Archive for the 'Photography' Category

Merry Christmas, You Sons ‘a Guns!

IMG_1212.JPG
Ahh, yes.

Here I sit, listening to George Winston’s December and Linus and Lucy albums as they stream through the aether to my computer, countless bits of paper and packaging and wire twisty ties and whatnot strewn all over the front room, browsing through the couple hundred Christmas season photos I’ve taken thus far.

I’d say it’s about time to share some, wouldn’t you?

IMG_1302.JPG
We spent Sunday evening at Mark and Sharon’s house and got to see Joni and Javi and Jeff and Sarah and their respective new kiddos Cameron and Seth.

Cameron’s a real ham for the camera and Seth is just a dang good looking kid with big blue eyes.

IMG_1323.JPG
Then we had Christmas Eve dinner at my Grandparents’ house and had a good time chowing down on roast beef and opening presents. I actually didn’t end up taking too many photos there, but I got a couple of good shots of Isabella reading The Night Before Christmas.

IMG_1337.JPG
Now an aside: Lately I’ve been reading a lot about off-camera flash photography, and have gotten some cheap speed lights and stands and some wireless flash triggers to boot. I decided that this year I wanted our Christmas-morning photos to actually, oh I don’t know… Ah. Oh yes. I wanted them to look good. So I spent a little time last night setting up two strobes on stands in the corners of the room opposite the Christmas tree, aimed them at the ceiling, took a few test shots, and got everything ready to take Christmas morning photos with as little thought as possible.

Kristina and I both stayed up fairly late, but still didn’t manage to catch a glimpse of Santa Claus when he visited our house. Next time I’ll rig up some motion detectors to my camera and catch him in the act.

IMG_1345.JPG
So this morning, our ambulatory kids came and woke us up bright and early. We donned our comfy robes and pajamas and whatnot, and headed to the front room to find what Santa had brought, and made a huge mess opening presents and assembling toys.

David got his first real bicycle and Isabella got her very own MP3 player, complete with about ten different Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson albums (amongst others) courtesy of her dear old dad.

All that remains now is our epic journey to Oklahoma to spend some time with some of Kristina’s family, and our Christmas season for this year will come to an end.

More photos are available in the photo albums.

Aperture Demonstration

Here’s a neat little demonstration of how depth of field is affected by aperture.

It’s not as dramatic a demonstration as it could be, as I really wasn’t intending to post this series of photos. I was just messing around with my new tripod*, experimenting with taking long-exposure shots. Turns out I ended up with a series of photographs that demonstrates the effects of changes in aperture quite nicely.

The series ranges from f/1.8, 0.8 sec. in the first frame to f/11, 30 sec. in the last, all at ISO 100. To keep that ISO and get longer than a 30-second exposure and thus be able to use smaller apertures, I’d have had to go to bulb mode, and as I don’t have a remote shutter release I would have had to hold down the button manually and just try to get as close as possible to accurate exposure times. That’s just too much trouble to go to for an improvised demonstration.

You’ll notice that in the first frame at f/1.8, the depth of field covers little more than just the eye-bud nearest the camera. The rest is a blur.

As you progress through the series toward f/11 you see that the depth of field increases to include a much greater portion of the frog’s body, ending with almost the entire body being in relatively good focus. The background too becomes more and more defined.

Depth of field is inversely related to aperture; the larger the aperture, the smaller the depth of field, and vice-versa. By using a large-ish aperture you can control which elements of your photograph are in focus, and therefore emphasized, while keeping the rest of the background and/or foreground relatively obscured. Alternatively, by using a very small aperture, you can achieve a much larger depth of field, bringing more of your photograph into sharp focus.

Portrait and close-up photography lends itself to using larger apertures, allowing the main subject to “pop” out of the background into sharp focus. At the other end of the spectrum, landscape and architecture photographers generally want as much of their photograph to be in sharp focus as possible, and thus tend to favor the use of smaller apertures.

This is a basic, basic concept in photography, and anyone with more than a passing interest in pursuing photography as a hobby will already know this stuff by heart. But it’s good to see a concept demonstrated in simplified form so as to better understand it “in the field”, so to speak.

 

* The Induro CX213 with SA-23 ballhead. Induro is the American-imported version of Benro, which is the less-expensive, Chinese-made, almost- just-as-good copy of French-born, now Italian-made Gitzo tripods, which are widely regarded as being at the top of the tripod food chain.

Here’s Kristina!

IMG_0827.JPG
Kristina’s self portrait.

 

Thanksgiving, It Was

IMG_0704.jpg
Yes, I know, we’re well past Thanksgiving by now.

Not that I’m obsessive-compulsive or anything, but if a big event isn’t documented here, then it just didn’t happen. Just think: What if some advanced alien race finds this website sometime in the far, distant future, long after we’ve all succumbed to global warming global cooling old age? What evidence will there be that we even celebrated Thanksgiving? None. Then the aliens will assume that we were a bunch of good-for-nothing, thankless layabouts with nothing better to do than documenting children as they grow up.

That simply won’t do, so here we go.

First we went to my grandparents’ house for Thanksgiving Dinner proper, and really had a good time. Everyone was in good spirits, and I took lots of pictures. We gorged ourselves on turkey, stuffing, gravy, green beans, salad, rolls, cranberry sauce, olives (green and black), sweet pickles, and carrots. Then we had dessert, consisting of pecan pie, pumpkin cheesecake, and coffee.

IMG_0779-mat.jpg
Afterwards, we trucked across the street to Mom’s house for more formal photographs, and I had my first commissioned portrait session, using the new camera and mom’s tripod, with no flashes or strobes. The images turned out a bit soft, as many of them were on the order of one-second exposures, and few people can stay perfectly still for a full second while a camera records them. But I think they turned out pretty good considering the circumstances, and I learned a lot of new things to do differently next time.

IMG_0840.JPG
A couple of days later we went to the Bowley homestead and had Thanksgiving with the Carr descendants. I didn’t get as many photos there, as it was a much less formal event where we all just ate and relaxed and hung out.

Photos are in the photo album, which is a good place for them to be, I think.

 

That’s Knot Funny

Sometimes kids are funny. They can so intensely focus on what we big people might consider the most trivial of things, while at the same time forgetting to pay attention to what might be considered slightly more important. Things like, oh I don’t know, putting your hands out in front of you so as to avoid smashing your face into the ceramic tile floor, for example.

I only bring it up because tonight David did just that. I watched him do it. He ran into the kitchen to pick up some playing cards he had scattered around, began a crouching maneuver upon arriving at the site of the strewn cards, and was doing quite well. However, he failed to stop the crouching maneuver after the appropriate amount of crouchness had been achieved, and proceed to plant himself face first in the middle of the kitchen floor.

So right now he looks like Rocky after the first good hit from Apollo Creed.

IMG_0556.JPG

I think my new f/1.8 lens really captures the true essence of a head injury.

The First 100

Canon EOS 40D 10.1 Megapixel with 28-135mm IS USM lens.
Yesterday we got one of these bad boys for the taking of better photos of Kids One through Three and anything else that we may want to record for posterity.

Since then I’ve taken well over two hundred photos. I now present to you, for no good reason, The First 100 Keepers.