Jeremy > March 29, 2009; Day 331.

You Call This Closeup Photography?

I don’t either!  But what I thought was going to be a trivial final piece of the Week 3 assignment in my closeup photography course turned into a head-scratcher.  The assignment was to create a shot of something through a field of “dew.”  If you’ve taken shots of dew on grass or water droplets and if you’re close enough to the drops, you can see what’s reflected by the water: it’s a mini-fisheye lens.

Course instructor Bryan Peterson discovered that he could create a fake dew effect with thick transparent liquids.  He specifically asked us to use a hair product called “Smooth ’n Shine.”  We put drops of it on a horizontal glass surface and then photographed something beneath it.  The focus is on the drops.  If you set your aperture correctly, you should see the actual object in soft focus beneath the table and several small, crisp versions (facing the other way) in the droplets.  In his example shot, he’s shooting an image of a red umbrella flying in the clouds.  Umbrella in the rain, get it?

The problem is, whereas he normally divulges everything in his lessons (even the camera settings), he left almost all of the details of this effect as an exercise for us to figure out.  I found the setup you see here to be the most effective way to maximize the amount of the object you can see in the drops.  The glass surface is on the table in the gap where you'd normally add the leaf. The object is perched on the black bag on the floor.  It's a Wal-Mart gift card.  Putting the camera closer than this causes the drops to turn into little telescopes.

Unfortunately, at this distance the macro lens is much too wide and a horrendous crop is required.  I did try my 70-210mm lens at 210mm, but the telescoping effect comes into play again.  Alas, I will see if I can get Bryan to divulge how he took his umbrella shots.

If you examine this photo at original size, you can see the drops on the glass surface, and the gift card, and the hair product. You can also see how much noise the D80 generates at ISO 800. Wow!

Click here to see the shot I submitted to the class. It is so small that Smart Sharpening was too much for it; I had to go back to Unsharp Mask.

Raw: Color Temperature: 2850K; Tint: +3
Raw: Recovery: +100
Raw: Fill Light: +25
Raw: Saturation: +8
PS: Curves: Medium Contrast preset
PS: Lab a channel adjustment: “Soft light” at 50% opacity
PS: Smart Sharpening: 180-1-Lens Blur
Jeremy > September 8, 2008; Day 129.

This isolated chair has been on my short-list of subjects for some time.  Conceptually, I want to convey loss with this, but the background here isn’t as good as I’d like.  Ideally, this should be in a dusty concrete basement.  But I do like the shape of the chair and I was happy to isolate it against this much wall, so I decided to at least see how the lighting would work.  I like it.  A rocking chair would probably work even better.

I'm simply holding the flash above the chair out of frame to the left.  I chose a fast shutter speed to eliminate the fluorescent ambient lighting in the room.

I spent the evening in Portsmouth visiting with friends.  They lament the passing of summer and I lament that soon it will be dark the entire time I’m there.  Still it was a very nice day.

PS: Saturation: +15
PS: Unsharp Mask: 20-30-0
Jeremy > September 1, 2008; Day 122.

Peter and I explored New Hampshire’s Monadnock region today, on yet another flawless late summer day.  This region is in the southwest corner of the state and has no major interstate access, so we theorized that we would not endure any of the normally horrifying end-of-holiday-weekend traffic. We were right, and that made the day all the more pleasant.

We visited two towns, Hancock and Harrisville. We walked, biked, shopped, and ate at both towns. During our exploration of Harrisville, I noticed this artist busy at work painting the scene in front of her. I used a long lens in order to crop reality; you must look at the painting itself to see the full scene. I should have spoken with her to get her permission to get this same angle of view with the wide angle lens as well. That might have been even more interesting; for one thing, the details and textures of the painting would have been much more pronounced (because I would have been standing right next to her). Next time I’ll remember this!

These towns have a lot to offer the photographer on the prowl.  I enjoyed capturing scenes of nature reclaiming mankind, fountains in action, and towering, renovated mill buildings. All of these scenes need lighting or composition improvements. Shucks, I guess we’ll have to go back.

PS: Unsharp Mask: 20-30-0
Jeremy > August 29, 2008; Day 119.

Autumn’s Emergence.

I enjoyed a brief stroll through a church garden today. Although it is still August, the colors of Autumn are just starting to appear.  (This reminds me that it is urgent that I capture “summer” at the log bridge this weekend!)

I would have enjoyed this garden longer but the mosquitoes started dive bombing me. I don't know how you green thumbs cope with the bugs. Spray? Netting? Anyway, in addition to the vegetables, there are several flowers growing in this garden.  The caretaker of the building saw me photographing and told me that if I came back during the day and waited patiently, I could catch the birds picking at the flowers. I don’t know if I’ll have time this weekend but that might be fun to capture.

No training ride tonight; I'm resting for tomorrow’s 71-mile repeat.

PS: Exposure: +1.0
PS: Unsharp Mask: 20-30-0
Jeremy > August 28, 2008; Day 118.

Amid all the historic significance of the day, Peter celebrated his birthday. I treated him to supper at 55 Degrees, one of the nicer restaurants in Concord. I think he’d have found it an even bigger treat if I had left the camera at home. But he acquiesced to this shot and I thank him for it, for it turned out really nice even though it came out of the camera really dark. I love how much detail you can find in the shadows if you’re willing to dig.

Peter enjoyed baked haddock on a bed of green beans and broccoli; I had a beef tenderloin on potatoes. A very good meal.

Dinner at 55 Degrees is a two-hour affair, so I didn’t do a training ride today.

Raw: Exposure: +3.0
PS: Curves adjustment for a little more exposure increase
PS: Desaturate
PS: Color Balance: -100 Yellow to Blue, -39 Magenta to Green
PS: Unsharp Mask: 20-30-0
Jeremy > August 25, 2008; Day 115.

Tonight the executive director for the Harbor to the Bay AIDS bike ride spoke to my men’s group in Portsmouth.  He thinks my training schedule is good and that there’s no need to ride further than the 70 miles I’m doing each Saturday.  This is good news.  Going longer than 70 miles would have required purchasing water along the way (or stealing from a hose).  Now I can see whether the 70 mile trip gets easier each week when I repeat it.

After the meeting, I was looking around for a daily photo subject and found this plastic Big Ben clock.  My friends think I’m nuts running all over this thing with the flash.  But getting the background texture to show up requires that the flash be positioned just right.  I do wish I had thought to increase the depth of field with a smaller aperture.  I don’t always think of my 18-200mm lens as a macro; I guess I don't always realize just how close I am.

A more serious photographer would remove the plastic cover too!

PS: Unsharp Mask: 20-30-0
Jeremy > August 20, 2008; Day 110.

I drive by this house once per week, lately during the golden hour of sunlight. I’m always rushing to my destination, so I can’t stop to shoot it.  It’s just another stately New England house with a lot of nice architecture. As I could not do a training ride tonight, I took a moment and snuck over there with time to chase the light.

The training ride was aborted today with 2 more flat tires this morning, each following inflation of the tire to 120 pounds.  This time, the tire made an ear-splitting pop, so the bike will spend the night in the shop.  Tomorrow I will train using the trusty mountain bike.  It will be interesting to see what my time will be.

PS: Saturation: +25
PS: Unsharp Mask: 20-30-0
Jeremy > August 16, 2008; Day 106.

Storm front.

I enjoyed an afternoon in Manchester today.  The timing was good, as a big storm rolled through while we were downtown.  We had planned to attend a Latino festival, but the rain pushed us to the mall instead.  Before the rain started, I was able to capture this and a few others.

Ken Rockwell says to embrace the wide angle lens and enjoy the crazy angles.  I’m not using my widest lens here (I didn’t bring the tripod, so I’m using my VR lens), but I’m as wide as I can be.  Cropped out at the bottom of the photo is the top of another building; I lined up the camera to match that horizon.

Bike ride training update: I had a 63-mile ride today, which took me 3 hours, 31 minutes, just shy of 18 miles per hour.  My speed increased slightly over last week’s ride because I’m starting to use the left shift knob.  For flat and downhill stretches, I can attain greater speeds without much additional exertion.  I also learned that once you pass 60 miles, one water bottle isn’t enough.  Also, all the big training rides will require snacks from now on.  Hunger is not a good pain to feel when you’ve got 25 miles left to go!

PS: Crop: ~8%
Jeremy > August 15, 2008; Day 105.

Log dance.

This is a trinket from my kitchen.  I can’t tell you the story behind it because I don’t remember how I got it.  Hopefully I haven’t just offended one of my friends or family!

I’ve used this background before, and I’ll use it again.  I’m applying a gamma exposure correction to produce the effect of a more tightly focused flash.  Unfortunately, I dropped my flash unit a few weeks ago and can no longer adjust it’s “focal length.”  Someday, if I ever have a red room, I’ll use this effect to create a sunrise.  For now, you’ll have to pretend our sun is a blue star…

PS: Exposure: +1
PS: Gamma Correction: 0.45
March 29, 2009; Day 331.

You Call This Closeup Photography?

I don’t either! But what I thought was going to be a trivial final piece of the Week 3 assignment in my closeup photography course turned into a head-scratcher. The assignment was to create a shot of something through a field of “dew.” If you’ve taken shots of dew on grass or water droplets and if you’re close enough to the drops, you can see what’s reflected by the water: it’s a mini-fisheye lens.

Course instructor Bryan Peterson discovered that he could create a fake dew effect with thick transparent liquids. He specifically asked us to use a hair product called “Smooth ’n Shine.” We put drops of it on a horizontal glass surface and then photographed something beneath it. The focus is on the drops. If you set your aperture correctly, you should see the actual object in soft focus beneath the table and several small, crisp versions (facing the other way) in the droplets. In his example shot, he’s shooting an image of a red umbrella flying in the clouds. Umbrella in the rain, get it?

The problem is, whereas he normally divulges everything in his lessons (even the camera settings), he left almost all of the details of this effect as an exercise for us to figure out. I found the setup you see here to be the most effective way to maximize the amount of the object you can see in the drops. The glass surface is on the table in the gap where you'd normally add the leaf. The object is perched on the black bag on the floor. It's a Wal-Mart gift card. Putting the camera closer than this causes the drops to turn into little telescopes.

Unfortunately, at this distance the macro lens is much too wide and a horrendous crop is required. I did try my 70-210mm lens at 210mm, but the telescoping effect comes into play again. Alas, I will see if I can get Bryan to divulge how he took his umbrella shots.

If you examine this photo at original size, you can see the drops on the glass surface, and the gift card, and the hair product. You can also see how much noise the D80 generates at ISO 800. Wow!

Click here to see the shot I submitted to the class. It is so small that Smart Sharpening was too much for it; I had to go back to Unsharp Mask.

Raw: Color Temperature: 2850K; Tint: 3
Raw: Recovery: 100
Raw: Fill Light: 25
Raw: Saturation: 8
PS: Curves: Medium Contrast preset
PS: Lab a channel adjustment: “Soft light” at 50% opacity
PS: Smart Sharpening: 180-1-Lens Blur
Jeremy > March 29, 2009; Day 331.

You Call This Closeup Photography?

I don’t either!  But what I thought was going to be a trivial final piece of the Week 3 assignment in my closeup photography course turned into a head-scratcher.  The assignment was to create a shot of something through a field of “dew.”  If you’ve taken shots of dew on grass or water droplets and if you’re close enough to the drops, you can see what’s reflected by the water: it’s a mini-fisheye lens.

Course instructor Bryan Peterson discovered that he could create a fake dew effect with thick transparent liquids.  He specifically asked us to use a hair product called “Smooth ’n Shine.”  We put drops of it on a horizontal glass surface and then photographed something beneath it.  The focus is on the drops.  If you set your aperture correctly, you should see the actual object in soft focus beneath the table and several small, crisp versions (facing the other way) in the droplets.  In his example shot, he’s shooting an image of a red umbrella flying in the clouds.  Umbrella in the rain, get it?

The problem is, whereas he normally divulges everything in his lessons (even the camera settings), he left almost all of the details of this effect as an exercise for us to figure out.  I found the setup you see here to be the most effective way to maximize the amount of the object you can see in the drops.  The glass surface is on the table in the gap where you'd normally add the leaf. The object is perched on the black bag on the floor.  It's a Wal-Mart gift card.  Putting the camera closer than this causes the drops to turn into little telescopes.

Unfortunately, at this distance the macro lens is much too wide and a horrendous crop is required.  I did try my 70-210mm lens at 210mm, but the telescoping effect comes into play again.  Alas, I will see if I can get Bryan to divulge how he took his umbrella shots.

If you examine this photo at original size, you can see the drops on the glass surface, and the gift card, and the hair product. You can also see how much noise the D80 generates at ISO 800. Wow!

Click here to see the shot I submitted to the class. It is so small that Smart Sharpening was too much for it; I had to go back to Unsharp Mask.

Raw: Color Temperature: 2850K; Tint: +3
Raw: Recovery: +100
Raw: Fill Light: +25
Raw: Saturation: +8
PS: Curves: Medium Contrast preset
PS: Lab a channel adjustment: “Soft light” at 50% opacity
PS: Smart Sharpening: 180-1-Lens Blur
March 29, 2009; Day 331.

You Call This Closeup Photography?

I don’t either! But what I thought was going to be a trivial final piece of the Week 3 assignment in my closeup photography course turned into a head-scratcher. The assignment was to create a shot of something through a field of “dew.” If you’ve taken shots of dew on grass or water droplets and if you’re close enough to the drops, you can see what’s reflected by the water: it’s a mini-fisheye lens.

Course instructor Bryan Peterson discovered that he could create a fake dew effect with thick transparent liquids. He specifically asked us to use a hair product called “Smooth ’n Shine.” We put drops of it on a horizontal glass surface and then photographed something beneath it. The focus is on the drops. If you set your aperture correctly, you should see the actual object in soft focus beneath the table and several small, crisp versions (facing the other way) in the droplets. In his example shot, he’s shooting an image of a red umbrella flying in the clouds. Umbrella in the rain, get it?

The problem is, whereas he normally divulges everything in his lessons (even the camera settings), he left almost all of the details of this effect as an exercise for us to figure out. I found the setup you see here to be the most effective way to maximize the amount of the object you can see in the drops. The glass surface is on the table in the gap where you'd normally add the leaf. The object is perched on the black bag on the floor. It's a Wal-Mart gift card. Putting the camera closer than this causes the drops to turn into little telescopes.

Unfortunately, at this distance the macro lens is much too wide and a horrendous crop is required. I did try my 70-210mm lens at 210mm, but the telescoping effect comes into play again. Alas, I will see if I can get Bryan to divulge how he took his umbrella shots.

If you examine this photo at original size, you can see the drops on the glass surface, and the gift card, and the hair product. You can also see how much noise the D80 generates at ISO 800. Wow!

Click here to see the shot I submitted to the class. It is so small that Smart Sharpening was too much for it; I had to go back to Unsharp Mask.

Raw: Color Temperature: 2850K; Tint: 3
Raw: Recovery: 100
Raw: Fill Light: 25
Raw: Saturation: 8
PS: Curves: Medium Contrast preset
PS: Lab a channel adjustment: “Soft light” at 50% opacity
PS: Smart Sharpening: 180-1-Lens Blur
See photo in gallery

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