

    The shot was take at f11 for 1/4 second with my Nikon D300 and my Nikon 24-70mm lens on my tripod. I have a few more shots like this I might post. These fireworks pictures were tough actually because the bright parts kept blowing out while the rest of the exposure was way under exposed. I have a bunch of shots of giant white fuzzy balls of white light with absolutely no detail. You might as well print a picture out and shoot a hole in the middle of it with a double pump twelve gauge with a polished cherry stock. Okay, that was too much detail about the shotgun. I really liked this shot though, and you better like it, or you’re gonna get another Teddy picture. So there.

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    A quick review of SmugShot for the iPhone

    I’m a big fan of SmugMug and was excited by the SmugShot iPhone application for taking pictures and uploading them to my smugmug account.

    I’m sorry to say that SmugShot is a disappointment. I frankly found it to be unusable and a pain in my keester - though it does have a few redeeming qualities. Okay, one redeeming quality and that’s its ability to upload photos to SmugMug from your Camera Roll. This part of the application works fantastically.

    Now the bad news. SmugShot’s user interface is a mess. The application is astoundingly slow and it’s way too modal (e.g. you have to do one thing at a time). Just doing normal things like starting up, saving pictures to the Camera Roll, and switching between its many modes is cheesegrater on the eyeball slow. Scrape. Ow. Scrape. Ow. Crap it’s still “Saving Photo”. Scrape. Ow. It really shouldn’t be any slower than the built in Camera application. For fek’s sake, it just can’t get in the way of taking pictures! It just can’t. Mike stomps foot and pouts.

    SmugShot really needs a rewrite to iron out the Grand Teton sized wrinkles. I can’t wait until they do but until then use the built in Camera app to take your pictures, and then upload your pictures to SmugMug using SmugShot. That’s actually a decently unsucktacular experience.

    Here’s how it should work (in my pretentious opinion):

    Scenario 1, setup:

    1. Run it.
    2. Click “Settings” button (note that the shutter button is already showing).
    3. Enter your SmugMug settings.

    Scenario 2, picture taking.

    1. Run it.
    2. Enjoy the super quick startup equivalent to built in Camera App.
    3. Click shutter button like Camera App.
    4. Go to 3 until done shooting.
    5. Click a button on the bottom that takes you to a list of photos you just shot (and they should also be saved in a camera roll).
    6. Batch select the ones you want to keep, or better yet, unselect the ones you DON’T want.
    7. Click upload.
    8. Wait until photos are uploaded.
    9. Go play Big Foot Bingo iPhone game.

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    Initial impressions of Adobe Lightroom 2.0

    I upgraded to Adobe Lightroom 2.0. The immediate good news is that it works fine with my .NEF files from my Nikon D700. Whew. And less than a week after the D700 hit the streets. That’s good timing. I wonder if that was planned.

    Some initial impressions. The fit and finish look much improved. Stuff like the folder list loads asynchronously while the application loads and the new icons and ui widgets look better. It feels amazingly fast. I chose a picture of Chloe our Yorkshire Terrier to play with, mainly because I wanted to try out the new touch up tools on her eyes which were a bit under exposed. It worked great. So far I’m super happy with it. Easily worth the $99.00 upgrade.

    The new plugin manager looks cool, though I ran into some awkwardness uninstalling the older plugins I already had, and installing the latest plugins for exporting to smugmug and flickr. I already had these installed in Lightroom 1.x and it got confused when I installed the new versions for Lightroom 2.0. I expect this is a one time awkwardness, though they could have included some kind of upgrade wizard or something for the plugins. One lame thing they need to fix is if you download a plugin and install it from the plugin manager (by clicking add), the plugin manager installs the plugin from where ever the plugin happens to be on your hard drive. This will typically be the Leopard Download folder or Desktop. So here’s what’s going to happen - people are going to install it from their desktop. At some point later they’ll clean up their desktop and delete the plugin (because it’s installed, right?). And then the plugin will obviously stop working and hilarity will ensue. The “Add” button in the plugin manager should copy it to a plugins directory - something like /Library/Application Support/Adobe/Lightroom/Plugins. Maybe have a wizard for installing plugins that asks you what to do, with copying it to this location as a default. I ended up making a “Adobe Lightroom Plugins” folder next to the application in the Application directory, just so I have a centralized location for them because I have the memory of a senile wombat. But now I have to copy the plugins into that directory before installing them into Lightroom, which really makes the process about as smooth as putting on ski-boots while wearing handcuffs. It should be one click and forget.

    Here’s the picture of our cute little Chlo-ball I mentioned above. She weighs about three pounds and really has the sweetest temperament of our fur herd. She’s also the most athletic. She’s able to climb over barriers a giraffe would trip over. She jumps onto the couch from across the room, a little fur missle flying through the air, landing right on her favorite spot on the back of the couch. She’s like Michael Jordon dunking one handed from the free throw line. She has some serious hang time. She got game. She all up in yo grill, biznich.

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    Thoughts on upgrading to the Nikon D700 from the Nikon D300

    I’ve shot about 500 pictures with my Nikon D700 now. And I have to say, with all due respect to legumes everywhere, Holy Garbanzo Beans! Yes it’s a HGB moment (whatever that is). What an amazing piece of equipment. I’d compare this experience to getting behind the wheel of a BMW M5 after you’ve been driving a BMW 535 for a year. The BMW 535 is a great car, nice leather, decent power, corners nicely. Has all the gadgets like Navigation and Bluetooth. But the BMW M5 has five hundred horsepower, gigantic brakes, and a sick suspension. You get in the car, hit the gas and I guarantee you’ll have an HGB moment. You want to stay in the car and drive it because it feels incredible. You’ll drive right past your exit on purpose.

    There is something about shooting with the Nikon D700 that is like driving a BMW M5. It responds so quickly - in fact you really have to be careful to not shoot too many pictures when on continuous low or high mode. I had to turn down the shooting speed because I kept shoot seventy three frames of the same thing. I didn’t have this issue with my Nikon D300 and in fact left it on the fastest continuous mode all the time. Can’t do that with the D700. There’s a couple of other things - the sound of the shutter is so satisfying. It’s so much more substantial than the D300 for some reason. And the eyepiece is so much better as well, it’s so much larger. Wow. I love that I can press the button in the center of the navigation control and get a histogram. That’s a killer feature.

    I put the optional Nikon MB-D10 battery pack on my D700 and it makes a giant improvement in the feel of holding the camera, especially when you rotate the camera for portrait mode. I already had the battery pack for use with my D300, but for some reason I really can’t explain, it feels so much better on the D700. The battery grip is especially helpful when shooting with a big lens.

    Right now I only have two full frame compatible lenses, the Nikon 24-70mm f/2.8G ED AF-S Zoom and the Nikon 50mm f/1.4D AF. The 24-70mm is an amazing amazing amazing lens. It’s so responsive and crisp - it focuses virtually instantly. Using it on the full frame D700 is a real joy. I never knew what I was missing in DX mode on the D300. It’s a hefty lens though. I busted it out at a friends house a few weeks ago and I got a lot of “paging Dr. Frued” jokes. Laugh it up fuzzball. Click.

    The 50mm on the other hand, I can’t quite get to work for me. It doesn’t seem to focus very quickly, and boy it’s loud when it’s focusing. Loud enough that it seemed like there was sand in or something (which there isn’t). But I suppose you get what you pay for. I keep trying this lens and having the experience of it not giving me what I want.

    I’ve seen rumors the Nikon may release some new prime lenses. I hope they do. I’m going to miss my Sigma 30mm lens (it’s a DX lens). I hope Nikon updates the 50mm 1.4 lens because it’s small and fast, which is great for being a bit more stealthy with the camera, like at a party or something. The D700 with the battery pack and the 24-70 lens on it is fricking ginourmous. Gargantuan even. Lose the battery pack and use a small lens like this, and you don’t people commenting on the camera or telling you to take a picture of something.

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    My next lens is the Nikon 14-24mm f/2.8G ED AF-S Nikkor Wide Angle Zoom Lens. I need to sell off some of my old stuff first and save up some cash. Anyone want to buy a Nikon D300? I have three other DX lenses I’m going to sell too, the Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM (which is one of my favorite DX lenses of all time), the Nikon 10.5mm f/2.8G ED AF DX Fisheye (awesome lens), and the Nikon 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 G ED-IF AF-S VR DX Zoom . I may have someone on the hook for the Sigma already, but let me know if you’re interested in any of the other gear. Oh, I also have a Nikon D70s gathering dust. It has the Nikon 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G ED IF AF-S DX lens on it. I put together a little beginners package of stuff if you want to get your feet wet with using a digital SLR, check this link out for what you would get.

    My excitement about the D700 is a bit tempered by the fact I can’t go through my usual post processing happy dance on the pictures because Adobe and Apple don’t support the file format yet. Incidently, according to all the flapping gums on interwebs the file format is the same as the D300/D3 - there’s just a field that says what model the camera is which is kerbusting the software. Must be true, cause it’s on the internet. I hope they release an update soon. Both Adobe and Apple got my hopes up in the last couple of days when both companies updated their software. I guess they updated other stuff. Sigh.

    I’ll post more when I have some post processed files to share.

    Edit: if you want to email me about the stuff I have for sale, you can contact me here.

    The Photographers Eye

    I went a little cuckoo over the last year or so and I bought several pallets worth of photography books. DHL had to bust out the flat bed and the forklift. The drivers were drawing straws to avoid my street. One guy actually threw a punch when I answered the door. Luckily I have ninja like reflexes and I simultaneously ducked, signed my name electronically, grabbed the package, and performed a perfect tuck and roll back into my foyer. Don’t mess with the Fullerton.

    One of the standout books was this book, The Photographers Eye: Composition and Design for Better Digital Photos, by Michael Freeman. I learned a lot about composing my pictures. Freeman writes about how to design your photograph - how to see what your photographing. There’s so much to think about, like framing, color, lines, juxtaposition, and pattern. It can be a bit overwhelming. I knew much of it going in, but it ties the concepts together well and it’s full of really great pictures. Of course reading about taking pictures is no substitute for actually getting out and shooting, but it’s a great addition to anyone’s photography book collection. Even if you already have several eyebrow high stacks of photography books like I do.

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    Some more dog pictures

    These are all taken at IS0 6400 with my Nikon D700. Converted to JPG from RAW with Nikon ViewNX. No editing was done to the photos. White balance, etc., is as shot.

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    Above is Sanjo our Pekingese, looking for his dinner. I like this one because you can really see the curve of his bulgy eyeball.

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    Above are all three of our fur friends. Teddy the Shinese in back, Chloe the Yorkshire Terrier on the right, and Sanjo the Pekingese on the left. They’re patiently waiting for me to feed them dinner. I was using my Nikon 24-70 lens here and I focused on Sanjo. I was shooting at f2.8, so the depth of field is fairly shallow.

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    Above is Chloe in her usual spot on the back of the couch. This one was shot at ISO 3200.

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