Wednesday, December 26, 2007

My Grandfather

Yesterday we went on a Christmas visit to my grandparents' house. And as we were sitting down at the table and eating some food I took this picture of my grandfather.

It looks like his eyes are shut but infact they're not. He's looking at all the delicious food my grandmom made. Click on the picture to enlarge it.


About the shot:

EXIF:
- Camera: Canon EOS 400D
- Exposure: 0.017 sec (1/60)
- Aperture: f/5
- Focal length: 41mm
- ISO: 100
- Flash: Flash Fired (Canon Speedlite 580EX II)
- Post-processing software: Adobe Photoshop CS2
- Date taken: 25.12.2007


No special settings this time. I shot it in P (Program) mode with ISO at 100 and I bounced the flash of the ceiling. There was quite a bit of postprocessing done in Photoshop.

Merry Christmas And A Happy New Year

Little late, I know. Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year to you all!

I've been having a lack of free time lately and this is the reason why I haven't been posting much. These holidays are keeping me busy enough. But I'll be posting a lot after I get back home from Prague where I'm gonna spend this New Year's Eve. So keep your eyes open for any new posts.

Wish you all the best in 2008!

Monday, December 17, 2007

Gino & the Band

I went to shoot a band called Gino & the Band (the site is in Slovene language) this saturday. Here are some of the pictures:









It is always hard to shoot concerts and live shows because of the limited amount of light. So in order to be able to shoot at fairly decent shutter speeds I used the Canon 50mm f/1.8 lens which enabled me to shoot at around 1/60 of a second at f/2.8. I used the manual mode and ISO at 1600.

One of the problems I had to deal with is the fact that I had to use the aperture of f/2.8 or less which in practice means shallow depth of field. In another words... only a small part of image is in focus. And that can sometimes be quite disturbing and annoying. The pictures you see above are not post-processed in any way.

Got any advice or suggestions for concert/music photography?

Friday, December 14, 2007

Grega's photoshoot

My friend Grega needed some portrait photos, so we made a mini photoshoot a few days ago. First we tried to do a couple of pictures at his house but those didn't came out as nice as I would like them to. So we went outside and shoot by the Škofja Loka castle here in my hometown. It turned out to be a nice location in the end. Here are just a few of many pictures we took.




Grega is a badminton player so we did some pictures with his prop - the racquet. We didn't have any stylists or make-up artists for this shoot. Although I could always use one. So if someone might be interested in doing make-ups on my shoots just let me know ;)

About the shot:

EXIF:
- Camera: Canon EOS 400D
- Exposure: 0.013 sec (1/80)
- Aperture: f/4.5
- Focal length: 50mm
- ISO: 100
- Flash: Flash Fired (Canon Speedlite 580EX II)
- Post-processing software: Adobe Photoshop CS2
- Date taken: 12.12.2007


*I used the same settings on all of the pictures as I was shooting in manual mode and with the Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 lens.

It was hard to shoot these pictures because of the cold that we have here right now. My hands were nearly frozen most of the time and my eyes were watery because of the cold, so looking through the viewfinder and assessing if the subject was in focus or not was a hard thing to do. It was a cloudy day with a few tiny drops of rain that almost ended our photoshoot before it even started. But the raindrops turned out to be moderate so we were able to pull it off.

A little bit of post-processing was done in Photoshop.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Young At Heart

When I was little my grandmother had a friend who would be around a lot. We would go to their house for a visit frequently. And her husband Pavle was there most of the times. He was always a man I was affraid of because of his looks. But that was 15 years ago. And once I grew up and my grandmother stopped babysitting me I lost contacts with those people. I mean I've been seeing them around but that only happens a couple of times per year.

But yesterday was a Saint Nicholas day who is a festive gift-giver. He's sort of like an European version of Santa Claus but not as commercialised. And what happens on the night of December 5th? Saint Nicholas goes from door to door and brings gifts for children. And I decided to go with him this year and take a few pictures. So we went from one house to another and finally we got to this house where my grandmother used to take me for a visit. And as I went inside I saw this man I used to be affraid of and took a picture.

He's a nice old man and was a bit affraid of all those devil figures that are walking around with Saint Nicholas. And I was only there for a few minutes. But him and his wife were actually very happy to see me. Too bad there was almost no time for a chat. We had to keep moving so that Saint Nicholas could visit as many children as possible in one night.

About the shot:

EXIF:
- Camera: Canon EOS 400D
- Exposure: 0.017 sec (1/60)
- Aperture: f/5.6
- Focal length: 55mm
- ISO: 400
- Flash: Flash Fired (Canon Speedlite 550EX)
- Post-processing software: Adobe Photoshop CS2
- Date taken: 05.12.2007


In order to take this picture I pointed the Flash unit towards the ceiling and bounced it. My camera was in Aperture priority mode so I chose an apperture of f/5.6 and pressed the button. But it all happened so quickly. There is no planning involved in this picture. The reason I shot it with ISO 400 is because it was fairly dark in that room and I needed to compensate that so my moving subject wouldn't be blurry. A lot of post-processing was done on this picture.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Grand Canyon HDR

I was going through my photos I took this summer. And I suddenly remembered that I took some pictures of Grand Canyon that I wanted to post-process later but kinda forgot about them. So I did that yesterday. And I got this interesting HDR (High Dynamic Range) photo.

HDR is achieved by taking at least two pictures of the same subject at different exposures and then combining them in Photoshop or Photomatix for example. For this picture I took three photos. DSLR cameras have an option called "Exposure Bracketing". What this does is automatically shoots three pictures where one is normaly exposed, one overexposed and the last one underexposed. This way, when you combine them, you get a greater contrast range than otherwise. But for this technique you need to use a tripod.

There is also a way to get HDR images from a single JPEG or RAW image and that is called an artifficial HDR. More on how to do HDR photography in this well explained tutorial.

And that's it for now. I can't paste any EXIF data for this pictures as this is a merge of three pictures. The only thing I can tell you is that I did a Batch Processing of three pictures I took at the Grand Canyon rim in Photomatix Pro and then retouched the result in Photoshop.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Molehills


I was lacking willpower and creativity for the last few days. I think I got a brain overload and my brain needed a few days to recover. But finally I managed to pull myself back together again and today I took this shot for the Digital Photography School weekly assignment.

This week's subject was "Repetition" and I had a hard time finding something repetitive that I liked. In the end I looked through the window in dispare and saw these molehills on my neighbours meadow. So I quickly grabbed my camera and went outside to take the picture.

About the shot:

EXIF:
- Camera: Canon EOS 400D
- Exposure: 0.002 sec (1/640)
- Aperture: f/2.8
- Focal length: 50mm
- ISO: 100
- Flash: Not Fired
- Post-processing software: Adobe Photoshop CS2
- Date taken: 04.12.2007


It was a cloudy day so I was working with a beautiful naturaly diffused light. I imagined my shot being black&white even before I took it. So I made sure that the sun was infront of me and got some nice shadows. Then I composed my shot and took a few pictures. Came back home, put the pictures from my camera on my computer and chose the one I liked the most. Then I post-processed it in Photoshop as usually. I boosted the contrast (more than I usually do) and sharpness, cropped it, made a strong vignette and turned it to black&white.