Showing posts with label photos galore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photos galore. Show all posts
Thursday, March 04, 2010
tumbling tumbleweed
i have a new obsession. actually, it's not that new, i created my tumblr last december after seeing my friend li's tumblr. but it only occurred to me yesterday (undoubtedly because i'm a little slow) that it's a whole new thing to do with my flickr faves! like this gorgeous grape shot from the ever-talented (and shockingly young if you're old like me) framboesa. tumblr makes it ultra-easy. i have a button called "share this on tumblr" in my firefox toolbar. so you just land on a photo you like and press that and voila, it creates a post to share with the world on tumblr and gives credit to its owner. bliss i tell you, bliss. especially since clicking the pic takes you directly there on flickr so you can fave it for yourself.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
what the plants learned at school
today, as you can see, i haven't spent much time here...
that's because the weather has been beyond glorious outside, so i was called out into the garden by birds singing and sabin's cheerful voice and husband asking me exactly where i wanted that new purple rhododendron planted. so i came in the house only to make a big pitcher of fresh lemonade and then to make dinner late in the day. but we ate it outside. and now although it's nearly dark out, we've lit candles all over the garden and will stay out until we can't stay out there anymore. but first, i had to sneak in and share a bit of the gorgeousness with all of you...
in danish, a nursery--as in the kind for plants--is called a planteskole. i love that name, because it makes me think that the plants go there to learn how to behave when they come home to your garden.
and here's a bit of what the plants learned at school...
and then, after dinner, we ate our fill of these...the first of the local strawberries. with sugar and cream.
it would have been a fitting end to a wonderful weekend, but tomorrow's a holiday, so it's not over yet!
note: these photos are just as they came out of the camera. no retouching, no turning up the colors. they've never been near photoshop or lightroom and i didn't even do the little snazzy iPhoto enhance magic wand. nikons are just that good at color.
that's because the weather has been beyond glorious outside, so i was called out into the garden by birds singing and sabin's cheerful voice and husband asking me exactly where i wanted that new purple rhododendron planted. so i came in the house only to make a big pitcher of fresh lemonade and then to make dinner late in the day. but we ate it outside. and now although it's nearly dark out, we've lit candles all over the garden and will stay out until we can't stay out there anymore. but first, i had to sneak in and share a bit of the gorgeousness with all of you...
in danish, a nursery--as in the kind for plants--is called a planteskole. i love that name, because it makes me think that the plants go there to learn how to behave when they come home to your garden.
and here's a bit of what the plants learned at school...
and then, after dinner, we ate our fill of these...the first of the local strawberries. with sugar and cream.
it would have been a fitting end to a wonderful weekend, but tomorrow's a holiday, so it's not over yet!
note: these photos are just as they came out of the camera. no retouching, no turning up the colors. they've never been near photoshop or lightroom and i didn't even do the little snazzy iPhoto enhance magic wand. nikons are just that good at color.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
photo obsessions
i'm a sucker for a new photographic obsession. last may, on a trip to singapore i bought my nikon D60 and when i got to manila and found my friends were all into lomo, i bought a couple of analog lomography cameras--a diana+ and a fisheye. soon after that, in munich, i stumbled onto a store with the lomo stuff and bought an octomat as well. that meant that i was schlepping a bag around with no less than four cameras in it at any given moment. that was madness. and it tapered off a bit (i don't carry the lomo cameras around anymore as much as i probably should). but it was mostly because i discovered through the viewfinder photography or TtV, as it's usually called around the internet. and that called for, yes, you guessed it, another camera. one which has a viewfinder large enough to use your DSLR to take a picture of that viewfinder. it helps if you mask it off somehow to make it dark enough for your DSLR to autofocus (you'd need extra arms to hold it all if you didn't use autofocus).
but, in case this is all gobbledy-gook, allow me to back up and explain.
first the lomography thing. lomography is a photo trend wherein people take old cameras made by the "lomo" people or holga or other old russian (read: soviet) cameras in general (why oh why didn't i buy some of those when i was in russia in '94?). these were cheap plastic cameras made and sold in the 50s and onward. they are extremely simple and have all sorts of light leaks and quirks which make for some really interesting and unpredictable photos. you can add to the effect by loading them with slide film (preferably expired) and then "cross-processing" it in the chemicals for regular film. you might have seen "cross-process" effects in Photoshop or Lightroom presets that are called this. they often given a bluish or reddish cast to the photos. but you can get it naturally by using an old fashioned film camera and cross-processing.
what got me intrigued about the lomo thing was an exhibition i saw in manila with displays of photos that a whole army of lomo fanatics took during one day at the wonderful serendra shopping centre at manila's fort bonifacio. the way of displaying multiples of the photos in big expanses was just so cool, as were the colors that you get using cross-processed expired slide film:
now the diana+ and the real holgas all use 120 film, but the fisheye and my octomat use ordinary 35mm film. here are some of the pictures i've taken with my lomo cameras, as well as a cheap penguin-shaped camera that came with some candy (those are funnily enough, some of the best ones).
for lomo enthusiasts, the beauty is in the unpredictability. film that doesn't advance, light leaks, double exposures. all of the "mistakes" are what makes it fabulous. and there's something really appealing in that. a chaos that i'm drawn to. plus, it's like the old days where you actually take your pictures in to be developed and have to wait for them. awesome. there's something that just feels good about waiting (however impatiently one might do that). we don't wait often enough for gratification these days.
which brings me to TtV photography. in a way, you get some of the appeal of the lomography thing...unpredictable, grainy, out-of-focus shots, but with instant gratification, since you actually take them with your DSLR.
the first camera i tried out the TtV thing with was this beauty:
and after reading a few tutorials online, i fashioned this contraption and took some pictures:
the only editing i tend to do with TtVis cropping, because when you download your pictures, they look like this:
but otherwise, i leave them alone because what you want is the blurriness, the dirt that's on the viewfinder on the old camera and the generally speaking, the quirks. with this really old camera (it's from 1901), i love the shape of the viewfinder, but most of the "right" cameras for TtV photography are square, like it comes out with my rolleicord, which was the next acquisition. since i wanted to do "real" TtV photography. the problem is that i haven't really been able to try it out properly until yesterday because it's been so cloudy and you need good light for TtV.
for my rolleicord, i made a contraption out of a box that a bottle of calvados came in. i painted the inside of the box with matte black paint, then secured it at the right size around the camera with a couple of pieces of duct tape:
but, in case this is all gobbledy-gook, allow me to back up and explain.
my diana+ (and my rockin' pilgrim sunglasses)
first the lomography thing. lomography is a photo trend wherein people take old cameras made by the "lomo" people or holga or other old russian (read: soviet) cameras in general (why oh why didn't i buy some of those when i was in russia in '94?). these were cheap plastic cameras made and sold in the 50s and onward. they are extremely simple and have all sorts of light leaks and quirks which make for some really interesting and unpredictable photos. you can add to the effect by loading them with slide film (preferably expired) and then "cross-processing" it in the chemicals for regular film. you might have seen "cross-process" effects in Photoshop or Lightroom presets that are called this. they often given a bluish or reddish cast to the photos. but you can get it naturally by using an old fashioned film camera and cross-processing.
what got me intrigued about the lomo thing was an exhibition i saw in manila with displays of photos that a whole army of lomo fanatics took during one day at the wonderful serendra shopping centre at manila's fort bonifacio. the way of displaying multiples of the photos in big expanses was just so cool, as were the colors that you get using cross-processed expired slide film:
photo exhibit in manila
who wouldn't fall in love with this?
fisheye sabin
diana+ - double exposure and film not advanced
expired slide film - cross-processed
penguin candy camera
expired slide film - cross-processed
octomat
from one shutter depression, this takes 8 photos over 2 seconds
expired 35mm slide film - cross processed
diana + - shot of cameras on the table
including the cyber-shot that's in the sony-ericsson phone
and our old SLR Canon AE-1 program (a classic)
if you want to see some really awesome lomography, check out my friend liane's photostream on flickr. she really knows what she's doing. me, i'm just playing around. some of her photos were part of that exhibit in manila that got it all started for me.
for lomo enthusiasts, the beauty is in the unpredictability. film that doesn't advance, light leaks, double exposures. all of the "mistakes" are what makes it fabulous. and there's something really appealing in that. a chaos that i'm drawn to. plus, it's like the old days where you actually take your pictures in to be developed and have to wait for them. awesome. there's something that just feels good about waiting (however impatiently one might do that). we don't wait often enough for gratification these days.
which brings me to TtV photography. in a way, you get some of the appeal of the lomography thing...unpredictable, grainy, out-of-focus shots, but with instant gratification, since you actually take them with your DSLR.
the first camera i tried out the TtV thing with was this beauty:
and after reading a few tutorials online, i fashioned this contraption and took some pictures:
and took this:
the only editing i tend to do with TtVis cropping, because when you download your pictures, they look like this:
but otherwise, i leave them alone because what you want is the blurriness, the dirt that's on the viewfinder on the old camera and the generally speaking, the quirks. with this really old camera (it's from 1901), i love the shape of the viewfinder, but most of the "right" cameras for TtV photography are square, like it comes out with my rolleicord, which was the next acquisition. since i wanted to do "real" TtV photography. the problem is that i haven't really been able to try it out properly until yesterday because it's been so cloudy and you need good light for TtV.
for my rolleicord, i made a contraption out of a box that a bottle of calvados came in. i painted the inside of the box with matte black paint, then secured it at the right size around the camera with a couple of pieces of duct tape:
my rolleicord and my contraption
rolleicord with contraption in place
picture by sabin of me taking a TtV picture with my Nikon D60
with the rolleicord, my pictures look like this before i crop/straighten them:
and like this after:
it looks like i've applied all sorts of processing, but i haven't done any at all, aside from the crop & straighten. that's what's cool to me about TtV--getting the processing effects naturally. i've been a little fed up lately with some of the over-processed photography i see out there. some part of me feels it's dishonest, at the same time as i am strangely drawn to it, because it's FUN to process your photos. this way, with TtV, i can satisfy both parts of my divided personality--the naturalist and the geek who loves software and gadgetry.
the beauty is that you don't HAVE to pay $300 for a used rolleicord TLR to do TtV photography, you can pick up an argus 75 or a kodak duaflex, which is what most people out there are using. you should be able to find one at a flea market for $10-25 (they made tons of them). i have yet to try my $10 brownie 620 , but there will be other days of sunshine and i expect it will work just fine too. you also don't have to have a macro lens for your DSLR, you just have to experiment and get your contraption the right length so your kit lens will do the autofocus thing.
so, what are you waiting for?
so, what are you waiting for?
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
in a photo kinda mood
i've been putting my negative scanner to use today, scanning old negatives in preparation for tomorrow's post, so i've totally neglected today's post...you'll see why tomorrow. and while i still owe willow an ode to the letter "i," i'm just going to give you some of the pix i scanned today, because i'm off to dinner with a friend...
husband in san francisco - december 1998
we took turns posing in that spot.
it was new year's eve and we had rented bikes and gone for a long ride across the golden gate bridge and back.
even burned up buildings are beautiful in san francisco
power lines in the late 20th century
ornate fence seen in london somewhere near the british museum
beautiful dead tree behind somewhere behind mt. rushmore
and on agfa pan 400 expired in 1991
the baltic sea
a hint towards tomorrow's post
and one last teaser for tomorrow
hoping your wednesday is more "wonderful" than "what the fuck."
:-)
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