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Tag Archive for 'photography'

Portraits of Raleigh

Click Image for full invite details in PDF format

This Friday evening, August 6th, at First Friday in Raleigh will be the opening for Series 1 of the Portraits of Raleigh exhibit at the Raleigh City Museum. I’ve been privileged enough to be selected for the exhibition. The opening reception will be from 6pm-9pm and will be on display until November 27th, 2010. There will be a “Sir Walter Award” given to the photograph selected as favorite by the reception attendees. So please stop by and vote!

In addition to my piece some good friends of mine have also been selected. Look for pieces from James Gries and Abby Nardo as well.

Plastic 52: A 2010 Project

Plastic 1: Trapped

I have decided to do a 52 weeks project this year (one photo each week for a year) and it’s been fairly enjoyable thus far. I had given brief consideration to a 365 (photo a day for a year) but quickly dismissed it for fear of it becoming an absolute bear. I enjoy photography, but it has its limits. Setting myself up for failure is something I strive to avoid.

There are a lot of approaches to this little project. Many people choose to do self portraits, some choose to do landscapes, a number of people choose an object to focus on. I’ve gone with the latter as you can see. Batman and The Joker are now on the loose!

You can watch my progress at my 2010 52 Weeks Set. I would also recommend checking out the Triangle 52 group and the Plastic 52 group.

I have more concepts for photography in 2010 as well. Hopefully I can execute and you will see more of that here in the future.

Plastic 4: The Streets

Tresspassing

Twin Towers

I recently took a trip down to the Charlotte area to visit a few friends.  I left early in the afternoon, early enough that I would have time for at least one photographic adventure on the way down.  I had decided that I would just truck along until I found a nice little detour.  I eventually found it when deciding to take highway 29 off of I85 in search of a location.  As you can see from the map embedded below that opportunity came almost as soon as I could exit the interstate.

I honestly have no idea what it is that I found.  The water towers were printed indicating that it maybe was the North Carolina Finishing Company.  I noticed that in the satellite view that whatever it was still stood at the time of the satellite imagery.  This is certainly not the case any longer.  Whatever it once was, it is now completely leveled.  I saw a few old broken down pickup trucks and heavy equipment, but overall it appeared to be deserted.  The one exception was a 18-20 foot camping trailer that was parked in an empty lot nearby.  This looked like it might be occupied, but possibly not at the moment.

Things looked quiet enough so I parked the car, grabbed my gear, and set out to capture some photos.  I have included a few here and more at my flickr site.  There are still more to be edited on my laptop, although many are fairly repetitious.  It was certainly an interesting site to photograph and given more time I’m sure I would have taken more shots.  Most of it was photographed from open land, however, some of the site was behind a chain link fence.  The vehicle gate was chained shut, but the pedestrian gate didn’t even have a gate anymore.  I didn’t see any tresspassing signs specifically, but it seemed pretty clear that it was.

After about 30 minutes of shooting I took a look around and noticed a figure in the distance moving along the side of the road.  It was a man, older guy, maybe around 70 from the distance I was viewing.  He looked to be the type of guy that could occupy a camping trailer parked out in an empty lot next to a demolished factory.  With this I decided to head back to my car.

As I approached my vehicle, so did the old man.  I could see now that he was pushing along a Vespa-like scooter and was dressed in some rather large and worn overalls.  We were equidistant to my car and once we were near enough, about 100 yards, he addressed me.  He asked what it was I was doing behind the fence.  I held up my camera and stated that I was taking some photos.  He responded by saying, “Did ya’ ever think that maybe somebody didn’t want no photos taken behind their fence?!?”, in a heavy southern drawl.  At this point we were both about 10 feet from the car and I decided that this old man wasn’t worth the fight.  I simply said to him, “Sorry buddy, I’m leaving”, jumped in my car slammed the door shut and took off while he angrilly shook his fist at me.

I looked in the rearview mirror and could see he didn’t have any fight in him today.  He just looked off at me, making no attempt to make chase.  In hindsight it was all pretty comical.  I do wish I had snapped a few shots of him and the trailer.  He probably wasn’t any real threat to me.  Although you never know what kind of firearm he had stashed in the scooter or the trailer.  Seems pretty likely that a 12 guage was lurking not far away.

Hijacked



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Off Camera

CANON INC.

Flash that is. I got my hands on a Canon 220EX Speedlite recently and it was a blast! I have never been much for flash photography but this was something completely different. I had a cable attach so that I had the freedom to hold the flash in my left hand and aim it wherever I please. The ability to bounce it off different walls, floors, and ceilings combined with bringing the light in from different angles was amazing.

I also combined this with the close-up lens filters that I have for my kit lens to do even more cool stuff.  Macro photography is much easier indoors when there is lots of available light from a flash.

I’ve been on a real kick lately to spend more time with the photography toys I already have.  Borrowing, begging, and stealing is also allowed in the case of the speedlite.  Overall it’s just cool to see how much there is out there in photography land that I have yet to investigate.  So cool!

Plugs

Raleigh Time Lapse

I recently got the bug to try and do some time lapse photography when I saw this post over at Digital Photography School.  It’s a good intro to what you are getting into and links to various attempts around the web.  I had considered doing this previously but never really got around to it.  This work by Ross Ching is pretty much the ULTIMATE time lapse I have seen out there.  It’s combining the use of tilt shift lenses and telescoping mounts along with crop panning to create an even more unique and dynamic experience.  Amazing.

I don’t own a dedicate intervalometer at the moment.  I will soon.  Using my laptop with the Canon EOS software hooked up to my Canon XSi allowed me to employ the basic concept of doing time lapse.  The result is interesting, it does not really meet my artistic vision though.  The biggest issues was that the fastest interval I could accomplish was a shot every 5 seconds.  This combined with a 1-1.3 second exposure time just didn’t give me the shutter drag I really wanted.

So there will definitely be more to come on this topic.  I have a big plan in my head of exactly where I would like to go with the concept.  I’m looking forward to implementing it and sharing it with everyone.

Photo Time

Tiny Fields

It’s been quite some time since I’ve posted any photos on the blog.  I’ve been really into photography again lately so I figured I would share a few.  This first shot was taken with some friends at an old burned down hotel.  All kinds of strange plants were growing out of the concrete foundation that looked pretty cool.  Here are some tiny ones that I shot with my 28-75 which is not Macro, but it’s pretty close.  I really liked the depth of field here and the look of the tiny little forest of trees.

The shot below was taken while I was on vacation in NYC over the winter.  New York had gotten a pretty good snow the day before.  It was FREEZING out on the bridge but I soldiered on.  I took over 200 shots just crossing the bridge, which is excessive even for me.  Only a handful were really interesting to me, this is one.  Architectural style photos are not my thing, but this turned out well I think.

Arches

Chinatown

Dragon This is one of the many reasons I love photography.

I recently took a 3 city tour of Washington DC, Philly, and New York.  I was visiting my sister in New York in  Brooklyn for four days and LOTS of photography.  On a trip like this I have my camera with me everywhere I go and will actively search out locations and events for shooting.  I do try to keep my camera with me as much as possible when I’m out and about.  This is why.

I had taken off early this morning to go to the local Farmer’s Market so Kate could pick up some fresh goods for the week.  Afterwards I had planned to cross through a local snow covered park.  Next location was Dumbo to take some bridge and skyline photos.  It was in the teens and windy but I had to make the crossing of the Brooklyn Bridge.  Well worth it.  Lots of fun shooting.  I was freezing my butt off so I went off in search of noodles.

Shortly after landing on Manhattan I heard singing in the distance.  I had to go investigate!  When I arrived I found myself in the middle of local Chinatown Christmas Parade.  The shot above is just one of MANY that I snagged.  Check my flickr stream for more fun shots.  Many many more NYC photos to come.  You can see what I have posted thus far in this set.

Housekeeping

Manhattan Bridge
Since I finally got around to looking at this place again I decided to do a little housekeeping of the ‘ol blog. Mainly I just tweaked the CSS a bit and tossed up a new header image. It’s a shot of the Manhattan bridge I recently took while visiting my sister in NYC. You can see more of my photos from New York in this set. Still many more shots to post from the trip.

My other exciting addition is a new sidebar widget for displaying my recent flickr shots. It’s a hacked together combination of Lightbox 2 and Flickr Photo Album.  Very excited about this little bugger.  Took a while to get it to properly link back to the flickr photo pages and all that, but totally worth it!  Check it out to the right.  Click on an image and enjoy the lovely browsing.  Yes, I am totally geeking out on that.

Just a Photo, and a Really Simple Tip

Nothing very exciting.  Just a photo I took that I kinda liked.  I’m by no means even a mildly skilled photographer but I do enjoy taking pics in hopes that some day something magical will happen and I’ll become decent at it.  All part of my master plan to become a wildly creative genius.

I’ve done a little bit of light reading on the subject in an effort to try and understand the basics.  For me composition is what I am really working on.  In this instance I actually went back and cropped the original a bit to get something I found a bit more pleasing.

Without question the best thing I have learned is the Rule of Thirds. It certainly makes things easier to compose even for someone who doesn’t really know what they are doing.  A good tip is to check if you camera will put the 3rds overlay on your LCD display.  Makes it even easier!  Or cheat and crop after the fact.