Tuesday, December 28, 2010

THE HECTIC STREETS OF COLOMBIA

MY SHORT LEAVE OF ABSENCE
I know I haven't been posting nearly every day anymore and I'm sorry to say, that starting tomorrow, I'll have no connection to the outside world until Tuesday. I'll be traveling up into the mountains of Colombia to stay at a beautiful house at the top of a large hill with a tumultuous river running through the bottom of the gorge. Great photo opportunities! 

DAILY PHOTO - THE HECTIC STREETS OF COLOMBIA
I love getting up to the high points in cities to get a nice perspective. The tops of many tall buildings have bars or restaurants where you can take photos. No one ever really seems to mind. One major problem though, is the lights inside the bar. They bounce off the windows and create some really bad reflections. I know some photographers who will talk to someone who works there and get them to turn off most of the lights a couple minutes to take the photo. Make sure to set up everything first since as soon as the lights go out you have a very short time to get the shot.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

LAKE APOPKA

DAILY PHOTO - LAKE APOPKA
While taking a walk around the massive Lake Apopka, I decided I wanted to try to capture an image of the lake in a new and unique way. Here you can see only a small peek of the lake through the trees adding more intrigue to it rather than a sense of it's large scale.

This panorama, processed, tone-mapped, and stitched together with eighteen RAWs, later converted to JPEG and then saved as a TIFF file, ended up as a massive file so large and unwieldy, that it took much longer than usual to perform the most menial of tasks. And yet this doesn't even compare to some other HDR photographers' work, some of which have been made with an incredible NINETY photos, tone-mapped into thirty photos and then stitched together into an enormous file that took a whole day to complete. Definitely takes a LOT of ram. That's my aspiration for the future but first, I'll need a faster computer and a larger hard drive. Not to mention an ideal subject that lends itself to the technique.


By the way, you should be able to click on this photo to enlarge it. It's not nearly large enough here to appreciate.


Tuesday, December 21, 2010

REFLECTION POND

DAILY PHOTO - REFLECTION POND
A few minutes after capturing this shot, the storm clouds started dropping fat raindrops which gradually started escalating in intensity. I rushed inside shortly afterwards, hoping that I was able to capture the emotion in the sky; the calm before the storm. 


I played around a little bit with Topaz Adjust later in the digital darkroom, it really brought the detail out in the clouds, as well as the trees. Speaking of Topaz, last night, as another early christmas gift, my incredibly awesome and technologically-savvy uncle loaded up my computer with several new programs that I'll be able to use to my advantage. It's always nice to have a few tools at my disposal. I've spent half the day moving my photos over from iPhoto to Lightroom, creating a couple HDRs in Photomatix, and post-processing in Photoshop and Topaz. You could say I'm excited.


Monday, December 20, 2010

MORNING CYCAD

A CORNUCOPIA OF POSSIBILITIES
I'm happy to announce, as an early present, I've gotten a wonderfully sturdy tripod. My old tripod was a beat-up video camera tripod that my dad had lying around and I've been using that for the past few years. But once I switched to my DSLR, it couldn't support the extra weight for any longer than a couple seconds. The Manfrotto 190XProB is ten times stronger and has a lot more capacity for different positions without motion. Paired with the Giottos MH1302-655 head, I can finally start photographing more night scenes, macro photos, scenes requiring telephoto lenses, wildlife scenes, ect. The list goes on. As professional tripods go, they definitely aren't at the top but for my uses, it certainly fits the requirements.


DAILY PHOTO - MORNING CYCAD
Testing my tripod out early in the morning, I found a bright green cycas revoluta (I probably misspelled that), a Sago cycad. It was still wet with dew and I got thoroughly creative (probably too much) contorting the tripod legs in excessive positions around the plant.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

A HUMID NIGHT

DAILY PHOTO - A HUMID NIGHT
This trip to Orlando proved to be very interesting and exciting, full of surprises. On my first day there, the sky was completely washed out in gray, like someone had thrown a giant amorphous glob of paint over us. It was looking to be a disappointing day for shooting with there being so little contrast to work with. Right before sunset, (not that you could really tell, with the gargantuan cloud above) a quick shower passed by, setting a layer of water down, and as soon as night fell, the temperature dropped, lifting all the warm rainwater off the ground. I was excited by the prospect of being able to shoot in a fog bank for the first time!

Maybe an hour later, the street lamps were shining wonderfully through the fog and a fluctuating breeze kept blowing fresh fog in, keeping it thick. At one point, visibility was less than 500 feet! I definitely would've looked a bit mad to anyone who happened to come by, what with my scurrying back and forth around the street, trying to make haste and get as many photos as possible with my sluggish memory cards, all the while carting my tripod and camera bag everywhere. (This whole time I was supposed to be inside at a Christmas party, but the opportunity was too good to pass up.) 

Saturday, December 18, 2010

THE REFLECTIVE FESTIVITIES






DAILY PHOTO - THE REFLECTIVE FESTIVITIES

While wandering around the city of Fort Lauderdale I found myself in the bay and this bright ship called to me because of its festival christmas decorations. I had to set up my tripod on the very narrow sidewalk on the side of the road and try to hold my camera steady while passing cars buffeted me with strong winds. It turned out to be very worthwhile though. 

Thursday, December 16, 2010

EMOTION IN ST. PETERSBURG

DAILY PHOTO - EMOTION IN ST. PETERSBURG
I was about to go into the Salvador Dali museum in St. Petersburg, (the old one, they are building a new one across the street which you can find out about here) when I realized that the sky was incredibly forbidding with rolling clouds and a strong, chilly breeze that carried the smell of humidity. Definitely a storm. I quickly set up my camera, snapped off a few shots, and hurried into the museum as I could feel large drops of water starting to fall. Luckily, those few shots worked and I came away with an image of the raw, forbidding emotion in thunderclouds. 

Here is when it really paid off that I had my camera with me, instead of leaving it in the car. You never know when nature will present you with a beautiful gem. This is why, and I'm being a bit of a hypocrite here, it really pays to have a light, carbon-fiber tripod. Eventually, no matter how much you love your tripod, if it's too heavy, you won't want to carry it around. Although I have a heavy brick that weighs in at about six pounds without the camera attached, do as I say and not as I do. If you can afford it, go with the lighter models. I got lucky that there was a nice place to settle my camera here but that won't always happen. I learned my lesson and I make sure to take my tripod around everywhere now, just in case...