Woohoo, I was able to sneak in another picture this week. We had a terrible storm here and were without power for 18 hours. Not fun with a toddler. But the ice made for some cool pictures.
I'm still struggling with my macro skills, but I think I'm slowing improving.
Camera: Nikon D700
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/4.5
Shutter Speed: 1/160
ISO: 800
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
Let's start by saying that I should not be hand holding this lens at that shutter speed, but I took a burst of pictures, so luckily I hit focus on one or two. Where I am really struggling is with the insanely narrow DOF that comes along with macro photography. You can see that the bubbles in this icicle are sharp, but the bottom fatter part of the icicle is a bit soft. As I've said before, my macros are a work in progress.
BTW, you'll notice a seemingly minor change in my EXIF data above. That's right, my D300 has been replaced by a D700 and holy moly, I am in love!
Friday, January 28, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Week 4 (January 22th - 28th) | Picture 6
Technically this is an OCF picture, but you'd never know that by looking at it. I was just playing around with setting up my flash in a stationary location in our living room to see what results I could get. Nothing special about the lighting here, as he was facing where the flash was bouncing, but I love the picture anyway. (Yes, my 13 month old son has better lashes than I do.)
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/3.0
Shutter Speed: 1/100
ISO: 400
Flash: SB-800 off camera, manual, 1/8th power
Exposure: manual
Not sure if I'll have another picture to share this week or not. I played around with OCF and glass bottles this past weekend, but don't love the results. Maybe I'll play again before the week is over.
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/3.0
Shutter Speed: 1/100
ISO: 400
Flash: SB-800 off camera, manual, 1/8th power
Exposure: manual
Not sure if I'll have another picture to share this week or not. I played around with OCF and glass bottles this past weekend, but don't love the results. Maybe I'll play again before the week is over.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Week 3 (January 15th - 21th) | Picture 5
I thought about saving this picture for next week, because I feel like I'm already running out of ideas, but that would be cheating. The goal of my 52 week blog is not to share 52 pictures, but to take a new picture every week to share. So this week, you get 2 pictures.
It was icy here this morning, and I couldn't resist taking a quick shot of the ice on our Japanese Maple from my kitchen window.
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/2.8
Shutter Speed: 1/1600
ISO: 200
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
Less than an hour later, the ice was gone. I wish I had gone outside to take some more pictures, but maybe next time.
It was icy here this morning, and I couldn't resist taking a quick shot of the ice on our Japanese Maple from my kitchen window.
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/2.8
Shutter Speed: 1/1600
ISO: 200
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
Less than an hour later, the ice was gone. I wish I had gone outside to take some more pictures, but maybe next time.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Week 3 (January 15th - 21th) | Picture 4
Well, it's official - I am obsessed with OCF (off camera flash)! I love, love, love it. This week's project was inspired by another one of my favorite ways to spend the free time I never get - with a little bit of alcohol . . .
I actually didn't pull this setup from any one place in particular, just some reading on Strobist and some searching around on Flickr. A lot of people have much fancier setups, but I just wanted to try something quick and easy.
The result:
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 35mm f/1.8
Aperture: f/5.6
Shutter Speed: 1/250
ISO: 200
Flash: SB-800 off camera, manual, 1/64th power
Exposure: manual
(EXIF data is not intact - sorry, that's because of the Photoshop work to get it on the wide layout. All other editing done exclusively in LR.)
I am loving OCF!!! This was so easy to setup and so much fun to play with. I toyed with my settings a lot. I really liked the look of a much stronger flash and a much narrower aperture - it really silhouetted the glass beautifully, but you didn't get enough of the color of the liquid. Maybe I'll do an empty glass like that in a future week.
Anyway, last week someone asked me if I had taken a setup shot of how I staged my water drop and I didn't think to do that, but I did this week. Here's my remarkably simple and cheesy setup.
My husband couldn't believe the glass was sitting on a white piece of foam core. I tried to explain to him that it was all about the light bounce, but he still couldn't believe it. If I actually plan for this experiment the next time I do it, I'll get a piece of black poster board. I don't love the variegation in the piece of foam I was using (but it was all I had on hand), and I think a black surface would make for an even stronger image - but for what I had in the house, I'm happy.
I actually didn't pull this setup from any one place in particular, just some reading on Strobist and some searching around on Flickr. A lot of people have much fancier setups, but I just wanted to try something quick and easy.
The result:
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 35mm f/1.8
Aperture: f/5.6
Shutter Speed: 1/250
ISO: 200
Flash: SB-800 off camera, manual, 1/64th power
Exposure: manual
(EXIF data is not intact - sorry, that's because of the Photoshop work to get it on the wide layout. All other editing done exclusively in LR.)
I am loving OCF!!! This was so easy to setup and so much fun to play with. I toyed with my settings a lot. I really liked the look of a much stronger flash and a much narrower aperture - it really silhouetted the glass beautifully, but you didn't get enough of the color of the liquid. Maybe I'll do an empty glass like that in a future week.
Anyway, last week someone asked me if I had taken a setup shot of how I staged my water drop and I didn't think to do that, but I did this week. Here's my remarkably simple and cheesy setup.
My husband couldn't believe the glass was sitting on a white piece of foam core. I tried to explain to him that it was all about the light bounce, but he still couldn't believe it. If I actually plan for this experiment the next time I do it, I'll get a piece of black poster board. I don't love the variegation in the piece of foam I was using (but it was all I had on hand), and I think a black surface would make for an even stronger image - but for what I had in the house, I'm happy.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Week 2 (January 8th - 14th) | Picture 3
The first several days of this week, I was waiting for the snow. And the first 13 hours of my day yesterday, I was waiting for the snow. I knew the snow was coming, and I was so excited to try to photograph a snowflake macro for this week's picture. Daylight came and went yesterday and still no snow. That was disappointing, but I figured I could make something work on our deck with some creative lighting after dark.
At 7:00pm the snow started falling fast, and I managed to get a good setup on our deck. Only to try to take pictures of wet, clumpy, icy "snow." I wanted a snowflake, not a large conglomeration of icy mess. I was really disappointed! And I didn't have any idea what I was going to photograph for this week's picture.
Off camera flash is something that I've really been wanting to explore more, so I popped onto the Strobist website last night and started poking around. Do you know the Strobist website? If you have any interest at all in creative lighting - run, do not walk, to that website.
I came across this particular post - and it's always been something I've wanted to try. I have naively tried this in the kitchen sink before and it's always failed. (Bad light, bad perspective, missed focus, should I go on?) But the Strobist post gave me inspiration to try again. So I rigged up a ziploc bag attached to a cabinet knob with a rubber band, used an aluminum baking pan for my water, propped up my white flash bounce sheet (a piece of printer paper) with a wine bottle, and rested my off camera flash on a container of baby formula. Yes, seriously. The result?
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/8.0
Shutter Speed: 1/250
ISO: 800
Flash: SB-800 off camera, manual, 1/128th power
Exposure: manual
Unlike my macro picture from last week where I took hundreds and had next to nothing to show for it, I did get several very cool pictures last night and it was hard to pick just one to share. I chose this one because of the razor sharp focus on the droplet and the way it picked up the light.
A couple points to note:
1) There was limited working space on my counter to set this all up, so my flash was set extremely close to the white paper. It took me a couple tries to figure out the right flash power for proper lighting. Next time, I would probably lower ISO some and up the flash power just a hair (only because I prefer lower ISO whenever I can get it), but overall I'm really happy for my first attempt.
2) I told you I took the picture in an aluminum pan with a white piece of paper for flash bounce, yet the image is remarkably blue. Is this fancy Photoshop voodoo?
NOPE! In fact, my goal for this 52 week project is to not do any post processing edits in Photoshop. (Now if you pull my EXIF data, they will all say Photoshop, but that's because I pull them over to apply my watermark. I know, I know, LR can do that. But you'll just have to take my word that I'm not doing any editing in PS for this 52 week challenge. And that is a HUGE challenge for me. I love PS, and it's been really hard not to run a quick defog on these images before I save them.)
Sorry for that digression.
So how did I take a gray image and turn it blue? White balance! I could have done it in camera (in fact I did do that on a couple), but since I shoot RAW, it doesn't really matter how I do it in camera since I can always change it after the fact. This went from boring gray to vibrant blue with one swift shift of my WB slider in LR.
At 7:00pm the snow started falling fast, and I managed to get a good setup on our deck. Only to try to take pictures of wet, clumpy, icy "snow." I wanted a snowflake, not a large conglomeration of icy mess. I was really disappointed! And I didn't have any idea what I was going to photograph for this week's picture.
Off camera flash is something that I've really been wanting to explore more, so I popped onto the Strobist website last night and started poking around. Do you know the Strobist website? If you have any interest at all in creative lighting - run, do not walk, to that website.
I came across this particular post - and it's always been something I've wanted to try. I have naively tried this in the kitchen sink before and it's always failed. (Bad light, bad perspective, missed focus, should I go on?) But the Strobist post gave me inspiration to try again. So I rigged up a ziploc bag attached to a cabinet knob with a rubber band, used an aluminum baking pan for my water, propped up my white flash bounce sheet (a piece of printer paper) with a wine bottle, and rested my off camera flash on a container of baby formula. Yes, seriously. The result?
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/8.0
Shutter Speed: 1/250
ISO: 800
Flash: SB-800 off camera, manual, 1/128th power
Exposure: manual
Unlike my macro picture from last week where I took hundreds and had next to nothing to show for it, I did get several very cool pictures last night and it was hard to pick just one to share. I chose this one because of the razor sharp focus on the droplet and the way it picked up the light.
A couple points to note:
1) There was limited working space on my counter to set this all up, so my flash was set extremely close to the white paper. It took me a couple tries to figure out the right flash power for proper lighting. Next time, I would probably lower ISO some and up the flash power just a hair (only because I prefer lower ISO whenever I can get it), but overall I'm really happy for my first attempt.
2) I told you I took the picture in an aluminum pan with a white piece of paper for flash bounce, yet the image is remarkably blue. Is this fancy Photoshop voodoo?
NOPE! In fact, my goal for this 52 week project is to not do any post processing edits in Photoshop. (Now if you pull my EXIF data, they will all say Photoshop, but that's because I pull them over to apply my watermark. I know, I know, LR can do that. But you'll just have to take my word that I'm not doing any editing in PS for this 52 week challenge. And that is a HUGE challenge for me. I love PS, and it's been really hard not to run a quick defog on these images before I save them.)
Sorry for that digression.
So how did I take a gray image and turn it blue? White balance! I could have done it in camera (in fact I did do that on a couple), but since I shoot RAW, it doesn't really matter how I do it in camera since I can always change it after the fact. This went from boring gray to vibrant blue with one swift shift of my WB slider in LR.
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Week 1 (January 1st - 7th) | Picture 2
I did it. I made myself go outside to use my macro lens in the dead of Winter. I got my awesome macro lens about 6 months ago, and learned very quickly that taking macro pictures is darn hard. So I have mostly been using it as a portrait lens. While it serves that purpose wonderfully, I could have gotten the 85mm 1.4 or the 135mm 2.0 if I just wanted a nice portrait lens. So I am really going to push myself to take more macro shots this year. Here's what I found in our barren yard:
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/3.2
Shutter Speed: 1/320
ISO: 200
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
Boring? Kinda. More interesting than a lens cap? I like to think so. My macro photography needs a lot of work - I took over a hundred pictures and only got 2 keepers. The DOF and my unsteady hands make it a very frustrating type of photography for me. But I will keep at it!
While we are talking about macro photography, I must give a shout out to Michele and Amanda - two personal friends who give me macro inspiration every day. These ladies take some of the most beautiful macro pictures I've ever seen.
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/3.2
Shutter Speed: 1/320
ISO: 200
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
Boring? Kinda. More interesting than a lens cap? I like to think so. My macro photography needs a lot of work - I took over a hundred pictures and only got 2 keepers. The DOF and my unsteady hands make it a very frustrating type of photography for me. But I will keep at it!
While we are talking about macro photography, I must give a shout out to Michele and Amanda - two personal friends who give me macro inspiration every day. These ladies take some of the most beautiful macro pictures I've ever seen.
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Week 1 (January 1st - 7th) | Picture 1
I'll start out boring. Since I'm used to taking family pictures, finding other "things" to photograph is going to take a little creativity on my part. At least this tells you a little something about me.
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/3.2
Shutter Speed: 1/500
ISO: 400
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
The week is only half over, so maybe I'll find something more interesting to share between now and the 7th . . .
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: 105mm f/2.8 macro
Aperture: f/3.2
Shutter Speed: 1/500
ISO: 400
Flash: none
Exposure: manual
The week is only half over, so maybe I'll find something more interesting to share between now and the 7th . . .
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