Friday, July 29, 2011

Inside Look



It was a slow day at the office. Not really, this was done all after hours! I scanned my Nikon D700 with a 70-300mm lens attached in a GE 64 slice Lightspeed CT scanner. The images were then rendered in 3D on the GE AW workstation make the rotation animations.

For a lot of fun try this QuicktimeVR model of the camera here. This is an 18 meg file so be patient.

D700 Exposed

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Hitting the Streets in London

While walking the streets of London on our recent visit and inspired by an excellent exhibit at the Museum of London, I thought it was time for a bit of "Street Photography."


Click here to view a full screen slide show.

I made a conscious decision to depart from Jay Masiel's technique of no image manipulation and process these images to a greater or lesser extent as pseudo HDR images to give them a bit of a gritty, urban feel. Sorry, Jay. But then you taught us to find our own vision ;-). I used Nik HDR Effects Pro to process the single RAW files.

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

Choose the Right

Choose the Right

I was hoping for a nice sunrise as a reward for getting up at 4:00 am. I had to find a place within an hour drive from Idaho Falls. I wasn't sure which direction all of the action would be happening in and where the clouds would be so I needed some place that I could shoot in many different directions. And I love reflections so somewhere with water. Decisions, decisions! I got in the car and had about 2 blocks before I had to turn and commit. And the decision is...Camas National Wildlife Refuge north of Idaho Falls.

As I enjoyed the fresh air, sounds of the abundant wildlife, and the beautiful sunrise I was reminded of Galen Rowell's famous quote,

"You only get one sunrise and one sunset a day, and you only get so many days on the planet. A good photographer does the math and doesn't waste either."

and I was glad I made the decision to get up early and come to this place.

Friday, June 03, 2011

Your Turn to Shine

Your Turn to Shine

A MFA worker carefully cleans the Zhan Wang sculpture entitled "Artificial Rock #85" located in the Shapiro Courtyard at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. She used a small bottle of some cleaning fluid and slowly worked around the bottom of the sculpture with what looked like a Q-tip. It was fascinating to watch her carefully and meticulously work.

My challenge was to capture the scene in an interesting way. How would Jay Masiel photograph this? But then Jay would probably tell me something like "Be yourself, make the photograph unique to your style" or maybe his famous quote, "You've got photography in your life. Now put some life into your photography." ;-)

Jay really changed the way I look at photography and I hope I will always remember and use the ideas and principle he taught. The slide show below has a few more images inspired by Jay's teaching...


Click here to view a full screen slide show.

.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Have A No Return Policy

Does something cool, interesting, or beautiful catch your eye? Take the shot! If you think you will return and get it later, you probably won't or if you do it will be gone or changed. I have learned from experience that these special moments are fleeting and the opportunity must be seized. Stop and take the shot!

As a group of us were driving up the Whitney Portal Road a large dust storm could be seen in the valley below. The morning sun reflected on the road making it appear as a silver ribbon winding through the Alabama Hills. Finding a place to stop was difficult and inconvenient but I am so glad I acted on this impulse...

Opportunity Knocks

Always remember that opportunity only knocks once. Don't think you will return and be able to get the image. Stop and take the shot!

Popular Posts