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Coming Back to the UK (or: The Merlion’s Miaow)

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That’s right – our time here in Singapore is coming to an end.  It’s been short (four months) but very sweet.  It’s unfortunate that I came here to work for a startup whose product was aimed at being sold to hedge funds just at the moment of a global financial crisis, but things could be a lot worse for us.

We’re not exactly sure where we’ll be living, I’ve got a couple of interviews lined up, but we’ll probably be staying with my parents in Somerset until we have something sorted out.

We’ll be moving fairly quickly – before the end of the month – since Laura is pregnant she won’t be able to fly safely for much longer.  Personally I think anything past 30 weeks is getting a bit close and we’ll be around 28.

Our landladies have been absolutely great after an initial freak-out that we were breaking our contract.  They’ve found another tenant for the flat who wants to move in quite soon, which has meant we’ve actualy ended up with a bit of a refund, *and* they even bought our cot and pram (which, I’m pretty certain, they have absolutely no use for).  They’ve been great, and although I doubt they read this blog, I’d like to say a big thank you anyway.

All in all, we’ve had nice little adventure in coming here – Singapore is a great place to live if you like hot weather, incredibly clean and green surroundings, and a fantastic melting pot of peoples and cultures. See you all in the UK sometime soon!

Written by pete

January 10th, 2009 at 4:47 pm

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DSLR Photography Projects

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If you have just bought your first DSLR it can be a little daunting at first – there are so many controls, options and settings that really don’t mean very much. I think one of the best ways to get yourself going is ot have some firm project ideas in mind, especially things that would be difficult or impossible with a compact camera. Although I’ll generally be discussing technical ideas, hopefully some of them that might spark your own imagination with ideas for a story you want to tell with an image.

Kit

  • Lens filter (UV or possibly “skylight”) – a UV or skylight filter will help a bit with outdoor photography, but you will want to get one and leave it on your lens all the time to protect it from dust and scratches. Filters are glass rings that screw on to the end of your lens, and can do all sorts of different things – see for example this Camera Filters website (actually a lot of the warm / cool / soft focus / cross filters offer images you could replicate with software.
  • Photoshop – this is an expensive piece of software, but is the absolute industry-standard photo-manipulator. You might want to leave off getting this, and use an online service like Picnik for basic colour correction / cropping and the like. If you do want to get Photoshop you can definitely look into buying an older version to save yourself a lot of money (on EBay for example) without really losing much in terms of functionality.
  • Tripod – this is more-or-less a requirement since you’re unlikely to find something else handy that you can just sit the camera on for long periods of time, in low light, and many other situations. Tripods are a pain to carry around and difficult to find a place for, but they do give you much more creative freedom. There are some interesting products like the GorillaPod which you might think about.
  • Remote control – either wired or wireless, your camera will almost certainly have some kind of remote control capability. It used to be easy in the old days, when almost all cameras had a standard fitting, but you can usually buy fairly cheap, unbranded wired remotes for models that have a connector. It’s worth trying a shot without one, but even at exposures of 1/8 of a second the shake from pressing the button can ruin a photograph.

Long Exposure

You’ve probably seen long-exposure photographs, one of the most common types is of streaming traffic lights along road networks. This kind of photography is pretty easy and quite fun.

Setting up your camera on the tripod is fairly straightforward, and you should refer to the manual for your camera on how to set it up for long exposure. By default this will expose for as long as you hold down the button, if you are using a remote it should have a “lock” so you can just leave it in the “exposed” position (ooh err) and go have a cup of tea.

Set Up and Settings

Ideally you should have a low ISO number set, as this will give better results. “ISO” is a term from the film days and refers to how much light the film needs for a good exposure, with higher numbers needing less light (you may even remember 100 speed film for daylight, and 400 speed for indoors). The faster the film, the more “grainy” the image will appear. Your DSLR probably goes from ISO 64 or 100 up to 1600 (or even 3200). You can step up the ISO if you have to, which will let you shorten the exposure time.

You’ll probably need to experiment with setting the “aperture” and how long the exposure lasts. Start out with narrow aperture (f16 or higher) and a short-ish exposure (5 minutes). If everything comes out black, then try opening up the lens (a lower f number) and, if the shot you want permits it, lengthening the exposure. Some shots you want may require you to have a specific length of shot (for example, the stars moving) so work around any single “fixed point” that you require.

Besides the “traffic” idea for a long exposure shot, you might also consider a river (flowing water turns all smooth and blurry with a long exposure) or even, if you’re in an area with a clear view of the night sky, the stars themselves:

[flickr]photo:628497091(medium)[/flickr]

This shot was taken over about 40 minutes, pointing up, and shows the movement of the stars visible because the earth’s rotation. Kind of cool really :)

Impossible Focus

Auto focus is great much of the time, but there are plenty of photographs you might want to take where it just won’t work. For example, looking through some trees at the person you’re stalking … uh, I mean “the person modelling for you” … is almost impossible for auto-focus, which will inevitably focus on the greenery.

There are no special kit requirements for this, and you will simply need to set either the camera, or the lens into “Manual Focus” mode (which are both probably physical switches near each other where the lens meets the body).

Now, as well as “zooming” (assuming your lens does that, which it almost certainly does) you can use the other “ring” on the lens to manually focus. It takes a little getting used to to do this properly, and if you’re camera has a “Live Preview” mode, this is the point to leave it behind and look through the viewfinder (since it’s going to be bascially impossible to tell from the digital screen what is in focus).

Here’s a floral example from Singapore’s Botanical Gardens. Using autofocus would have honed in on the foremost flowers, whereas I thought making the central ones appear crisp, and having some blur in the foreground and background would look more interesting

[flickr]photo:3037281032(medium)[/flickr]

The Hichcock Cameo

“The camera never lies,” or so the saying goes. In fact, the camera *always* lies – a photograph is a 2-dimensional representation of a 3 (or 4 if you include time) dimensional event, and by definition is manipulated and shot from a particular perspective.

You don’t have to be in a studio to manipulate the scene you want to shoot. Careful positioning of yourself, or other objects and props can add a lot to an image. Look at this picture, which is striking immediately, but also includes an image of my friend Ben, who was doing the shooting:

[flickr]photo:2311707171(medium)[/flickr]

This is a relatively obvious example, but you could place a mirror in a scene, angled just right to show yourself.

I know I said I would only be discussing technical ideas rather than creative ones and I think getting your head around the idea of controlling your shot and its environment counts, just about.

Multiple Exposures

You can of course get a multiple exposure effect using software, but it’s quite a lot of fun to do it directly on the camera, and certainly can help you avoid getting bogged down in endless photoshop tweaking.

I don’t have any examples to hand, but a quick search for multiple exposure on Flickr gives plenty of results.

One of my all time favourite multiple exposures was made (ibn the days before digital) by Albert Watson for a portrait of Mick Jagger. the photographer superimposed a leopard’s face onto Mick’s, with fantastic results:

Portrait of Mick Jagger by Albert Watson

Portrait of Mick Jagger by Albert Watson

Stop Frame Animation

This is a fairly straightforward technique, and could in fact be done with any camera at all. Set up your camera on a tripod and point it at your scene. Snap, move your subject a tiny bit, snap again.

Given that you will probably be working at (at least) 12 frames per second you would be well advised to dramatically lower the image resolution – something like 800 x 600 (or whatever your camera’s “low quality” setting is) should be fine for video.

You’ll need some kind of software to stitch these images together into an actual movie. Drop me a comment if you need some suggestion.

General Techniques

To get the best of many of the kinds of shot I’ve listed here, it will be well worth your time getting your head around some of the more technical aspects of photograpy.

Aperture and Shutter Priority

Your camera will have various “scene modes” such as “Sport”, “Portrait” and “Landscape” which are usually very well set up for their respective environments. You will benefit from understanding what their doing in the background, and simply mimicing them with the more manual modes your camera offers is a great start.

Aperture priority lets you adjust how wide open the lens is (the “f stop”, or how much light it lets in) while the camera automatically adjusts the shutter speed for a correct exposure. Shutter priority is the opposite – it lets you adjust the shutter speed while opening or closing the lens accordingly.

A very open lens with a low f stop setting (1.4 to 4) will narrow the “depth of field” or amount of things that will be in focus. Look, for example, at the “Impossible Focus” shot of flowers above – only a small area (I’m talking in terms of distance from the camera rather than surface area of the picture) is in focus. Contrast this with a landscape shot, where you will almost certainly want a large depth of field (achieved by having a high f stop of f16 or more) and everything from a nearby tree to the mountain in the distance to appear crisp.

Shutter priority lets you control the shutter speed – the amount of time the lens is actually open. If you are taking a shot of a hummingbird you will probably want a very fast shutter speed, otherwise you will only see a blur. If you want a very dramatic shot of a runner, you might want to slow the shutter down so you get some motion blur (something like 1/15 of a second).

The modes mentioned above will work out something like this in manual terms:

  • Sport will have as fast a shutter speed as possible to stop any motion blur of fast moving subjects.
  • Portrait will have as low an f stop (as “wide open” a lens) as possible, so that only the subject is crisply focused.
  • Landscape will have as high an f stop as possible, so that as much as possible is in focus.

AE and AF “Locking”

AE (Auto Exposure) and AF (Auto Focus) “Locking”, and also a combination of the two, are fantastic things to understand and use as they give much greater freedom over how your picture is framed, while still being in control of how it is focused. I’ll assume that you are using locking on both AE and AF at the same time, but bear in mind that you can just do one at a time.

If you want to take a picture where the subject is not central in the frame, it can be difficult to get your camera to focus in the right place, or even if you are using manual focus, the picture may end up being exposed for a dark background rather than the well lit, but off centre, foreground that you wanted. AE / AF Locking is the answer, and here’s what you do:

Point you camera directly at teh actual subject of your picure, and half-press the exposure button – this will set the focus and exposure. Now press the AE / AF Lock button and keep it held down. You are now free to move the camera about and point it at anything – and the focus and exposure will remain as they were when you began the lock.

Bracketing

As you experiment in more manual control over your camera, you will inevitably find shots that weren’t exposed correctly. In many situations you can just try again, but if the shot was a “one off” then sometimes you just have to write it off to experience.

Bracketing can help you here, as what it does is take a series of shots (either 3 or 5) as quickly as possible after each other with slightly different settings – both under and over exposed. In the case of 3-shot bracketing, you will get one shot exposed as the camera thinks is “correct” and then one underexposed and another overexposed – fairly obviously 5-shot bracketing is the same, but with two steps of under- and over-exposure.

Bracketed shots can also be used not only in case of problems, but also to create “high dynamic range” images. These are really interesting images where more detail is brought out from the shadows and well-lit parts of a photograph than is possible with a single exposure. You’ll need to find some software to create HDR images for you though.

That’s a Wrap!

Well that was another mammoth post! Hopefully it’s got your creative juices bubbling!

Written by pete

January 6th, 2009 at 3:31 pm

Posted in Personal,Professional

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Buying your first DSLR

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I’m writing this post since a friend (hi, Emma!) asked me for some advice about buying a first DSLR.

Introduction to DSLRs

The first thing to understand, as you’d find out if you search around is that with DSLRs one is actually buying into a system rather than just buying a one-off piece of kit. The lenses are interchangable, and if you do end up with more than one, it makes sense when you want to upgrade the camera that you only need to upgrade the body as long as you stick with the same make, you can keep all your lenses and they should work fine.

In this regard, I’m really only going to suggest the two big makers in the market – Nikon and Canon. You could also look at Sony or Olympus – who make very fine cameras – but if you are thinking that you may want to take your photography further in the future the former two will, I think, give you more options.

Lenses and focal lengths

The biggest thing about DSLRs, apart from the manual controls you get, is the wide variety of different lenses and filters you can slap on the front of your camera. You will probably get at least one lens with your first camera (they cost much less to buy as a “kit” with a lens included than to buy the body and identical lens separately) and they can vary so it’s worth getting an understanding of the numbers and acronyms that infest the industry.

Focal Length is a number given in millimeters, and refers to how “telescopic” the lens is, with a bigger number magnifying things more (a very small number will give you a super-wide “fish eye” kind of effect). These numbers usually range from about 18mm (wide angle, good for landscapes, group shots and indoors) right up to 300mm and beyond (super telephoto, good for sports, wildlife and portraits). Your first lens will ideally be a zoom lens (this means it has a range of focal lengths) and will give you a range somewhere between 18mm and 135mm. The next lens you will likely want will be a higher focal length, up to 200 or 300mm.

IS & VR refer (in Canon and Nikon terms respectively) to lenses that can help reduce bluriness due to shaking. This is especially great with a long focal length lens (high power magnification also magnifies the movement of your hands) and also in low light. It’s not 100% necessary, and will not remove all camera shake, but it helps (and it costs a lot)

F number or “F stop” is a number in the range of 1.4 up to 6. This number (lower is better) describes how much light can get into the lens; the more light you can use the more freedom you get over exposure controls (as well as just a better image anyway). A seemingly identical pair of lenses with a high F-number and a low F-number will cost a huge amount more and less repsectively. Note – this number refers the minimum f-stop that the lens is capable of, and you will be able to “stop up” to a higher number. That probably doesn’t mean much to you, but if you get into photography it will!

Macro lenses can truly magnify a close up object to appear larger than it does with the naked eye – imagine looking through a very low-powered microscope. Some lenses you will see will offer a “macro” capability, and this is a nice feature if you like taking picures of flowers, bugs, cat’s noses, jewellery, needlework or anything else very close up.

Budget

It will probably help if you have an idea of how much money you want to spend. You are likely to be able to get a camera-and-lens kit for under £400. Are you happy to go up to £600 if you get a lot more for your money or a better lens?

If you are really counting the pennies – and who could blame you at a time like this – then definitely look at trying to get a second hand one, preferably not more than about 2 years old. This can be an excellent way into the world of DSLRs because if you save yourself a couple of hundred pounds by buying an out-of-date camera body you could put the money towards a really nice lens which you can keep for years (even when you become a pro and upgrade to supery dupery £10,000 camera body in the future).

Try out some cameras – but go prepared

One thing to do before you make up your mind is to go to a shop and actually try out the cameras in question. This is worth spending some time thinking about before you go especially since not only the cameras, but the very things you can do with them are going to be new to you and having a list of things to remember will help a lot. Here’s a few points:

  • Make yourself a “call-sheet” of photographs to take that will be easy in a shop environment. For example: a portrait of the sales person; a close up of some small print, or a piece of jewellery you take along; a “landscape” of the front of the shop and also the view through the front door (to check how the lens and camera handle very different ranges of lighting and shadows). If you can, also try some shots that would not be easy (or even possible) with a compact camera, e.g. a manually-focused photograph with a small item off-centre in the picture is actually visible and most of the frame is blurry.
  • With as much research into what these things mean as you are comfortable with, try various manual settings with the camera in your hand in between actually taking shots to see how comfortable it is. For example: “aperture priority” and “shutter priortity” modes; white balance; manual focus; bracketing; flash forced to be on and off; focus type (spot, average, weighted, etc); exposure compensation
  • Take a laptop with you, and load the pictures you take with each camera onto it so you can view them more closely. Any decent shop will not mind you doing this at all, and they should really provide you with a memory card reader so you can get the images on to your machine. You shouldn’t need any special software as you aren’t going to edit the photos, just preview them.
  • Be prepared to go and look at the cameras available in a shop and go away without buying anything, but with some more knowledge of what to research on the internet. Speaking of which …

Search the web!

There is a huge amount of information out there about all the cameras you might be interested. In fact, since the entry level DSLRs are by far the biggest selling, it’s often a matter of sifting the signal from the noise. Possibly the most comprehensive site available – it certainly has exhaustive many-page reviews – is DPReview.

Gizmodo has a review of four recent entry level DSLRs, which is quite good aside from a couple of points. I feel that “Live Preview” modes more or less completely defeat the point of having a DSLR. I haven’t handled the supposedly best-in-class Olympus but I really don’t think one could realistically get an equivalent experience looking at digital screen rather than through the viewfinder – so I consider those points irrelevant.

That’s all!

I guess that wraps it up. For what it’s worth, I am a Nikon fan and have been since the days of 35mm film. I currently have a Nikon D80 with the 18-135mm lens that came bundled with it and a cheap and cheerful Sigma 70-300mm lens with a macro capability. You can see some of the stuff I (or in fact, we since Laura has been getting into photography) do with it over on my flickr account.

If you’re interested let me know and I might write a post on some project and photograph ideas to try out with your new camera once you get it!

Written by pete

January 1st, 2009 at 2:30 pm

Posted in Personal,Professional

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New Year’s Eve 2008

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We’re off to the Marina Bay Countdown tonight. Being old (in my case) and pregnant (in Laura’s) we opted to buy tickets for reserved seats rather than the free standing-room that is also apprently plentiful.

Will be taking a camcorder, so hopefully will have some nice stuff to post in 2009!

[Update 01-01-2009: Here's the Video!

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Written by pete

December 31st, 2008 at 5:21 pm

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Another Baby Scan

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You definitely get your money’s worth here in Singapore!
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Written by pete

December 31st, 2008 at 4:49 pm

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