Archive for the 'Photo' Category

Pix Pix

Sunday, February 15th, 2004

The pictures I took at the Woman’s Basketball game at UPenn on Friday night shall be in tomorrow’s Spectator. Three of them to be exact.

Did you know the Spec is New York City’s 7th most read daily newspaper. You didn’t? Why not? I’m in it.

I took the pictures with a digital camera. Wow, I really don’t like cameras that do things for you. I wanted to set the aperature at its widest, point, focus, and shoot. However, the Canon Digital Rebel that Frankie had found for me had a few intricacies that I couldn’t get used to.

  • As with most autofocus cameras, the manual focus was lackluster. Real MF lenses have some nice characteristics that let you accurately focus on a certain point. First, it takes a slight amount of force to turn them (so the focus doesn’t jiggle about). Second, the focus range (e.g. from 1 meter to infinity) is covered by a maybe a half turn of the focus “ring” or whatever the thing you turn is called. The AF lens, in MF mode, had a “gearish” feel when I spun it, and the focus range was covered by such a small turn that I couldn’t set myself on one point accurately. A slight tap of the hand and I would be focused on something else.
  • So with MF mode out of the question, I had to autofocus. But since there was so much motion, the camera had no idea where to focus. Almost all of the pictures I shot were blurry. And of course I had to wait for it to focus before it would let me shoot. Half the time it wasn’t “ready” for shooting when I actually hit the shutter — so the shutter never fired. There went another picture.
  • To change the aperture I had to use the wheel on the top of the camera. It’s more intuitive (for me) to turn a ring on the front of the camera.
  • The “sports mode” let the camera take pictures even when its focus wasn’t “ready”. But in sports mode I lost control of aperture, ISO and shutter settings. If I put it in MF mode, I had all the aforementioned manual focus problems. As a result everything in sports mode was blurry as hell

The truth is that I could have overcome many of these problems by learning the camera better. By the end of the game my pictures had already improved. At the same time, manual focus cameras have some great features that autofocus ones fail to replicate.

My personal favorite: manual focus camera that can do aperture and shutter priority (choose an aperture/shutter setting and the camera does the light metering itself). Shoot with a prime lens (one that can’t zoom in or out). With that equipment, you choose your aperture/shutter, focus, and shoot. Ahh.

Blah Blah Blah

Thursday, November 6th, 2003

For those of you who are interested in how I edited those pictures, check this out. Off now.

Night Time

Tuesday, November 4th, 2003

Oh it’s time to go to bed! Joy! But before that, it’s time to look at the latest two pictures I scanned in. Granted they are not as cool as the first one but I like them just the same. Fuck. It’s 4:30AM.

Tom holding drumstick
Playing on drums at angle

Grumble grumble it’s late in the AM

Monday, November 3rd, 2003

Tom with green haloI take back my previous rant about concert photography. Bring your digital cameras, crowd the front row taking your shots. I don’t care. Obviously my criticism was misguided cause the pics came out great! And that makes me SO happy.

In other news, I’m finally taking advantage of the fact that I live in New York City. And by taking advantage, I don’t mean getting the Statue of Liberty drunk or any of that nonsense (pardon me, it’s getting late, and I’m going to regret typing this crap tomorrow.)

( Back at the HS there was a chart in the yearbook room, plotting dirtiness of jokes by hour of the night. It had two lines, one for all guys, and the other for yours truly. The one for all guys was pretty much flat, and the one for me just shot up around 2AM.)

So I’ve gone to the Village area 3 times in as many days, which is good since it means I saw the Halloween parade, Brother’s Past, and Pulp Fiction. I like this place.

Scanning Pictures

Monday, October 27th, 2003
I shot half a roll of film during my first month at Columbia, and I finally got it processed today. There were some good shots conceptually but they didn’t turn out so well in the end. You can click on the picture to the right to see a bigger version of it — it’s the only one that came out well, I think. Building with columns at angles