I stumbled across this video while surfing the web. Although not about photography in the way I or any reader would use the word, it still is technically "photography". Also, it's set to Pink Floyd, which is always cool and brings back memories of smoke-filled, midnight showings at planetariums.
Enjoy.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
The Most Important Image Ever Taken?
Adobe Plenoptic Video
First, a definition: "A plenoptic camera, also called a light-field camera . . . is a camera that uses a microlens array (also known as a lenticular lens array) to capture 4D light field information about a scene." Click here to see the entire Wikipedia article.
Adobe has recently demonstrated a light-field camera that is truly amazing. Through software, it actually lets the user refocus the image through then entire depth of field. Light-Field cameras are able to do this by refocusing the image through many, smaller lenses much like a bug's eyes focus through many small lenses. Essentially, an unprocessed image looks totally blurred, but can be focused at any point in the depth of field. It can be focused after the fact.
Ratrix, a company out of Germany actually makes light-field cameras for sale and will also modify existing cameras to work with their light-field software. Click here to see their products.
Check out the video. It is truly amazing.
Adobe has recently demonstrated a light-field camera that is truly amazing. Through software, it actually lets the user refocus the image through then entire depth of field. Light-Field cameras are able to do this by refocusing the image through many, smaller lenses much like a bug's eyes focus through many small lenses. Essentially, an unprocessed image looks totally blurred, but can be focused at any point in the depth of field. It can be focused after the fact.
Ratrix, a company out of Germany actually makes light-field cameras for sale and will also modify existing cameras to work with their light-field software. Click here to see their products.
Check out the video. It is truly amazing.
Labels:
adobe,
lenticular,
light-field,
plenoptic,
ratrix
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Portrait of a Young Candidate
Katie Edwards |
In April, I spent a day following Katie and her campaign volunteers around as they engaged in old-fashioned door-to-door politics in order to meet the voters and garner the necessary number of signatures to qualify for the primary election without a filing fee.
None of the photos in the essay was staged. I had complete access to Katie and was granted unhindered freedom to photograph at will. The photo-essay shows an earnest and eager young candidate who engages the voters and her campaign volunteers with friendliness and respect. This is democracy at work. Click here to view the gallery.
Labels:
black and white photography,
Candiate,
election,
photo-essay,
photo-journalistic,
photography,
portraits,
young
10 Things Photographers Should Not Do
Brian Auer has an interesting piece on Epic Edits listing 10 things photographers should not do. My favorites are number 2, "Don't lust for gear", and number 9, "Don't ignore the rules".
Photographers are a curious group that includes hard-core gear-heads on one extreme and the touchy-feely artsy crowd on the other. While I love the gear (don't get me wrong I really love my gear) to focus (pun intended) on the gear misses the mark entirely. Photography is about the images, it's about what you can capture and how you can display it. To focus on the gear is not only super expensive but totally misses the mark. The gear-heads might as well be talking fuel-injectors or hard-drives.
It's all about the images.
As for the "rules", yes there are compositional rules for photography. In sum, you should learn them and commit them to memory so afterward you can intentionally ignore them. That's the difference between accident and intent.
Click here for the rest of Brian's article.
Photographers are a curious group that includes hard-core gear-heads on one extreme and the touchy-feely artsy crowd on the other. While I love the gear (don't get me wrong I really love my gear) to focus (pun intended) on the gear misses the mark entirely. Photography is about the images, it's about what you can capture and how you can display it. To focus on the gear is not only super expensive but totally misses the mark. The gear-heads might as well be talking fuel-injectors or hard-drives.
It's all about the images.
As for the "rules", yes there are compositional rules for photography. In sum, you should learn them and commit them to memory so afterward you can intentionally ignore them. That's the difference between accident and intent.
Click here for the rest of Brian's article.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Suburban Knights
NPR has done a very interesting profile of work by Venice-based photographer, E.F.Kitchen in which she photographs medieval reenactors from The Society for Creative Anachronism. According to NPR, Kitchen "photographs with a large-format 8x10 camera, and makes her own prints using an old-fashioned platinum process" which takes about a month for each print. Click here for the article.
Labels:
black and white photography,
large-format photography,
medieval,
photography books,
platinum prints,
reenactor
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Rockabilly Culture
"Rockabilly is one of the earliest styles of rock and roll music, and emerged in the early 1950s.
The term rockabilly is a portmanteau of rock (from rock 'n' roll) and hillbilly, the latter a reference to the country music (often called hillbilly music in the 1940s and 1950s) that contributed strongly to the style's development. Other important influences on rockabilly include western swing, boogie woogie, and rhythm and blues. While there are notable exceptions, its origins lie primarily in the Southern United States.
"The influence and popularity of the style waned in the 1960s, but during the late 1970s and early 1980s, rockabilly enjoyed a major revival of popularity that has endured to the present, often within a rockabilly subculture." Wikipedia.
I love the music and think the culture is kinda cool, at least in measured doses. The Gawno Magazine has some wonderful photos of Rockabilly Culture taken by Erik Refner. The photos are in black and white, very graphic and photo-journalistic, exactly what I like and exactly my style as well. Click here to see these truly great photos.
How to set metatags in blogspot.
Excellent (and SIMPLE!) tutorial on key-wording and SEO from Tweak My Blogger.
Monday, September 13, 2010
Alter Egos of Online Gamers
I really wish I'd thought of this photoshoot. Very cool. From Gawno.com, the alter egos of online gamers.
Labels:
alter egos,
art,
gamers,
performance art,
photography
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Is it the camera or the photographer?
Those of you who've seen me shoot know I use top-notch equipment, mostly Canon 1 series cameras and Canon L lenses. These are the very best cameras and lenses that Canon makes; they are in fact the definition of "world class". The cameras are big, heavy and built like tanks. So, when people see me with one of these really big, impressive-looking cameras I often hear "wow, I bet you can take really good pictures with that camera!" Hmmmmm, ggrrrrr, . . . it's like nails on a chalkboard.
Yes I can, but truly it has very little to do with the gear. Good photography is in the eye and in the heart. If you know how to frame an image and you love this craft you'll take "real purtty pictures" no matter what gear you use.
Don't believe me? Have a look at this video. Lee Morris shot an entire photo session with nothing but an iPhone and lights.
The iPhone Fashion Shoot - Lee Morris Shoots With The 3GS Fstoppers from FStoppers on Vimeo.
Yes I can, but truly it has very little to do with the gear. Good photography is in the eye and in the heart. If you know how to frame an image and you love this craft you'll take "real purtty pictures" no matter what gear you use.
Don't believe me? Have a look at this video. Lee Morris shot an entire photo session with nothing but an iPhone and lights.
The iPhone Fashion Shoot - Lee Morris Shoots With The 3GS Fstoppers from FStoppers on Vimeo.
Labels:
cameras,
fashion photography,
Miami photographer,
quality
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
My Father's Rangefinder
I first fell in love with photography at the age of fourteen, after borrowing my father’s Konica rangefinder camera. I immediately appreciated the special magic of the medium: the little box in my hand enabled me to stop time. In a frame of 35mm film, I could literally capture a fleeting slice of existence that was here one moment and then gone the next.
I also very quickly learned an iron rule that governs this special magic: in photography, there are no second chances. What would be a great photo at one moment, may only be a snapshot a moment later, a blink of an eye, a parting of the lips might make all the difference. One moment you’re Robert Capa, a moment later, you’re just a guy with a camera.
Through this blog, I hope to more fully express my love for this craft. I hope you enjoy reading this as much as I will enjoy writing it.
Labels:
art,
commentary,
Miami photographer,
photography,
portraits,
wedding photographer
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