Showing posts with label available light. Show all posts
Showing posts with label available light. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2009

Extraction... Part 2




















The belated follow-up and conclusion of an afternoon at the dentist's. One was fortunate in obtaining permission to shoot on the premises and with the cooperation of the gracious yet gallant and brave patient. Fast lenses are valuable indeed.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Extraction... Part 1
















I used something other than the Summilux 50 Asph in one or two of these shots. Better shooting than getting shot with a massive big ass steel syringe. I'm trying to like the Biogon too, but I haven't had much of a chance to use it 8-).

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Melbourne - Lanes Pt. II















While waiting for and drinking one cup of coffee, one was subjected to several mini-dramas being played out, each with a unique narrative. Lit naturally by the morning winter's light, and leakages of tungsten and halogen and fluorescent from windows and doors, each singular moment compels and seduces.

One should wait and just watch, and if one is lucky, one gets to record. One location, one morning, and a nice cup of coffee is all one needs.

Monday, July 27, 2009

what if somebody asked you...

...if it were possible to do photojournalism, at night, with a point and shoot with a cripplingly small 1/2.3" sensor, and a maximum aperture of just f3.2?

I'd give them these as an answer, and tell them size doesn't matter: only what you do with it counts.

Her mother never told her it was rude to stick her tongue out at people.
Canon SD780 IS


The observation powers of children
Canon SD780 IS


Waiting for dad
Canon SD780 IS


She got their attention
Canon SD780 IS


What are you looking at? (other than the bright blue duck)
Canon SD780 IS


Fruit stall back office processing
Canon SD780 IS


All about the guy on the left
Canon SD780 IS

That last image is my favorite by some margin. Maybe it's because the kids decided to play along and throw me an expression; maybe it's because if I'd tried it with a larger camera they'd probably not have been so friendly, but the image wouldn't be as noisy, sharper, I'd have better isolation blah blah blah...

And this raises a big paradox for me.

You see, it's always a trade off between size/quality and discretion; the motive of ditching the D3 for the M8 was discretion without giving up a lot of image quality (actually, gaining in some areas). For a little over a week, I've been shooting exclusively with the Canon SD780 IS - yes, that little thing I reviewed a couple of posts ago - and finding my creative juices refilled and flowing. I've shot more in a long time (and oddly, seen more images in the world around me) despite not having gone anywhere special, or attended any events. Most of the time I'm pretty sure another camera wouldn't have gotten the shot because I wouldn't have had it on me. Some of the time I wish the image quality was better (and most of the time it's at night - the M8/50 'lux combo is unbeatable); the LCD is very deceptive - stuff that looks great turns out mushy, flat and underexposed on the PC. Stuff that looks too bright and vivid is actually good - go figure. It's going to take some adjustment shooting with this and the D90/ M8, that's for sure (those have 'honest' LCDs.)

Files DO need a lot of work to get them to look like what you see above - but still probably no more than I'd do on a typical M8 RAW file, just different.

So how do I justify having a US$4,000 camera sitting idle doing nothing while I use a US$250 one instead? I can't. And that's the crux of the paradox. If I can do 90% of my work with an M8 instead of a D3, and 95% of that 90% with the SD780 IS...well, seriously, how little camera can you have before you find you can't make the images you want?

Pretty darn little, I suspect. So go out and learn to use what you've got, because it's almost certainly more than you need.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Back to Regular Programming...

Plotting, July 2009
Leica M8, 50 Summilux-M ASPH

Reviewing, July 2009
Leica M8, 50 Summilux-M ASPH



The Slide is in Place, July 2009
Leica M8, 50 Summilux-M ASPH

You Love It, July 2009
Leica M8, 50 Summilux-M ASPH


Some people prefer the relative comfort and privacy of a surgeon's office, although many dentists today consider that term archaic. But I still think 'oral health technician' has more to do with fellatio/cunnilingus than dental care.

The best dentists not only make you comfortable with the idea of paying someone to inflict wicked pain in sensitive areas, they can also involve you in the process, as if the very decision is completely natural and good for you. Maybe.