In the quiet days of 2009 and 2010 I'd forgotten what it was like to be busy all the time. Now assignments are rushing back as though a dam broke somewhere upstream. Too many executives decided they couldn't put off being successful anymore. More people decided to defend their marketing turf. Maybe they just got tired of looking at the same old stock photographs they got for a song. Maybe they really needed to differentiate the service they sell from every other competitor in their industry.
Whatever the reason it seems like were back to those busy Fridays where the kid needs delivered to some event, the clients would like to see everything we shot. Now. And the book is just tantalizingly out of finishing range for the moment. And of course, masochist that I am, I promise camera reviews on Monday.
So why am I posting yet another installment of the blog? Because, in the interlude between making client web galleries and uploading I stopped and lingered on a shoot I did for fun. I liked this portrait so I messed with it for a minute or two. And I came to the conclusion I've come to so often before: The magic that happens in photographs isn't about some soulful camera or magic lens. It comes in spite of our tools. Our tools interject. It's as though they are part of the Heisenberg Theory. They become intertwined in the process of seeing and subtly change nuances of intimacy and revelation. Some more, some less. Our goal should be to nullify their impact on our vision. Because that's when we step over into art. And I damn sure don't want the breeze from a shutter actuation in Belgium to create stylistic hurricanes here in Austin if I can prevent it.
Cameras blow in the breeze. Tethered by your own sense of style.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Bikers meet Olympus EPL2
Barbara and friends down at Buffalo Bills in a promo shot for an upcoming production at Zach.
Leaving behind the "red dot" imbroglio for a now, I took the EPL2 (with the EP2 as a back up) when I went to shoot some production shots for an upcoming play about Molly Ivins, today. We took a series of shot in front of a red curtain with a large LED fixture as our main light and then we headed down the street to a bar called Buffalo Bills where we met our group of volunteers. They all brought their own Harleys but the director, David, though this one would be the signature bike. I was going to light the scene but it was a beautiful day, we were in open shade and the open shade setting on the new camera seemed just right.
I was happy to be able to shoot black leather jackets so I could see what the noise looked like in a every day kind of shot. This was shot at ISO 200 which, like the EPL1, is the Olympus "recommended" ISO to shoot with. It's supposed to be the best combination of dynamic range and low noise.
The camera, with the VF2 is actually a very capable production camera. Set on continuous it bangs out frames quickly and it takes a while for the buffer saturation to slow down your shooting speed. I tend to shoot in burst of three and four frames so with my method I rarely ever have to wait for the camera. It's usually waiting for me. It probably wouldn't be a good sports camera because the view finder tends to black out for too long after each shot in single frame and the buffer does fill up quickly in raw.
We went back over to the theater and shot some other production shots against a white background. I used the larger LED (two for the background and one for the main light) lights and the camera, on auto white balance, nailed a perfect white in the background and great skin tones. And I needed that. Since there's no RAW conversion for this new camera in Lightroom I was shooting jpeg and depending on proper technique to ensure good results. No "save it in raw" here.
When I looked at the files I was happy. I'd probably stick to 800 and under for print production photography but then, as a measuring method, understand that I try to keep my Canon 5Dmk2 at 1600 ISO or lower for the same kind of work. The bigger, sharper screen was a big help when it came to sharing previews with the production team.
There were no red dots but there were red boots. I swear they were that way in real life. I didn't change a thing. This file is straight OOC. I should mention that I used the two kit lenses for everything. The bike shots were done with the 14-42.
Fun shoot. Should be an even funner play. EPL2 does it's first, full, solo, real life job.
For the nosy foodies, I went to Artz Rib House with my friend, Mike, today. We both had the regular order of baby back ribs, double beans, no potato salad, yes cole slaw. For my money, the best BBQ ribs in the city limits. Nice.
Leaving behind the "red dot" imbroglio for a now, I took the EPL2 (with the EP2 as a back up) when I went to shoot some production shots for an upcoming play about Molly Ivins, today. We took a series of shot in front of a red curtain with a large LED fixture as our main light and then we headed down the street to a bar called Buffalo Bills where we met our group of volunteers. They all brought their own Harleys but the director, David, though this one would be the signature bike. I was going to light the scene but it was a beautiful day, we were in open shade and the open shade setting on the new camera seemed just right.
I was happy to be able to shoot black leather jackets so I could see what the noise looked like in a every day kind of shot. This was shot at ISO 200 which, like the EPL1, is the Olympus "recommended" ISO to shoot with. It's supposed to be the best combination of dynamic range and low noise.
The camera, with the VF2 is actually a very capable production camera. Set on continuous it bangs out frames quickly and it takes a while for the buffer saturation to slow down your shooting speed. I tend to shoot in burst of three and four frames so with my method I rarely ever have to wait for the camera. It's usually waiting for me. It probably wouldn't be a good sports camera because the view finder tends to black out for too long after each shot in single frame and the buffer does fill up quickly in raw.
We went back over to the theater and shot some other production shots against a white background. I used the larger LED (two for the background and one for the main light) lights and the camera, on auto white balance, nailed a perfect white in the background and great skin tones. And I needed that. Since there's no RAW conversion for this new camera in Lightroom I was shooting jpeg and depending on proper technique to ensure good results. No "save it in raw" here.
When I looked at the files I was happy. I'd probably stick to 800 and under for print production photography but then, as a measuring method, understand that I try to keep my Canon 5Dmk2 at 1600 ISO or lower for the same kind of work. The bigger, sharper screen was a big help when it came to sharing previews with the production team.
There were no red dots but there were red boots. I swear they were that way in real life. I didn't change a thing. This file is straight OOC. I should mention that I used the two kit lenses for everything. The bike shots were done with the 14-42.
Fun shoot. Should be an even funner play. EPL2 does it's first, full, solo, real life job.
For the nosy foodies, I went to Artz Rib House with my friend, Mike, today. We both had the regular order of baby back ribs, double beans, no potato salad, yes cole slaw. For my money, the best BBQ ribs in the city limits. Nice.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Walking around, looking for trouble.
These are all handheld images taken this afternoon (after a long day of commercial shooting) with the Olympus EPL2 and the kit lens or the Panasonic 20mm f1.7 lens. This is what I do to relax after a day at work.....
I knew I would get in trouble when I posted this afternoon's blog. Apparently, I just didn't understand that, while the red dot might not affect me personally, it would render the EPL2 ineffective for skyline shots at night. This is the Frost Bank Tower. At twilight.
And this is the Frost Bank Tower about 35 minutes after sunset. Wicked flare from the street light....
Funny what you'll find in a typical parking lot in Austin, Texas. Kit lens.
I love the clouds in the winter and I love the view from the pedestrian bridge. You could tell we had a nice 60+ degree day in Austin because the downtown hike and bike trail was packed with runners, walkers and bikers. Sorry, no HDR.... Just good timing.
We Austinites are fascinated with high rise buildings. Especially condo and apartment towers. I guess it's because we had so few in the city until recently.
Someone questioned my last test with the sun over to the side. "What would happen if the sun was in the center of the frame?" they asked. This is what it looks like with the sun in the center of the frame.
Pretty Sky. Softlight. Fresh Cookies. Sumatran Coffee.
Gosh. I couldn't even get the street light to misbehave.
I've lost my chance to show the red dot at sunset for today. But I was already out walking and the camera felt so good around my neck I just kept going.
There's so much energy in downtown Austin these days. The W Hotel just opened and everyone is hanging out at the bars. I dropped by to get a Bloody Mary but it was too bloody crowded so I decided not to stay.
The IS has its mojo working.
If you want skies to do this neat color thing then chuck the AWB and keep your camera on "daylight" as the sun sets in the west. It's really cool and warm at the same time.
I thought I got it. I thought the dot showed up. See the street light on the left? Look about one third down from the top and the same amount to the left and there's a soft, white dot. On further inspection it's really the light on top of the moon tower in Clarksville. Foiled again. But nice OOC black and white...
I walked from 5 to 7:30pm and then it was time to go home. Dinner. An interesting one. Lentils and rice with a yogurt sauce and grilled onions. A salad of fresh avocado and grapefruit slices with a drizzle of oil and vinegar dressing and fresh shallots.
Can we talk very frankly? About the serious, red dot issue????
I walked in the door a few minutes ago and set down my stuff. I've been shooting photographs for an oral surgery practice again today. Yes, I shot a model released patient having a procedure done. Yes, there was a little blood. Yes, I'm squeamish about blood. Yes, we took lots of frames to get the angles and relationships between the surgical team just right. I shot most of it with can big, heavy Canon camera but I shot some of it with the little Pen EPL2 because I'm trying to keep it in my hands all week. It's the only way I can write a review about it. Anyway, the first thing I find when I hit my mail box (sorry, I'm not the kind of pro that can keep his head in the game and still instantly respond to e-mails and texts.....) is a growing hysteria about the alleged Olympus EPL2 RED SPOTS CATASTROPHE!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Otherwise sane readers are on the edges of their seats, eager and anxious to know more about the red dots/spots dilemma. Well. That stopped me cold. I've looked at the red dots on some sample photos from the middle of China and I've tried shooting the camera with the sun in the center third of the frame and I'm not able to replicate the problem. At least that's the answer I posted a couple of days ago.
But that wasn't good enough. People implored me to shoot: "With the sun peeking around a building." "Directly in the middle of the frame." "At 4 pm." "At noon." "With all the Pen lenses." "Wide Open."
"Stopped down to f16." "Surrounded by naked women." "In a Klingon Null Force Field Containment System." "While riding in a black helicopter." And much, much more.
I have no doubt that you can make the Pen cameras create red dots. Really. Not disbelieving the possibility. But chances are I have a Pen EPL2 in my hands and you don't. I've pointed it at the sun, and a house lamp and an LED lamp and you haven't. So, to increase your anxiety or put your mind at ease (depending on which side of the fence you are on.....) I want to give you the straight scoop.
Now, before I do I need to let you know that ALL the camera and lens manufacturers are trying desperately to keep you in the dark about this. I'm breaking all sorts of NDA's to tell you this. But I think you have a basic, All American, All trans European, All Asian (etc.) right to know this......
Here it is:
SINCE THE DAWN OF COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY YOU'VE HAD THE POWER TO MAKE RED DOTS WITH ANY CAMERA!!!!!!! It's nothing more than abusing an optical system. It's like oscillating your Siemens centrifuges back and forth over their red line. It's like driving your car at red line for hours and hours and waiting for the engine to smoke. The red dots are no doubt coming from lens flare. Here's the scenario: Take a small sensor camera with a reflective sensor surface and shoot it at f16 (the system is already diffraction limited at about f5.6, at most, f8). Point it directly at a point light source many times brighter than the surrounding area. Watch the lens flare. Watch the collimated light hit the sensor and bounce back against the rear lens element. Watch it ricochet off the lens element and restrike the sensor. Repeat ad nauseum.
But here's the special, secret part: You've been able to do this with any camera you can think of. And pretty reliably too. Just shoot stupid. Of course the manufacturer warns you not to point the camera directly at the sun. Of course every lens manufacturer warns you not to include a bright light source in the frame for fear of flare. Guess what? If you go it your own way, all independent and self-reliant and what not......you'll likely get some sort of flare. Could be repeating patterns of the lens diaphragm. Could be general light source smear, could be red dots. But if you use any tool outside its proscribed parameters you get to deal with the......artifacts. Or the blown engines. Or the flare.
But......I would not give up on my personal search for the EPL2 red dots because I know how important it is to everyone out there considering a full featured, interchangeable lens, 12 megapixel, still / HD movie camera with included optical zoom to have a camera and lens that is more flawless than camera systems costing 100x more.
Well. In my testing I could make a Leica M9 flare like fireworks with a $5000 lens on the front and I wanted to get the same performance from my $100 lens and, frankly, I started to despair. Perhaps my technique wasn't all I thought it was. Did I have a defective system? And I remember being able to ably elicit flare and red dots from the Phase One camera I tested a few years ago.
Then, my dog reminded me of a new and better way to get the red dots. Photoshop's filters menu. Apparently many of you think of Photoshop as only a tool to get those wonderful and sought after HDR files. But, it's also a great tool for red dots and all kinds of flare effects. Just go to Filters. Then to Render. Then to..............lens flare. The possibilities are endless. And they represent what photographers have seen from real world camera and lens systems for decades!!!!
Cameras and lenses are not yet computers. They are tools. They have limits. No one camera system has a lock on flare. Get over it. I'd worry more about this: I measured the self timer performance of the camera, with a fresh battery and at room temperature.........the ten second increment on my unit is fast. It goes off in just 9.85 seconds. Wait till they hear about that over on the forums. Olympus will never be able to sell another camera.......... (for the achingly literal: The last sentence is not true. I have no way and no intention to test the self timer on any camera....).
Otherwise sane readers are on the edges of their seats, eager and anxious to know more about the red dots/spots dilemma. Well. That stopped me cold. I've looked at the red dots on some sample photos from the middle of China and I've tried shooting the camera with the sun in the center third of the frame and I'm not able to replicate the problem. At least that's the answer I posted a couple of days ago.
But that wasn't good enough. People implored me to shoot: "With the sun peeking around a building." "Directly in the middle of the frame." "At 4 pm." "At noon." "With all the Pen lenses." "Wide Open."
"Stopped down to f16." "Surrounded by naked women." "In a Klingon Null Force Field Containment System." "While riding in a black helicopter." And much, much more.
I have no doubt that you can make the Pen cameras create red dots. Really. Not disbelieving the possibility. But chances are I have a Pen EPL2 in my hands and you don't. I've pointed it at the sun, and a house lamp and an LED lamp and you haven't. So, to increase your anxiety or put your mind at ease (depending on which side of the fence you are on.....) I want to give you the straight scoop.
Now, before I do I need to let you know that ALL the camera and lens manufacturers are trying desperately to keep you in the dark about this. I'm breaking all sorts of NDA's to tell you this. But I think you have a basic, All American, All trans European, All Asian (etc.) right to know this......
Here it is:
SINCE THE DAWN OF COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY YOU'VE HAD THE POWER TO MAKE RED DOTS WITH ANY CAMERA!!!!!!! It's nothing more than abusing an optical system. It's like oscillating your Siemens centrifuges back and forth over their red line. It's like driving your car at red line for hours and hours and waiting for the engine to smoke. The red dots are no doubt coming from lens flare. Here's the scenario: Take a small sensor camera with a reflective sensor surface and shoot it at f16 (the system is already diffraction limited at about f5.6, at most, f8). Point it directly at a point light source many times brighter than the surrounding area. Watch the lens flare. Watch the collimated light hit the sensor and bounce back against the rear lens element. Watch it ricochet off the lens element and restrike the sensor. Repeat ad nauseum.
But here's the special, secret part: You've been able to do this with any camera you can think of. And pretty reliably too. Just shoot stupid. Of course the manufacturer warns you not to point the camera directly at the sun. Of course every lens manufacturer warns you not to include a bright light source in the frame for fear of flare. Guess what? If you go it your own way, all independent and self-reliant and what not......you'll likely get some sort of flare. Could be repeating patterns of the lens diaphragm. Could be general light source smear, could be red dots. But if you use any tool outside its proscribed parameters you get to deal with the......artifacts. Or the blown engines. Or the flare.
But......I would not give up on my personal search for the EPL2 red dots because I know how important it is to everyone out there considering a full featured, interchangeable lens, 12 megapixel, still / HD movie camera with included optical zoom to have a camera and lens that is more flawless than camera systems costing 100x more.
Well. In my testing I could make a Leica M9 flare like fireworks with a $5000 lens on the front and I wanted to get the same performance from my $100 lens and, frankly, I started to despair. Perhaps my technique wasn't all I thought it was. Did I have a defective system? And I remember being able to ably elicit flare and red dots from the Phase One camera I tested a few years ago.
Then, my dog reminded me of a new and better way to get the red dots. Photoshop's filters menu. Apparently many of you think of Photoshop as only a tool to get those wonderful and sought after HDR files. But, it's also a great tool for red dots and all kinds of flare effects. Just go to Filters. Then to Render. Then to..............lens flare. The possibilities are endless. And they represent what photographers have seen from real world camera and lens systems for decades!!!!
Cameras and lenses are not yet computers. They are tools. They have limits. No one camera system has a lock on flare. Get over it. I'd worry more about this: I measured the self timer performance of the camera, with a fresh battery and at room temperature.........the ten second increment on my unit is fast. It goes off in just 9.85 seconds. Wait till they hear about that over on the forums. Olympus will never be able to sell another camera.......... (for the achingly literal: The last sentence is not true. I have no way and no intention to test the self timer on any camera....).
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Common Sense and Buying Compact Cameras.
But if you want something a little stouter, something with a bigger sensor, something with more tools (like a hot shoe) the days of the premier point and shoots, like the G10's and G11's I carried around in years past, seem temporarily gone. The LX-5 and the G12 are just the same as the cameras that came before them. And in the case of the Canon line the S95 uses the same chip and processor as the bigger brother camera so what's really the point?
During my search and coinciding with my sudden interest in the EPL2 I stumbled across the product page for the EPL1 with lens and I was stunned by the price. You can pick up a camera and zoom lens for around $400. Less than the companies own recently announced, fixed lens "super" camera and less than the Canon G12 or the Panasonic. And what do you get when you "settle" for a slightly bigger camera? Interchangeable lens capability. A much bigger sensor. Really nice Jpegs. The ability to add the best eye level electronic viewfinder on the market and entry into a world of legacy lenses and inexpensive adapters. For the same price or less.
I can guarantee you'll have better low light performance. And if you throw my current favorite lens (the Olympus 40mm 1.4 for the original Pen half frame film cameras) or the Panasonic 20m 1.7 on the front of this camera you'll be able to exercise much, much control over depth of field and maybe even that mysterious function called bokeh.
You know why the price has dropped. Olympus is about to throw the new upgrade on the market. But the upgrade is little more than the addition of a dial on the back and a few less buttons. Nearly everything I like in the EPL2 is already on the one. The sensor is purported to be the same (and the nearly the same as that used on the new e5). You can use the same VF-2 eye level viewfinder. It already has the incredible jpegs and the unbeatable blue sky mojo. So, what does the new camera buy you? A nicer body design. A slightly faster interface. The ability to use the groovy new PenPal. And......did I mention the nicer body design?
If you were about to pull the trigger on a super compact I'd like to make the point that this represents a great gob of what we've been professing to love about smaller cameras along with features we asked for for nearly ten years and at a selling price that matches some slightly smaller, much slower, much less adaptable, and less handholdable cameras for the exact same price, or less.
If I did not already own one..........
I have three little Pens in my bag right now. The EP2 (the prettiest and slowest), the EPL1 (the cheapest body with the biggest interfacial learning curve) and the EPL2 which is as fast and sharp as the EPL1 but better looking and slightly faster to use. I'll probably buy the EPL2 because it's a good camera. I haven't decided yet, though, because when I look at my files I'm not seeing that much on sensor improvement over the EPL1. I haven't done my high ISO tests yet so some stuff remains to be seen. But you'll be the second to know.
But I'll tell you this, with cameras this good at this price, I'm not giving much love to the super compact category of fixed zoom lens cameras. And I'm pretty sure that's a good thing.
Finally, I shot the EPL2 alongside the Canon 5Dmk2 today. If you were banking on getting close on high ISO performance you'll need to stop smoking whatever you've been lighting up. The Canon is still the undisputed champ of low light in my camera bag. But everyone in the medical practice thought the Olympus was cuter. I don't have a metric for that.
Monday, January 17, 2011
I love this review of my blog by quotidian photography.....
The Visual Science Lab I didn't really understand this blog when I started reading it. It's a bit all over the place. When I started reading the author, photographer Kirk Tuck, was obsessed with Olympus cameras and I really couldn't relate, not owning nor even wanting particularly to own an Olympus. But what gear he's shooting with is really beside the point. He is an incredibly prolific writer, spinning out endless essays about the worth of various parts of the photography business and process as a whole. What I love about him most is that he changes his mind almost every week. Yet I wouldn't characterize him as wishy-washy or indecisive. He's just a bit quicksilver, unpredictable. Always a good read. Even when you don't particularly care to purchase or even try the equipment he's talking about.
From Quotidian Photography (blog)
From Quotidian Photography (blog)
Early Adapters and what that entails.
Can you tell what camera I used for these shots without looking at the EXIF data? Can you tell when they were shot? Many people think of themselves as early adopters of digital technology because they started shooting with a Nikon D1x or a Canon 30D. Others consider themselves to be early adopters because they were using a film scanner to bring images into the fold. I recently looked thru a folder that contained images from my third generation of digital cameras and it actually holds up very well.
Starting back in 1996 we used a FujiFilm DS300 camera for some of our event work. It was only 1.3 megapixels but I remember pressing it into service on a Motorola shoot. We were doing all the documentation with 35mm film but we needed to print and deliver 100 11x14 inch prints over night. They were going to put the prints on a kinetic display that attendees would walk thru on their way to the first meeting, the next day.
My assistant and I did 100 portraits and we tried to limit our shooting to five shots per person because editing was slow going back then. Few real image management programs were available then and the ones that existed were glacial and prone to crashing. We had two of the Epson wide carriage printers. I can't remember the model number but it might have been the 1200. The old camera and printers did the job. There was no preview LCD screen on the back of the DS300. You shot it on faith. And you definitely used your flash meter. Just to repeat: There was no preview screen on the back. I love the PCMCIA memory cards we used. And at $600 for 64 megabytes we were careful not to lose them.
The job above was done for Tivoli Systems back in 1998 or 1999, in Madrid. We were using film cameras for most of the work but the webmasters insisted that we try to capture and send a generous handful of images everyday for a web display. We also used digital for quick press release images. Since digital was an afterthought and I would be carrying a bunch of film gear, and film, I decided to take the brand new Nikon Coolpix 950 along. I cobbled together a corded hot shoe for flash and I bought both the wide angle and the telephoto attachable accessory lenses for extra width and extra reach.
Did the wide angle distort? Just look at the stage shot. But the telephoto adapter was good. Just look at the CEO on stage just above.
I shot 800 images with the digital camera over the course of the week and spent my evenings downloading to the brand new Apple Blueberry laptop and burning CD's with a 4x CD burner. The joy of it all. At least that camera had an LCD on the back. And from what I remember it was pretty good, but pretty small. Amazingly we did a ton of work with that little camera.
But being a very early adopter (Fuji DS300) means finding your own work arounds for everything that pops up. From computer incompatibilites to card corruptions. There was very little trouble shooting software for memory cards back then, much less recovery software. And since about 400 people in the U.S. owned the camera (maybe fewer) there wasn't a big network on the web to consult. But good technique counted double back then.
A few years later I shot my first website project with a Canon G2 and the food images from that are still great at websize today.
I bring all of this up because I've lived on such a roller coaster over the last year. I got the Canon 5D2 for its high resolution but most of the images end up on the web or in show productions where 1080i standard is par for the course. I've recently started working with the Olympus EPL2 which is a consumer camera, one step up from a point and shoot. People loved the two images I posted from it yesterday. That camera is cheaper than all of the cameras I mentioned above by a factor of 2 to 5X and yet the images are striking.
Do we buy the new cameras to assure ourselves or because we really need them for work? I guess we do both. But if I didn't do this for a living I sure would have thought long and hard about giving up some of the early cameras to upgrade. The Nikon D200 wasn't much of an actual upgrade over the D100. The Fuji S5 didn't blow the S2 away and the Olympus e3 sure didn't wallop the e1. In some regards the user is still more important than the camera. But so much depends on the intended target for the images. A Nikon Coolpix 950 against a Nikon D3x for a 20 by 30 inch enlargement is the obvious comparison but below 8x10 inches things look like more and more shades of gray.
Review Notes: I'm working on my EPL2 review but I want to manage your expectations. If flare rears it's ugly head, I'll talk about it, but I won't go out shooting into the blazing sun looking for it. Ditto red spots. I'll slap on a 40mm 1.4 and shoot some high ISO stuff but I won't be doing the DPR thang where I shoot a boring still life set up at every single setting.
I'm shooting the camera and the two lenses they sent along just the way I'd normally shoot a camera and that's what I'm going to talk about. So far it seems promising. Takes a day or two to get in the groove.
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