I suppose once you know the basics of landscape photography, there's no limit to where they can be applied in order to capture images. The photographer Robert Overweg is shooting striking landscapes within computer games. Nice idea.
Wednesday, 30 June 2010
Friday, 19 March 2010
Hey, Put Down Your Goddamn Camera"
Just because you can document and share nearly every moment of your life doesn't mean you should. Stop worrying so much about stealing away with an image or a clip that perfectly crystallizes the night, like a trophy to collect, another document to catalog, and just experience it. Enjoy it. There's not a camera on the planet that can capture the way a concert makes you feel. Take one picture. Mark the occasion. Then put your goddamn camera down.
YES! This. I went to a Black Kids gig in Manchester early last year, and apart from being the oldest person in the room (not kidding) I also felt very out of place for not having a mobile or compact in my hand, filming the entire gig. What do they all do with all these videos?
I saw a factoid today that the amount of data captured/created by humans in 2009 surpasses the amount of data captured/created by humans in all years up to 2009, and I can well believe it.
Monday, 8 February 2010
A useful site for film photographers raised on digital: Negative Slide
Like this site a lot. Only just found it so am planning on poking through to see what goodies come up...
Wednesday, 9 December 2009
The Digital Harinezumi 2
That is what the Harinezumi has brought back to video. It had all become too clean, to perfect. High Definition, crystal clear focus, rich sound. But just like the warmth of a vinyl record is more soothing then a compact disc- there was a need to have that warmth in the videos that you were creating of the special moments now.
A very beautiful and convincing piece of writing that's also a review of the new Harinezumi 2 digital camera. Worth clicking through to the website as there's some beautiful videos and images on there.
It's getting tricky not to buy this camera – along with this lovely piece of writing, I'm also fending off emails from a very dear and knowlegable friend who's ordering me to sell all my film gear and buy a Harinezumi as soon as physically possible.
Ho hum. Maybe after Christmas...
Thursday, 3 December 2009
Pictory
Pictory is a new online photomagazine from Laura Brunow Miner, former Editor-in-Chief of JPEG magazine. This is brand new, but it's already easy to see that it's a beautifully designed piece of work and a fantastic way to display images.
Tuesday, 5 May 2009
Friday, 10 April 2009
Why I like my Lomo (by a digital photographer)
Squeezing through the crowds, I made my way to the press desk, determined to "make first contact" with someone on the Lomo team. I'd run out of business cards about six meetings ago and the only worker who wasn't involved in an animated discussion with a trendy hipster only spoke halting English. Somehow my fervent: "Honestly, I work for a *cough* digital *cough* photography magazine, which I know isn't quite relevant to your company, but I really love your stand and I'd love to know more about Lomography," translated into her grinning, nodding and handing me my very own Lomo camera. It was a bit like that scene in Before Sunrise where the stone-broke lead character persuades a bartender to give him a bottle of wine on the house so that the serendipitous couple can continue having the best night of their life. Anyway.
For the rest of the trip I skipped around Cologne beaming from ear to ear, happily clutching what a lot of my digital colleagues have since dismissed as a "toy camera". Back home I gloated for about two weeks straight, proudly displaying my prize on my desk. And then I started using it.
Taking pictures with film has been completely enlightening. I only really got into photography when I got my job with the magazines, so I'm almost wholly a child of the digital age - taking a picture where you can't see if it's worked until you develop it has blown my tiny mind. It's so freeing. And I know how cliched that sounds, but it is.
Initially I snapped. I had no idea about exposure times or focal length and was unable to set the aperture - all I could do was point the camera, shoot and keep my fingers crossed. I developed the occasional film here and there, and maybe five out of the twenty-four pictures could be classed as keepers. The number of completely dark ones where I'd left the lenscap on was slightly frightening - there was nothing to beep at me and say "take the lenscap off!". It started to make me less lazy, and my photographic muscles revelled in suddenly being asked to work. Bit like when you haven't been for a run for weeks, and it hurts like hell but simultaneously feels so good.
As an experiment I decided to make the Lomo my primary camera and take it everywhere that I'd usually take a digital camera. A quick holiday to Paris, pre Christmas? My only camera was my Fisheye. A shoot for Photo Pro at the De la Warr Pavilion? I'm there, snapping away, to the absolute delight of the photographer who laughed with real happiness and demanded to take pictures of it. An Olympus event with David Bailey at Holborn Studios? I whip out the Lomo and everyone (including the Olympus reps) crowds round cooing about "the old days" while Bailey stops his own conversation and eyes it suspiciously from afar. One of the nicest things about the Fisheye is that it makes everyone smile. DSLRs just don't do that.
The downsides: practically speaking, it's freaking expensive to run. I developed 7 films the other day (the big bag that I mentioned at the start of this ramble) and it set me back £40, which really shocked me. I guess this is my karmic payback for spending the last two years blagging memory cards which I'd then carelessly run over or send through the wash.
When I was only developing one or two films, every photo I pulled out of the pack made me squeak with excitement - but having developed this big whammy of images, I began to notice the camera's limitations. The in-camera flash doesn't extend past the lens enough, so when I use it at night or in dark situations there's a large shadow cast. See:
Here I was all set to continue rambling, writing more about how the limitations of my Lomo has made me think I'd be better off buying my own DSLR - but having dived into the big stack of shots to fish out this badly-lit shot of my Christmas tree, I started smiling at the images I'd forgotten. Shots of my "plus one", riding escalators in Paris - pictures of my friends at New Years Eve, and again at my recent MA graduation. Yes, some are badly lit, and there's still loads of shots of the inside of my lenscap, but these images have an immediacy that my digital shots just don't possess and that's what I love about it. They might not be technically correct but they bring back the memory of the event, which is what I was trying to capture anyway. And the idea that there are "rules of photography" have always irked me somewhat. At an amateur level, all that matters is that you like the images that you take. If you're selling shots, then your client needs to like them too. That's it, surely.
Of course, in a more practical sense, the cost of developing all these films is hugely prohibitive. If I can get that Lomo effect with a digital camera, I'd be as happy as the proverbial Larry. I wonder if it's possible...