September 6, 2009
August 11, 2009
The great undead
Oh my darling
will you be here
before I sputter out
~ Eels, "Novocaine for the soul"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/10 sec,
F/2.8,
ISO-100
August 4, 2009
Sink
"Oh quarter, oh quarter"
Those pirates they did cry
- Blow high, blow low, and so sail we -
But the quarter that we gave them
Was we sank 'em in the sea
~ Traditional, "High Barbary"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/400 sec,
F/3.5,
ISO-200
Hippo
They've hired men with the crab-tree sticks
To cut him skin from bone
And the miller, he has served him worse than that
For he's ground him between two stones
~ Traditional, "John Barleycorn"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/50 sec,
F/2.6,
ISO-800
The Happening
Photography can be awfully time-consuming. You can spend hours - nay, days! - stuck in a dark room or glued to your computer screen, struggling to bring out the best of your photograph. You can walk miles and miles just to get yourself in that advantageous position, or wait for hours until the clouds move or the people move or the light falls from that exact angle you were waiting for. (Or, as Ansel Adams put it, "a good photograph is knowing where to stand".) You can spend hours setting your tripod, external flash and spotlights around your scene.
But it is also entirely possible to produce a photograph which satisfies you completely by spending exactly 1/60th of a second: Click.
Photography is widely known to be the art of the ephemeral. It's one of its charms, after all. Here's another one:
Can you imagine anyone, professional or amateur, producing a worthwhile piece in painting or sculpture without investing precious time and actually working on it? Nah. But can you imagine a breathtaking photograph coming out of an instant's worth of attention, a point-and-click procedure, a fortunate timing or sheer blind luck? Man, this happens all the freaking time! Spare me the "thirty years and five minutes" clichés. Photography is the only art form that allows lazy people to express themselves with as much variety, emotion and nuance as any art form can hope for.
Why? Because we shoot what we see, and we all see differently. We all frame differently. The very nature of photography allows anyone to push a button (YOU PUSHED! THE WRONG! BUTTON!) in their own unique way, and the rest (preparing to shoot, fiddling with more buttons, or image processing afterwards) are optional. Useful and vastly expanding the creative choices, but certainly not essential. The essence of photography is The Frame, freezing a part of space in time. And even lazy people can handle that.
I was driving, doing nothing, on the shores of Great Salt LakeBut it is also entirely possible to produce a photograph which satisfies you completely by spending exactly 1/60th of a second: Click.
Photography is widely known to be the art of the ephemeral. It's one of its charms, after all. Here's another one:
Photography is art for lazy people
Can you imagine anyone, professional or amateur, producing a worthwhile piece in painting or sculpture without investing precious time and actually working on it? Nah. But can you imagine a breathtaking photograph coming out of an instant's worth of attention, a point-and-click procedure, a fortunate timing or sheer blind luck? Man, this happens all the freaking time! Spare me the "thirty years and five minutes" clichés. Photography is the only art form that allows lazy people to express themselves with as much variety, emotion and nuance as any art form can hope for.
Why? Because we shoot what we see, and we all see differently. We all frame differently. The very nature of photography allows anyone to push a button (YOU PUSHED! THE WRONG! BUTTON!) in their own unique way, and the rest (preparing to shoot, fiddling with more buttons, or image processing afterwards) are optional. Useful and vastly expanding the creative choices, but certainly not essential. The essence of photography is The Frame, freezing a part of space in time. And even lazy people can handle that.
Sometimes I think of photography as a game of fortune. Did I happen to be in the right place in the right time? Click. I didn't premeditate, I got lucky and took advantage of it. Did I happen to see a wonderful scene from where I was standing? Click. I didn't know where to stand, I got lucky. Did I happen to notice an odd shadow somewhere? Click. I don't walk around to get the perfect shot, I just enjoy finding the best angle and frame from where I happen to stand. Happen, happens, happened, happening. Sometimes photography just happens. And this brings a smile to my face whenever I think about it. Begone equipment-freaks and... hard-working people!
Photography. Just. Happens.
Photography. Just. Happens.
When they put it on the air, I put it in the hammer lane
I soon forgot myself and I forgot about the brake
I forgot about all laws and I forgot about the rain
~ Pixies, "The Happening"
Labels:
- Technobabble,
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/100 sec,
F/2.4,
ISO-400
Filter
Labels:
- Technobabble,
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Portraits,
1/4 sec,
F/2.8,
ISO-400
All we've ever had was now
As logic stands, you couldn't meet a man who's from the future
But logic broke as he appeared, he spoke about the future
"We're not gonna make it"
~ The Flaming Lips, "All we have is now"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/320 sec,
F/8,
ISO-80
Yonder
I should have stayed way out yonder
Better off with the scorpions and snakes
~ Calexico, "The Ballad of Cable Hogue"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/500 sec,
F/8,
ISO-80
Stay sick
Had all the violence and liquor within close reach
But all bars, pills and threeways lead me back to the beach
~ The Cramps, "Bikini girls with machine guns"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/500 sec,
F/8,
ISO-80
August 3, 2009
Other side
You still walk among the living
but there's a place you'd rather be
with the shepherds of Arcadia
in your home across the sea
~ Madrugada, "Look away, Lucifer"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/800 sec,
F/4,
ISO-80
And so sail we
"Oh, I'm not a man-o-war
Nor privateer," said he
- Blow high, blow low, and so sail we -
"But I am salt sea pirate
All a-looking for me fee"
~ Traditional, "High Barbary"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/125 sec,
F/4,
ISO-200
July 24, 2009
Windows
Now, to consult the rules of composition before making a picture is a little like consulting the law of gravitation before going for a walk.
~ Edward Weston
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Dirty old town,
1/20 sec,
F/2.8,
ISO-200
Sometimes I forget my position
July 2009, Patissia, Athens
I think we've been forced to our knees
but I can't tell
~ Magazine, "Parade"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Dirty old town,
1/100 sec,
F/2.8,
ISO-200
July 22, 2009
Alec Empire / Nine Inch Nails
"But all we know is how to learn"
~ Ursula Le Guin
In Concert
So here's one thing the 24-60mm lens was NOT built for: concerts. Unless you're backstage (or ON stage), if you want to shoot some nice "mainstream" photos in a concert, you need zoom. And when you're in the pit? Well, first of all, you need to zoom, focus and centre the picture around the artist(s). You also need to be either right in front of the stage, or tall enough to shoot past people's heads and raised hands. And last but not least, you need a goddamn battery in your goddamn camera. I failed miserably at all of the above, but at least I was able to shoot some photos. Until the battery died on me, that is.
Choosing ISO
Grain or blur? If you carry a lens longer than your arm, you can reliably say "neither". Otherwise, you have to choose and lose. I should have tried both, but this would require thinking! and deciding! - and I was too busy moshing. So I picked grain right at the beginning and stuck with it. Now, grain is a bad choice when you want to focus on a detail, small objects, or Trent Reznor's frontal vein. But since my zoomless lens already prevented me from such noble pursuits, I simply went for the hazy stuff. ISO-800, under the standard (erratic) lighting of the stage, results in grain which is just enough to make the classic smoke/spotlight combination look eerie, without fucking up the image's resolution beyond recognition. This was all well and good on paper (err... screen), until I came home and decided to do the unprecedented: crop the pictures.
Cropping
Cropping is harder than it looks, I realised in astonishment yesterday. It changes everything, and there's no "right" way to crop an image. There are millions of ways and you have to choose. This proved difficult and time-consuming. ("I'll cut here... No, wait, I should include the spotlight. Umm, no, I should keep the microphone at the centre... Oooh, I know, I'll have the amp and keyboard form a line right here... Er, what did I want to do, again?") Mix that with increased grain, and you have a problem. ("Hey,this cropping would be perfect! ...If you could make head or tail of what's left.") Because film grain is awesome: zoom in, and even if the shapes are less well-defined, the image overall is still great. But digital grain (or however they call it) is crap: zoom in, and you get noise.
Lessons learned:
1) Cropping is a pain.
2) Cropping is a wonderful tool.
3) Be very careful with grain if you intend to crop later.
Labels:
- Technobabble
July 19, 2009
Before you snap
But... how much can you take?
How much can you take?
How much can you take before you snap?
~ Yonderboi, "Before you snap"
How much can you take?
How much can you take before you snap?
~ Yonderboi, "Before you snap"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Dirty old town,
1/500 sec,
F/2.2,
ISO-400
Childhood's End
Oh if you find the time
please come and stay a while
in my beautiful neighbourhood
~ Space, "Neighbourhood"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Dirty old town,
1/640 sec,
F/2.2,
ISO-400
Wishful thinking
One sunny morning
We'll rise, I know
And I'll meet you further on up the road
~ Johnny Cash, "Further on up the road"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Dirty windshield,
1/400 sec,
F/3.2,
ISO-80
FTL
In the tunnel, I meant to change the ISO setting. There were three tunnels. I forgot three times. Oh well.
Vault
"For the love of God, Montresor!"
"Yes," I said, "for the love of God."
~ Edgar Allan Poe, "The Cask of Amontillado""Yes," I said, "for the love of God."
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
1/50 sec,
F/2,
ISO-200
Free falling
all manner of joy
all manner of glee
and our one heroic pledge
~ Placebo, "Meds"
Labels:
..Black and White,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
# Dirty old town,
1/3 sec,
F/2,
ISO-1600
June 28, 2009
8 seconds away
8 seconds exposure: Look, ma, no tripod!
OK, this is not technically a good shot, but I like it and it's interesting in several ways.
1) With my moderately steady hand and holding my breath for eight freaking seconds, I get this. "This" being a NOT complete fuck up, which is a big deal, as far as I'm concerned. I'm happy. Yet another reason to like a lightweight camera.
2) Barring that pathetic excuse of a moon (it's blurry here, but actually it was a very thin slice), this cloudy night sky was pitch black. And look at it now.
3) Weird, weird colours. I had no idea what to expect when I took the shot, but now I can rationalise it. The moon itself offered little light, at least directly. The main light sources here are the clouds above (yellowish-red, carrying rain) and the yellow street lamps below. Both quite warm. The result reminds me of expired film or underexposed Kodachrome (R.I.P., by the way) or a combination thereof. All in all, weird enough to be interesting.
4) Pictures like this just compel you to fool around endlessly, don't they? Now I want to play with all the settings and perhaps colour temperature - though this is a strictly digital thing and I won't have a clue what the fuck I'm doing. Which is great.
5) And I didn't try black & white at all. Damn.
6) A tripod would be tremendously useful here, and at the same time defeat the entire purpose of getting a camera which is small and easy to carry around etc. I'll go restrain myself now...
Labels:
- Technobabble,
..Colour,
* Lumix DMC-LX3,
8 sec,
F/2.8,
ISO-200
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