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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Time Lapse Experimentation

You know how it is on the web.  You see one thing that catches your attention (whoa ... thats pretty cool...  ) and you follow a link, which led me to another link, and the next thing I knew I was watching some cool youtube videos on creating time lapse images.  I tried one today on my way home from work.  As any of you who are local to the Central New York region are more than painfully aware - Spring is takings it's merry f_#c^g! time getting here.  While the weather certainly wasn't great today, it did have some low hanging, very quickly moving, and thick cloud cover.  I figured that I might head up to the top of the ridge that overlooks Munnsville (Hamilton County) and see if I could frame up a wind turbine or two with the cloud cover moving by as a backdrop.  I found a spot, pulled the car over and parked and then attempted to open the door to get out.  I say attempted.  It was windy as all hell up there!!  I mean like, I had to really push on the door just to get it open enough so that I could get out of the car... for real.


Now I'm standing out there in this gale force wind and am seriously second guessing my intent - the camera isn't heavy enough to stay put - even clamped onto the tripod.  My past experience from bike racing kicks in ... see if I can find shelter from the wind off of the back of the car and just keep the tripod and camera mounted as low at rear tail lights height...   that'll work.  There is still a fair bit of wind swirling about where I setup just off of the back of the car, but it's not nearly enough to potentially blow the thing over.

As usual I'm watching the clock...  I want to play with this as a test, but I also don't want to try and test / play with a full on multi hours long time lapse either...   I'd like to get home.  I figure I'll go for 200 frames with about a 5 second delay between shots.  ( you use the camera's built in intervalometer )  Quick math off of my cell phone tells me that this will take about 16'ish minutes ...  so I start it and then just go back into the car and check e-mail, facebook, etc ...  on my iPhone.  I go out and check it from time to time ....  125 more shots to go ....  back to the car.  75 more to go ....  hang out and wait for it ....    finished!

I get home, eat dinner and then sit down at the computer and revisit the video where I first saw this and more or less follow along.  My first (very rough) down and dirty time lapse... !  16 minutes (and some change I'm thinking) worth of images shot over 200 frames and then turned into a video compressed down to 12 seconds.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Fuji Play and Waterfalls

...  gotta post this quick - have to run car to garage for repairs.  I think I have a few more keepers that will wind up here.  Briefly though:

Oxbow Falls at Oxbow County Park in Madison County, NY.

Click the photo to see it larger | Click here to view the 1800px export (much bigger)
( .... a few hours of time has passed )

OK - dropped the car off, came back home, played with the dogs for a while, fed them, fed me, and just exported these other two keepers from the little batch of photo's that I took today at the falls.

I had seen signs for this little park in the past but had never stopped to check it out.  It's a nice little place - it would be good for a quiet day picnic with some friends and/or family.  The falls are nothing compared to Chittenango State Park which is 20 or 30 miles south of here.  But this is a nice, small'ish quiet little park none-the-less.

So I went down into the creek bed / falls and photographed my way back up and out.  The top photo is from the furthest point down in that I had gone on this particular outing.  The next two are sequential as I worked my way back up.

Click the photo to see it larger | Click here to view the 1800px export (much bigger)

Click the photo to see it larger | Click here to view the 1800px export (much bigger)
This was the first time that I have shot raw with this little Fuji body.  The thing produces huge files - averaging 32 - 33 meg .raf files!  Wow....  way bigger, and presumably packed with far more data, than either of my Nikons.  Talk about chewing up disk space though ..  ouch.  The more I use and learn this little camera though, the more I like it...  :)

The middle photo above:  yes - the lens did catch a few water drops in case you happen to notice those ...  'eh.

I may go back to this little park sometime in the future ...  not sure.  Maybe after a hard rain or a good long rain - see if the water is running a bit higher and faster, and maybe the falls will be a bit more "fally".  <grin>  :)

-=- jd -=-

Saturday, April 19, 2014

FPS or Draggin' The Shutter?

When I first got back into photography five or so years ago, I quickly re-discovered that I have a passion for shooting uncontrolled, unscripted, unposed subject.  Basically I shoot sports.  I was a photographer in the Navy back in the early to mid 1980's and basically hung up my camera's for about 20 years before I decided to get back into it.  I purchased my first digital body, a Nikon D80, around 2009 and was smacked in the face with the reality of the fact that I hadn't shot or kept up with the pace of technological change for such a long period of time.  I kind of had to "re-learn" how to shoot again!  Fortunately my background did come in handy as I did have a basic understanding of how light, shutter speeds, iso, etc ...  all play into being able to produce a nice result.  Anyway -- this whole digital thing was a wild discovery and .... wow!  Instant results on the back of the body via the onboard lcd screen and cheap!!!  ( no film, no processing fees, no waiting..  this is great!! :)  )

Nikon D300, 1/80th @f/14, iso 200, 24mm with a 24-85mm nikkor lens, hotshoe mounted sb-600 flash - rear curtain sync | click the photo to view it larger | click here to see the full 1800px export

So getting back to the second sentence - I discovered I have a "thing" for shooting sports.  Initially I was really pretty hung up on frame rate.  ( how may frames per second can a camera body shoot - ie; is it a machine gun? )  I had to have faster and faster frame rates ...  I did also discover more robust "pro level" bodies too.  Not only did they satiate my growing addiction for faster frame rates, but they also tend to be much more robustly built - made out of metal instead of plastic.  And weather sealed.  "Ahhh .. this is good - now I can stay out in the pouring rain at football games, or get roosted with mud and rocks at the motorcycle races ...  Me like.  :) "

Nikon D300, 1/80th @f/14, iso 200, 24mm with a 24-85mm nikkor lens, hotshoe mounted sb-600 flash - rear curtain sync | click the photo to view it larger | click here to see the full 1800px export

Time passes and like all things as we grow and learn, we mature.  I find that while I do still appreciate my 8 FPS bodies that I have - which by today's standard in pro class bodies is considered slow - I also have discovered in recent years that I rarely actually use that 8 FPS capability.  I rarely shoot in bursts of more than 3 or 4 frames in succession, and am more often than not just single tapping the shutter release.  ( shooting single frames as opposed to just mashing down on the trigger and letting 'er rip )  As I come to get a better handle on both light, the gear that I own - and a knowledge of the sports I like to shoot - I find that not only am I slowing down in the machine gunning department of pure frames per second bursts, but I'm also actually slowing down the actual speed at which the captures are made.

Nikon D700, 1/25th @f/25, iso 200, 36mm with a 24-85mm nikkor lens, hotshoe mounted sb-600 flash, rear curtain sync | click the photo to view it larger | click here to see the full 1800px export

"Dragging the shutter" as it is commonly referred to in photo circles.  Basically it refers to using slow shutter speeds to achieve a particular look.  Slow shutter speeds are not uncommonly used mind you - but they are more typically used on stationary subjects.  Sports almost always dictates two basic principles - high FPS and even higher shutter speeds to freeze action.  Both of my bodies can shoot at speeds up to 1/8000th of a second shutter speed.  Thats very fast and it can make for some really spectacular imagery.  But it can also be very "static" too.  I've come to dig creating images that are not only reasonably well focused and exposed, but ones that also evoke a sense of movement or action.  It's actually kind of a challenge getting it (the camera) dialed in "just so" when trying to setup a scene - but then once you do get it dialed in and can make it repeatable ...  one can occasionally come up with some killer grabs!  :)

Nikon D700, 1/25th @f/25, iso 200, 29mm with a 24-85mm nikkor lens, hotshoe mounted sb-600 flash, rear curtain sync | click the photo to view it larger | click here to see the full 1800px export

So anyway -- I was up at Broome Tioga again today shooting a little of both hare scrambles (last race of the 2014 winter series up there) and some MX that they were doing on the MX track.  I was doing a little shutter dragging as presented in the photo's here.  These and the rest from today's batch will get posted up to the galleries over the next few days - keep checking back to see if I shot you.  :)

Monday, April 14, 2014

Sky Shot! ( and/or replacement )

Motoheads:  Hey man ...  if/when Broome or other facilities have open practice sessions and/or you just want to create some killer shots - let me know.  This guy was getting some pretty consistently good air off of the big jump at the top of the hill @Broome this past Sunday and for a not planned shoot - pretty cool!  ( if I do say so myself )

Yes I swapped out the sky.  While we had nice conditions on Sunday - again - this was not planned and with the equipment I had on hand, and portability always a top concern for shooting the races ...  I (as a shooter) often have to compromise.  I could expose for the sky (rider will be dark) or expose for the rider - sky will probably blow out or (best case scenario) be somewhat over exposed and not really all that great.  The original photo was the latter.

Now if this or a similar shot had been a planned thing ...  I could bring in lots of lights, expose for the sky (and then slightly underexpose - just a tad -  it to make it a little darker and richer) and then with multiple strobes nuke the rider as he/she (you) come into frame.

So long as you don't crash and or kill me -we could have some fun and make some wickedly cool photo's.  :)

Click the photo to view it larger | Click here to view the full size export at 1800px

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Spring / Summer Racing Season Begins!

Fresh and hot off the presses - the latest "edition" ( of my purely fictional... lol! ) magazine - STORR - Southern Tier Off Road Racer.  I haven't done one of these in a while and we're overdue for one.  So seeing as today was the opening round of the MX season at Broome Tioga, and yours truly spent some time up there ... I found a couple of pretty good candidate shots and decided to use this one.   (I'll probably come across one after the fact that is absolutely killer that would have lit up SI's radar and then I'd get a kazillion dollar contract offer from them, become a globe trotting, world dominating shooter with all of the greatest equipment, etc ....  )  But -- I didn't.  <grin>

Anyway -- photo's from this opening round can be found at the galleries here (I still have many more to upload at the time that I write this post - they'll all likely be up in a fews days time... )

Click the photo to view it larger | Click it here to view the full sized export (1800px)

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

April Showers

...  bring May flowers?

At the very least they can create some high running water and produce cool looking skies.  Full disclosure though - this is the bridge at Upper Lisle just off of route 26 slightly north of Whitney Point.  The bridge itself is low and there is even a sign right before you cross it warning that the roads beyond it, including the bridge, may be closed from time to time due to flooding.

It looks cool though...  <grin>  :)

Click the photo to view larger | Click here to see full sized export (1800px)

( time has passed) .... and a black & white one now too.
Click the photo to view larger | Click here to see full sized export (1800px)


Sunday, April 6, 2014

06 April

... it's a work in progress.

I've seen this little barn / storage shed just off of the side of the road on route 38b in between Maine and Newark Valley before.  Had a camera with me today and stopped to catch a grab of it.  I just like the patchwork of tin that someone has been applying to it for the last year of so.  View it full size to get a better view of the roof.  :)

Click to view it a little larger | Click here to view it much larger

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

01 April

My little Fuji X-T1 (take ii*) showed up yesterday and I used it this afternoon on my way home.  I was actually just about home for all of these pictures.  ( *I sent the original one back in for replacement as the first one had a few issues... )

Anyway -- one of several cool looking barns right on route 38 just 5 minutes from my house in Berkshire.  Unfortunately a number of these old(er) barns are literally falling down.  I've thought about stopping in and introducing myself to the property owners and asking if I could grab some shots of these old barns before they do disappear.

Click the photo's to view them larger.


So after taking a pic or two of the barn above I decided to swing by one of my favorite places in the Berkshire area that is a dilapidated remnant from the local past.  The remainder of these are from what is left of the old Howland Brother's Mill.  I'm still learning this little camera and figuring out what it is and isn't good for, what it can and can't do (or maybe it can and I just don't know how yet... ).


With spring like weather possibly, finally, starting to show itself there was a fair amount of water in the vicinity and I was kind of digging the reflections that could be found by hunting around for the right angle of view.  The camera has one of those articulating rear display screens which makes it really nice for composing an image from a low angle point of view - without actually having to get down low.  :)


So after grabbing a couple of externals in their respective "reflection pools" I happen to notice that some of the local yahoo's have been busy brushing up on their graffiti skills.


...  more water and reflections at the next couple.  These are all, by the way, nearly straight out of that little camera - shot as jpegs too.  Really.  I normally shoot raw with my Nikon's but Adobe still hasn't released an updated engine for Lightroom that can deal with the Fuji raw files.  Not a big deal though for me at present - again - still learning this little camera and besides - the jpeg's look surprisingly good right out of cam anyway!  :)