Archive for the 'photography' Category

jumping like fleas around here

Hanibal Springerzeller
(yeah, I know there are part of him missing, but I love the shot anyway)

Hanibal’s been catching frisbees with some consistency for a while now so I guess he was due for a quick photo shoot. He’s still a long way off from the standard Dina set but what he lacks in acceleration and accuracy he makes up by jumping real high. He’s a bouncer ;)

Dina, frisbee

Of course there’s now way we can have just one of them having fun so it was her turn catch a few. It doesn’t work with both of them at the same time though.

More shots should be in the gallery as usual (when I figure out why it doesn’t work with WP2.5 I’ll get it back online)

update – gallery works

Still Life photoessay

Neil Hartmann’s got a very nice photo essay up on Honeyee.com called Still Life 2008. Seeking powder in the hills of Japan… envy…

I just wish I could advance the slideshow manualy.

as portraits go…

…I don’t think these came out that bad.

Petra, on stairs

Petra was kind enough to stand in as a model for three (5 more applied but didn’t appear) high school seniors that came for the 4-5 hour intro studio photography and editing class. Other than running around, re-positioning the lights I (naturally) took some photos myself.

To be honest, I expected they’d have some prior knowledge about the basics of photography but as it turned out I had to make time for some exposure 101. You can imagine there’s only so much you can squeeze into a time frame we had. So I tried to be as clear and concise as possible with the exposure basics without going all quantum physics on them. I’m not entirely sure I succeeded though. I may have been carried away slightly… Afterall, these were 17-18 year old kids who could probably care less about physics (albeit simple enough) and just get on with shooting and hands-on training. I was caught a bit off-guard on that one but either way, I definitely have to rethink the approach if I’m ever doing anything similar again. If anything, I found out it’s not quite so easy to explain such basic stuff as relationship between shutter speed, F-stop and ISO, how/why DOF changes etc.

After we were done shooting (three rather simple two light + ambient setups) we tackled Photoshop. That was the easy bit though. I knew from previous experience that pretty much anyone can get a grasp of the basics in just an hour or two. From then on its just a matter of playing around and a lot of practice. There’s always google if any specific problems come up. And they can do that on their own.

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