Well I keep going on about the tools I want for for the iPad, especially tools that link to Adobe’s Lightroom. But what if you don’t use Lightroom but use its arch rival Apple’s Aperture or even just iPhoto from Apple’s iLife Suite of apps.
Well there is now an app for you too. Pixelsync. As I use iPhoto for some tasks, I might give it a try.
That also gives me an idea for a future blog post, workflow.
This week, it is my wonderful wife’s birthday. We are taking tomorrow off work to go out for a nice meal.
As promised I have the DVD’s you wanted but did I get you an iPad? You will just have to wait and see.
Lots of Love from all the family.
PS for Photographers out there, buying your partner some nice flowers also gives you the opportunity for you to practice your still life techniques. Just don’t tell them!
I was thinking that I would have my next flower photo shoot in the studio, but then I thought it would be good to show you what could be achieved with just two flash guns outside on a sunny day.
The setup is relatively easy. Camera on tripod with hot shoe flash and a moderately short telephoto lens in my case a D200 with a Nikkor 105mm f/2.8.
To my right I mounted a Nikon SB-800 hotshoe flash. This was mounted onto a small light stand and was firing into a small brolly.
The camera mounted flash was set up as a trigger and was not contributing to the overall exposure.
Behind the flowers I had a black cloth. This was supported by the usefully provided double ended clip that comes with the Nikon Macro Flash kit.
The actual exposure was very simple I switched the camera to manual and set the flash to FP Hi speed sync.
I picked a shutter speed in conjunction with an aperture to give me sufficient depth of field and but would underexpose the picture. The flower exposure would be handled by TTL flash.
After a couple of test shots, the photos looked a little dim, so I dialed in +2/3’s of a stop and they looked good.
I had an email from a model today asking for me to shoot her.
She has no experience and wanted me to cover all the costs and pay her £45 an hour for the shoot!
Models please be serious!
I sometimes do tfcd, but if I am paying you, it’s normally for a commissioned shoot, and you can provide me with the professionalism, experience and look I need with the minimum of work and direction, so I can nail the shot the client wants in minimum time.
If you have no experience then you have to start at the bottom, working tfcd or paying a photographer to build experience and a dramatic portfolio.
While I do not have an iPad yet, I like many other photographers can see the use they can be put through.
While some consider it useless, and label it a toy, unable to be used for real work, a joke for professionals, many people think its great for when you cannot take the trouble to carry a laptop.
To be honest when travelling I sometimes take Medium Format Camera equipment, 35mm equipment, lighting equipment and heavy tripods and light stands. Sometimes the last thing I want to add is a laptop.
Yesterday I spotted a posting from Adobe about a beta Photoshop App (see Chris Bennett’s Blog Post).
Photoshop is not one of the key apps that would make me buy an iPad but if someone released the Library Module of Adobe Lightroom then I would be buying an iPad like a shot.
http://blog.photosmithapp.com/
Well that day may well be nearly here. Check out the Photosmith Blog. This seems to offer what I want.
For heavy image work then a laptop in the field in not really the tool. Heavy image work is a job for back in the office/home with a powerful computer and controlled lighting conditions in the room, and a calibrated monitor. No, in the field its evaluating your work, making picks, keywording, metadata and quick adjusts to help you evaluate the shots.
When this gets released, together with some of the tethering apps that are coming out; Elinchrom’s and Hasselblad’s remote control apps then the iPad will be coming with me, out in the field and in the studio.
If you are after a filter system you cannot get better then the Lee Filter System, but if you are after a particular filter get your order in now. The popularity of the Lee Filter System has exploded and there is a very long waiting list now.
I have now been waiting four months for a new set of Glass Grey Graduated filters, hope they arrive soon, I have a foreign trip planned and was hoping to use them.
Another trip out. The morning found us exploring the moors. We then headed to Rievaulx Terrace which as well as some interesting architecture, has some dramatic views down the hill and through the trees to the ruins of Rievaulx Abbey.
We took some shots of the temples built as items of interest by Thomas Duncombe the landowner. The sun climbed and illuminated Abbey below, so both Caroline and myself took some shots of the Abbey using our medium format gear.
We then popped down to the Abbey itself to visit their tea room for lunch and photograph the dramatic ruins from close up.
The sun had gone in but the dark clouds with some glimpse of blue had potential, so we carried on carrying the medium format gear, tripod and Nikon SLR with the 12-24mm f/4 DX (APS-C) around the Abbey ruins in hope.
At the end of our visit we walked slowly back to the car, when I saw the hills in the distance slowly becoming illuminated in light.
Looking at the clouds I guessed that in about 5 minutes the break in clouds would illuminate the Abbey. Quickly finding a good position I had spotted early, I set the tripod and Medium format camera up.
As the golden light reached the Abbey I quickly metered the scene with my spot meter and two shots, one with Fuji Velva 50 and one Ilford FP4.
I quickly repositioned and shot two more frames before the sun when in again.
A day out at Whitby.
It’s the start of Whitby Goth Week and I am not sure but the Photographers may just out number the Goths.
As always the outfits are fantastic and whole family’s get involved.
With so many Photographers, Goths, Steam Punks & Emo’s not to mention lots of bikers clad in black leather (not us this time thou), I am not quite sure what the ‘Normal’ holiday makers made of it all!
If you are going to Goth week during March or later on this year in the autumn, remember to treat everyone with respect.
Today we had a trip across the North Yorkshire Moors and spent several hours at the Ryedale Folk Museum.
William Hayes’s (1871-1940) Photographic Studio has been moved there. It’s the oldest daylight lit studio surviving. His studio still has his large format camera with 7.5 inch portrait lens and his dark room is also there.
Dark View
The studio was set up in 1902 in Monkgate, York, and moved to Hutton-le-Hole in 1911.
In many ways its not much different todays studios, a selection of cloth backgrounds, props, but instead of flash, a side wall of glass and a glass ceiling.
The Museum opened in 1964, and the original exhibits comprised of the private collections of Wilfred Crossland, Raymond Hayes and Bertram Frank.