Archive for the ‘Digital Photography’ Category

Thousands visit art fair

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Maxine Welp of Marshalltown never misses a chance to soak in the art at the Central Iowa Art Fair in her hometown.

The one-day fair put on by the Central Iowa Art Association brought crowds of art lovers outside the Fisher Community Center.

“It’s a wonderful thing for Marshalltown to do this to support some of the artists,” Welp said.

About 40 artists exhibited their work, which included drawings, paintings, photography, ceramics, jewelry and more.

“I think it’s good for the town,” said Marshalltown’s John Wells who was displaying his photography and ceramic work. “It introduces people to different art.”

The Kids Quest area was popular with families as children enjoyed storytelling, face painting and balloon animals. Live music was also provided by the band World Port and the string musician Paul Imholte.

Fair organizer Marti Jo Ferneau said she was “pretty happy” with how things turned out.

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Discover outdoor photography with Light and Land

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

Leading photographic tour company Light and Land has announced the opening of its doors for the 5th of its renowned ‘Discovery Days’.

The day, hosted by the famous Charlie Waite, is touted as an ‘inspirational celebration of landscape photography‘, and is a chance to meet and gain wisdom from some of the best in the business.

There will be seminars documenting top techniques, opportunities to gain a constructive critique of your work from one of the experts and, as a new feature to the discovery days, an open forum discussion between Joe Cornish, Charlie Waite and David Ward, chaired by the acclaimed photography Eddie Ephraums.

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New Address

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

We have a new home!

Please bookmark:
www.theonlinephotographer.com (front page)
http://theonlinephotographer.com/the_online_photographer/blog_index.html (Blog)

(Note: If this does not work for you, please try:
http://theonlinephotographer.typepad.com)

Mike J. and the TOP writers and photographers
see more here

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Laid Low by the Spam-Fighting Robots

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Well, wasn’t that fun.

If you haven’t heard, last Friday I got locked out of The Online Photographer. When attempting to post I got a dire Warning! message that informed me that Blogger’s Spam-Fighting Robots had identified TOP as a spam blog (whatever that is…and please don’t tell me, I’m quite sure I don’t want to know). So for three days—thank the stars and the Blogger Team it wasn’t more—I haven’t been able to post here or to even tell you what was going on!

I’ve been almost ill over this. I feel I’ve worked hard for my traffic—you, that would be, and thank you—by giving you something new every day. In nearly a year and a half I don’t think I’ve ever gone three days without posting new content. That was the original idea behind TOP—to give photo enthusiasts a place where they could reliably find something fresh.

And I have to say I’ve been pretty happy with Blogger for this purpose…up till now.

But apparently I have just run headfirst (and, yes, ow) into one of the major failings of a free-service site: namely, no Customer Service. I did everything I could think of to find someone to help—even tried to call Google in California. No luck. Good as it normally is, Blogger is a take-what-we-give-you type of arrangement. Don’t like it? Tough tiddlywinks. Once I’d made the request for reinstatement, all I could do was wait. My only option was to sit on my hands. You can imagine how I felt when I heard the news (from reading in the Blogger Help forums) that TOP might have been out of commission for as long as a week.

I did get the “thanks for your patience” reinstatement this afternoon, and here I am posting again. Fine. But in the meantime, I did something I probably should have done a long time ago—built a new version of the blog, and registered it under my own domain name.

It’s looking pretty rough yet, but I think it will end up being an improvement. See what you think: the new URL is www.theonlinephotographer.com (same as before, just without the “blogspot” in the middle there).

For now, until the DNS servers catch up with us, you may have to access the new site HERE.

I’ll be interested to hear comments. And my apologies for abandoning you over the weekend—it wasn’t voluntary, believe me.

Posted by: MIKE JOHNSTON
see more Laid Low by the Spam-Fighting Robotshere

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Tripod Resolution

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Every now and then when the moon is almost full I grab my camera. I think it’s because I love the phrase “waxing gibbous moon.” Waxing is the opposite of waning; it means it’s getting bigger. And gibbous is the opposite, or the complement, of crescent; it means a partial moon larger than a half moon. I’ve always wanted to title a picture Waxing Gibbous Moon.

Two nights ago I took the camera out by the garage and took this. I tell myself in those situations that there’s no time for a tripod. For this shot, I turned on “Anti-Shake” (actually, I never turn Anti-Shake off) and jammed the camera up against the garage door.

When I saw that the exposure wasn’t totally sharp and the moon was still blown out (this would be a good application for two quick exposures blended with one of those actions that combines two exposures for extended dynamic range—I’m not just imagining that those exist, am I?), I had one of those “tiny epiphanies” of which my days are full—I realized I dislike tripods on principle. That is, I don’t think of myself as a tripoddy kind of person, all finicky and particular. I’m an anti-tripodite.

Real Purple: This unsharp waxing gibbous moon Kind of Blue moon
—a detail from the shot above—is also one of the few times I’ve ever
actually seen bonafide purple fringing from my 7D and 28–75mm lens.

I have a friend named Christopher Bailey who was once a house painter. I remember keeping him company once four stories above Georgetown. I couldn’t leave the window, but Chris was scampering around on boards laid on scaffolding with nothing under him but sidewalk, dizzyingly far below. Now, I’m scared of heights, dramatically so, so just watching him had my stomach in knots. At one point I said, “Chris, aren’t you afraid of falling?”

At that, he started jumping up and down on one of the boards, which flexed beneath him and then flung him upwards. He jumped on it like it was a trampoline. “Oh, I don’t know,” he said, “I just feel like if I fall, I’ll get my hands on something.”

Bingo. That’s how I feel about steadying the camera. I’ll use anything and everything to brace the camera on or against—mantelpieces, car windows, someone’s back, whatever. I like to extemporize. More than that, I like to think of myself as someone who can extemporize. Even when I do use a tripod, I just jam the camera down on the top plate with my hands—I seldom actually attach the camera to the tripod head. What I realized the other night is that I avoid tripods just because of this self-conception I have—even when they’re called for, and would be appropriate and useful. There was really no reason at all not to grab a tripod when I went inside to get the camera the other night.

So here’s my resolution. The next time I shoot a waxing gibbous moon (granted, the shot above is another miss), I’m going to get the tripod out, and use it properly. In fact, I’m going to try to use my tripod more often in general. I don’t care for “tripod snobs,” but being an anti-tripod snob is no better.

Posted by: MIKE JOHNSTON

Featured Comment by Cliff: “Waxing Gibbous Moon—Nikon D70, Nikon 18-200 VR, 1/400 sec. F5.6:”

Featured Comment by Joe Decker: Image stabilization can save the day when tripods won’t do the job. This was taken from a moving ship (Canon 300L/4 IS, f/4, 1/160, ISO 400):


Featured Comment by DMayer: “While I agree with your comments both pro and con about both tripods and VR/IS/whatever, I’d like to humbly point out that the argument would be moot (mooot?) for moon shots. To successfully photograph the moon you have to shoot at a shutter speed fast enough to freeze the moon and to make the earth’s movement negligible. At usual f-stops, the proper exposure would be fast enough to freeze the moon with a ‘normal’ lens in a shutter speed range that would allow your IS to be effective. Shoot slower, and a tripod may yield a sharper picture of everything else, but your moon would either be blurred or grossly overexposed. Cliff’s WGM looks good at screen resolution, and was presumably shot at 200mm at a high ISO (I would guess around 800?) At this shutter speed some people may not need the VR, let alone a tripod, especially if you use the stabilization method that you (Mike) used for your moon shot. And let’s not talk about the need for remotes and mirror lockup while on your tripod. Sort of takes away the spontaneity a little, eh? Yes, I do have a tripod (carbon fibre of course, sniff-sniff), a remote cord, and a usable MLU function on my camera, and do from time to time use these functions, but I also have VR lenses, and in a pinch which do you think would yield a more successful moon shot? (The smarta-answer is the tripod, used a couple days before the full moon around sunset, when the difference between the sky exposure and the moon is within the dynamic range of your sensor and the moon is close to the horizon. Luck has nothing to do with making a good photo.)”
see more Tripod Resolutionhere

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Harold Cazneaux Artist In Photography

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Harold Cazneaux remains the influential ghost of Australian photography’s past and present. Decades before Max Dupain and Olive Cotton first strived for lean, confident modernist ways of seeing, Cazneaux was liberating his camera from 19th-century values with photographs that were prophetic in their style.

Three decades before David Potts and David Moore pioneered Australian photojournalism with success in 1950s London through Life magazine and The Observer newspaper, Cazneaux was documenting Sydney - from the mean streets of Surry Hills to the salons of the artistic elite.

In Harold Cazneaux - Artist In Photography at the Art Galley of NSW, the curator, Natasha Bullock, has assembled a massive selection of original Cazneaux prints that reflect the life of a photographer who possessed a remarkable eye from the start. Even his lifelong affection for pictorialist photography’s diffuse charms couldn’t conceal a vision that was essentially modern.

Daily life in Sydney in the early 20th century also fascinated Cazneaux. When he wasn’t making portraits of the city’s notable citizens for Sydney Ure Smith’s pioneering glossy, The Home, Cazneaux was photographing a pinch-faced boy cradling a ship’s cat at Circular Quay, a bird’s eye view of the car-lined canyon of Martin Place or a crowd of well-dressed spectators in a field, being thrilled by a pioneering aviator.

Curiously there are no pictures of early political figures in Bullock’s display. This Cazneaux show is preoccupied with light, landscape, personal portraiture and, in a rare commission during the 1930s, industry. Cazneaux’s pictures of BHP factories in Newcastle and Whyalla are remarkable for brilliantly establishing atmosphere but little else. For a photographer renowned for portraying character, Cazneaux’s BHP workers feature only distantly against a wider, infernal industrial landscape.

Between capturing celebrities, there were also the affectionate pictures Cazneaux made of his family and the muscular, evolving vistas of Sydney.

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First International Meeting of Photography Centres in Spain

Friday, May 30th, 2008

The primary aim of the First International Meeting of Photography Centres is to share knowledge and experiences among 20 photography centres from all over the world. The event, a pioneering project in Andalusia, Spain and the world, will be hosted by the Andalusian Centre of Photography, which belongs to the Andalusian Department of Culture.

Approaches: First International Meeting of Photography Centres, consisting in a photography exhibition and a publications exhibit, as well as a presentation of a publication of the same name will take place during the event. This parallel activity will remain open to the public at the Andalusian Centre of Photography until 13 July 2008.

The First International Meeting of Photography Centres will have a duration of three days. The programme includes morning and afternoon sessions of discussions and activities by both speakers and members of the audience.

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Nature Photography Workshops in Iceland

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

This summer some of the best known American instructors in the field of photography will hold workshops under the “Focus on Nature” program, including Chris Rainier, Rick Sammon, Vincent Versace, John Paul Caponigro and Stephen Johnson.

Since 1992 Erlendsson has dreamt about launching an international photography workshop event in Iceland. When the US American Military abandoned the Naval Air Station in Keflavík he finally saw a window to make his dream come true.

The Icelandic government was given control over the base and decided that some of the facilities there should be used for educational and innovational purposes. Erlendsson used the opportunity to get access to some of these facilities through Keilir – The Atlantic Center of Excellence, for his photography workshops.

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Photography exhibition at Marriott

Monday, May 12th, 2008

In another proof of its commitment to distinction and its constant search for innovation and artistic excellence, the Doha Marriott Hotel is hosting a photography exhibition by renowned photographer Ayham Hassan at Caf? Trottoir. The exhibition portrays a photographic tour of Qatar from behind the lens.

Ayham Hassan is a professional photographer whose images can be recognized by richly evocative and intimate reflections. Hassan says that the journey into the realm of photography began as a hobby at first, and soon developed into a passion of lenses, colors, and style. To him photography is a passion and a process of creation.

Speaking on the occasion, Saeid Heidari, General Manager of Doha Marriott Hotel, said, “To us, this exhibition is a chance to bring art, innovation and all that is beautiful under one roof. The Doha Marriott Hotel is accustomed to presenting all that is modern and new and that caters to the different tastes of its customers.”

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New Photography Shop Offers Old Time Service

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

It’s opening night for a store in the Five Points area that’s promising good old fashioned customer service.

The F-Stop is not your average photo shop.

They’re trying to bring photography lovers together by offering a dark room so customers can develop their own film.

The store’s owners aren’t afraid to teach customers a thing or two about cameras either!

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