The Good Stuff.

10.29.2018

Reykjavik and close by. October 29, 2018

Woke up in one of the more comfortable beds I've slept in and went downstairs in the Canopy Hilton to have a filling breakfast. Today we visited places like a church in the middle of the city. a fishing village a few minutes away from the capitol, a botanical garden, and even stopped at a Bonus grocery store (Bonus is the actual name) to compare prices with the same stuff we might buy at home. We haven't gone out to the big stuff yet, like the glaciers, the waterfalls, the Blue Lagoon or the Golden Circle. We start on the cool itinerary tomorrow. I guess the rationale was to get our "sea legs" under us and not push too hard after everyone's long travel days and the Saturday night with no sleep.

Last night, after dinner, I put on my coat and went out for a walk through the downtown area where I found the lovely display above and the fun marketing posters just below. The top is just exterior signage and props for a bar but the image below is advertising for Mink Studios. Apparently the business has many viking props and customers can choose various scenarios and be photographed in Viking Character and take home prints of their inner Viking self. I love it. It's just what folks used to do in Texas when big instant films were all the rage. Not the Viking thing but the dress up, period regalia; only in Texas it was always cowboy hats and chaps or dresses with bustles.



I don't have much else to say except that stories about the prices in Iceland being breathtaking were both true and false. A steak in a nice restaurant here will run to $50 but there are steak houses in Austin where prime ribeyes can run to $125, and a $50 (good) steak is the high average. Mixed drinks and wine are about 50% higher than what I see in good places in Austin while the price I paid for a decent mixed drink in one of the smaller U.S. towns I recently visited was about 50% lower than Austin prices, so I guess when it comes to alcohol it's all location and  context. Prices on some things in Reykjavik can be expensive but the place is heralded as the top tourist destination for international travel so I guess the Icelanders are making hay while the sun shines. Nobody seems to be complaining about it... For meals that come out of my pocket I'm not economizing and they end up being on par with what we pay at home.

But let's talk cameras for a few sentences. I could not have made a better choice (for me and my tolerance to carry and use cameras right now) than the Panasonic G9 and the Olympus 12-100mm f4.0 Pro lens. The combination is light enough to carry around and the results can be tremendous. I do find myself reaching for the Pana/Leica 15mm f1.7 when the light starts to drop. It's turned out to be a surprising lens for me because, in the past, I've never warmed up to medium wide focal lengths. The size and build of the lens just beg one to use it all the time and the results so far exceed the stuff I read on sites like that of Lloyd Chambers, and others, that I no longer believe any reviewer who hasn't put a lens on a test bench and put it through its paces. 

The other great lens for walking around at night is the Sigma 30mm f1.4. It's super sharp and the fast aperture is the difference between being able to shoot handheld after dark, or not. Finally, I'm glad I upgraded my Apple laptop for the WP Engine show I did back in late September because it's easy to pack, fast as lightning, and the retina display is making me smile every time I look at it. 

That's all I've got today on cameras and gear but I do have an observation on winter wear. I brought along a jacket that's warm and weather proof. It's funny because the brand name is: Weatherproof. I felt comfortable bringing it along instead of rushing out and buying something North Face-y or 66 Degrees because it's the same jacket I took to Toronto last year and it stood up to 10 degrees Farenheit for several hours at a time and never left me shivering. Today it handled temperatures around freezing and weather that included rain, snow and sleet all in the course of our eight hour outing. It's funny because it's a coat I picked up on a whim at Costco.com a few years back for the princely sum of $39. So much for cost as a determiner of performance.... 

We're up earlier tomorrow so we can get some driving done. For those of you who've been to Iceland I thought I'd tell you we are heading to Vik in the south part of the island and then into the interior. I just heard that one of my favorite Vloggers, James Popsys, is also here in Iceland and I hope to run into him. His YouTube channel is unpretentious and fun. And he shoots with a Panasonic G9. 

The only downside of the trip so far? I miss Studio Dog. I've been looking for souvenirs to bring back for her. Haven't found anything yet but it's early times. 

All the people on the photo tour are really nice and we've had some great meals together. They are also not too, too chatty in the van. A nice quality all around. 

Big socks and tough boots tomorrow! Be well and keep reading. Comments always welcome.

































yes. I know. I'm not a landscape shooter but I'm learning, honest.

15 comments:

Unknown said...

The light! Quality of the light on your subjects is beautiful.

MikeR said...

Blue skies! How lucky.

Just for fun, pick up a package of dried fish - hardfiskur - at a rest stop. Studio Dog might not cotton to it, but you might enjoy this Icelandic take on jerky.

Anonymous said...

Beautiful golden hour images & colors. It appears the golden hour probably lasts for at least a few hours, morning & evening, weather permitting.
Catching my eye is your architectural images. The domestic building architecture appears very practical, simple, sturdy, and certainly Scandinavian. Definitely does not employ multitudes of intertwined gables & arches, per the "Ramada Inn" school of design.

Paul

Anonymous said...

Glad to hear things are going well! Looks like you had great light, even tho there's evidence of wet conditions :) Pictures make me want to hop on over- you must have a good camera :) Keep the reports coming.
Rick

Bob said...

I'm liking your landscapes a lot. Show us more, please!

Jim Metzger said...

Oh the LIGHT! beautiful rendering.

David said...

Happy belated birthday!,
Glad you made it there safe. So for your next year, you have decided to surprise us all by throwing away the whole portrait thing and move back to your roots with architecture. Good choice, although I don't see it sticking, you have some nice horse portraits there. The street photography also looks interesting, more fishing then, well actual street.
Keep it fun!

Tom Barry said...

I assume that because of the angle of the sun that far north there is a long period of slanting light at both ends of the day. At any rate, the light you had for these shots is wonderful and your professionalism shows through whether it's on landscapes or architecture or and or and or...

Jack said...

Light & colors are very nice. The G9 continues to impress me (in your hands). Keep 'em coming.

Landscape is not easy (for me), as I found out recently in Rocky Mountain National Park. Wrong equipment and techniques.

John Krumm said...

Nice post. What strikes me about the photos is how familiar the light looks after living in Southeast Alaska. Low angled sun, blue sky, everything still wet, and colors almost unbelievably vivid. Love the bike in the stream too.

Kenneth Voigt said...

I hope your wife doesn't read this

mosswings said...

We'll be arriving in REK about the time you leave. All of these pictures look so familiar, but so new. You may not be a landscape photographer, Kirk, but you see the story and tell it beautifully. Enjoy.

Clayton said...

Some of these remind me of Tierra Del Fuego, where I spent quite a bit of time working. Most photogs ignore it on their way to Antarctica.

Fred said...

I can only echo the other comments about the light and the colors in your photos. The two right after the shot of the interior of the van are spectacular. The first photo of the sun and the sky and water reminds me of a Turner painting. The contrast of the color in the road to the land around it in the next picture is quite remarkable.
Since you are turning into a landscape and architecture photographer maybe you should have brought a nice view camera on this trip :-). Seriously, it looks like your cameras and lenses are working well for you.

David B said...

I really like the church and disapearing road photos. The pink bike photo is interesting if nothing else.

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