2/01/12
Here's the wee hoes as they quickly got labelled, shot with some out of focus xmas lights behind them. These figures are even smaller than the usual sets I have and they really don't like to stand up. It took ages to get the two of them standing at the same time. Usual drill, 105mm Sigma macro lens, tripod and remote release.
3/01/12
This was fun. I decided to Google "indoor photography projects" and the concpet of dropping fruit into water seemed to be near the top of everyone's lists. I made the mistake of reading a couple of "how to" articles which appeared to involved massive glass fish tanks, five strobe heads, pocket wizard triggers and a few dancing girls. OK - I made up the dancing girls. I thought it should be possible to do this without all the fancy gear. I used the biggest cylindrical glass vase we have with a sheet of white paper taped to the back of it. I light the water/fruit with two speedlights (triggered with ultra cheap yung nuo triggers) positioned below and pointing slighting upwards and with a slight angle into the vase. This gave me a reasonable depth of field at a fast shutter speed (1/200 at f10) and allowed me to keep the ISO at 200. I shot over 200 pics on continuous mode - strangely this was the second shot I took. In case you haven't worked it out, I flipped the picture, so it is upside down. Do a headstand or turn your monitor upside down - you'll see what I mean.
4/01/12
It might be a bit narcissistic of me but I love taking self-portraits. It might be the dressing up thing. The night before I took this shot, my good lady and I were pressed into service as private eyes and ended up doing a bone fide stakeout. Strange, but true. In the dark and everything. It was really quite exhilerating in a strange and almost creepy way. I did feel a little guilty afterwards, but what the hell. That gave me the idea of doing a film noire style private eye self-portrait. The hat and coat were defintiely the look I was after - peeking through the blinds with binoculars was an afterthrought.
5/01/12
I blagged the chance to shoot the Thursday evening training session for the ladies of Belfast Roller Derby. I have to be honest and say that I love shooting them - they're an almost perfect mixture of fun and dedication. They train pretty hard, although not quite as hard as they compete in bouts. I wanted to try out the new 24-70 Nikon f2.8 lens and see how it compared to my last set of shots using the 18-70 f3.5 lens. I have to say the new lens was impressive but with the limited zoom, you need to get close to the action. Got a load of great shots and their presence on Flickr pushed my view count over the 40,000 mark. Any opportunity to shoot the Roller Derby, I'll take it. I think they need to be persuaded to get some good head shots for player profiles on their website.
6/01/12
I kept thinking about this building - it's in the world's dearest car park (North Street, Belfast - £2.20 per hour) and I've taken a few shots of the external stairs before with no success. This time I shot for black and white and cropped in as tightly on the stairs as I could go. I liked the lines and the way the pattern of stairs and handrails repeats.
7/01/12
This is the sculpture outside the new library at Queens University. Again, I've taken shots of it before with little success and again I was thinking in advance about texture, colours and contrast (i.e. the things that made me want to photograph it in the first place.) and this time it worked out the way I had visualised it. Pushed the colours a bit in Lightroom and burned the contours and features of the face a little to make it stand out and was pretty happy with the result.
8/01/12
The Japanese Garden at Dixon park seems to make nice photographs. Set out early on Sunday morning but ended up with one of those grey, overcast days that meant that the sky was awful in any shots. I decided to focus more on the details and the little stone thingy in the middle of the pond. The colour version had some nice grrens and oranges in the foliage but it took away from the focal point of the shot. I wanted texture and contrast, so HDR'ed the shot with Photomatix Pro and then imported it into Lightroom, converted it to black and white, bumped the blacks up and incresed the contrast and clarity. Turned out pretty well.
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