Tag Archives: Update

norbs, a photographic history. Pt IV.

Well, around this time the past 3 years, I have published a yearly round up of my photographic journey. The 2009, 2008 and 2007 articles have all proven to be popular, so I hope 2010 can keep the tradition going. I am going to go from Jan 09 to Dec 09 this time round, just to make it easier for myself. 🙂

It seems that each previous year I have tried to pin a theme to my photography. 1st year was a real learning experience. The 2nd year seems to have been a year of experimentation. The 3rd year I gained a better understanding of light. Year 2009 saw me take a different approach. I made a conscious effort to shoot less, but of a higher quality than previous years. Looking back, that may have been a mistake, as I didn’t have the same interest level last year as the previous ones. I think a better idea for a hack like myself is to adopt the “What the duck” approach. That approach had served we well for 3 years.

Skeleton

On a trip down to Albury, I spotted this tree near Yass and took a shot that I was worried wouldn’t work because off all the negative space. Turns out people liked it because of exactly that. Even better, on the drive home I saw a great rainbow, and managed to get it captured on the digital sensor.

Pot of Gold next exit.

I was still in love with film photography, but combined with the new ethos of less is more, I didn’t use it as much as I would have liked. I still had a load of different cameras in the stables, and tried to get them out as often as possible. Here are a couple, including one taken by someone else!

Joel putts.Olympus Trip 35.


norbographyThe norb!

I even managed to take the Yashica 635 TLR down to the beach!

Making Tracks

I think I should do that more often. That is one of my favourite photos from 2009.

I even tried my hand at gig photography, with limited success.

Paul Greene plays Culburra Surf Club.

That had to have some digital shenanigans to get it to look ok.

January ended with Monty (RIP) starring in a photographers nightmare.

Monty, Elvis and the roll of film.

More on that on the blog here. Poor Monty.

February rolled around and I splashed out a cool $35 bucks for this little piece of plastic wonder.

Plastic and 120 Film

What a great investment.

Swamp Road Gallery

When it turns out shots like that, you can understand why I liked to carry it where ever I went. Makes photography as easy as taking a breath, and the results can be fantastic. They can also be god awful.

The 5D and macro lens took a trip out to the vege patch and I spotted a blue lady beetle.

Bugs Life

Not an every day sight, that’s for sure. I haven’t seen one since.

March rolled around, and with the days shortening, and the weather cooling, it was back to the local boat ramp for seagull shots.

Hoppy

An early rise nearly always means beautiful colours, and this morning didn’t disappoint.

Wet feet

Float

The end of March saw me drive down to Melbourne for a day at the GP. God almighty, thos fences really stuff up the photos of the cars, but things on your side of the fence can still work out AOK.

Fire Marshall

More fun with the Yashica TLR and B&W film.

Nails Part 2

April usually involves two big events for me. The Sydney Royal Easter Show and ANZAC Day. Here are some shots from both events.

Champion Pony

Ferris Wheels

Navy.

ANZAC Dawn Service 2009.

That final shot ended up a full page photo on the front of the local paper. Score one for norbs.

Last Mondays South Coast Register.

May was a very quiet month. I really took the whole “shoot less, more quality” thing to far. Here is the best from May.

Lone fisherman in the afternoon light.

June and I finally hunted down an affordable Polaroid camera. With film costs going through the roof, I probably bought at the worse time. But I love the results you get.

Well, have you????

The Yashica TLR also had a few trips out in June.

And TTL (Through the lens) on the TLR.

Yashy at the river.

It was also the time when the good bride saved one from the big trash can in the sky. I didn’t like the look of this at first.

Jetty in slo-mo.

The bride told me to keep it, and I am glad I listened.

July was the start of a rather ambitious project for me. The 52 week project. One self portrait, every week, for one whole year! It didn’t start with the best photo I have ever taken.

1/52

It was also the month I got the new push bike. Things were about to change. I was a whopping 105kgs, as heavy as I had ever been.

My new ride.

Hopefully that would help. It did, and still is, at the expense of photo time.

I also had a crack at time lapse photography.

August, and time to experiment. The full story is here. Pretty much me and two young kids having some fun making a camera obscura.

The House.

It really was worth the effort.

The International Space Station was making a dash across the sky one night, and I managed to grab a shot of it hurtling by. It is not until you see it flying by at speed that you really sit back and think what a treat it must be to be in that floating tin can in space.

88 seconds of flight...

If you would have said to me I would do a nude self portrait, I would have probably punched you in the head then walked off shaking my head. Well, I did actually do one. And before you say it, I was nude at the time!

8/52

I think the whole internet breathed a collective sigh of relief when I posted it. “Thank ye gods for the crop” was a popular exclamation.

September was very quiet at the beginning, but then I got a hair cut, got all strobisty on the world and went on my road trip.

12/52

It was 30 odd degrees before I took off on the trip, so I was hardly expecting this.

Snow dangle.

It snowed a couple of times.

Here is the GPS track of the trip.

What 3600kms looks like.

And a couple of my favourite photos from the road trip.

Damn clouds.

Get up there!!!

The whole trip can be seen here.

October 28th, a day before my 42nd birthday, the 5D decides to throw a tantrum and the mirror falls off.

When the mirror falls off!

Happy Birthday Mr Norbury! Bugger.

With the 5D in camera hospital, out came the film again.

Do as I do, not as I say.

By the time the camera was back, we had just got a new dog. Introducing Millie Norbury.

Millie

The little helmet cam was taken out into the surf and I managed to grab the most popular photo of the year.

21/52.

Sleeping with the fishes.

I also managed to grab some video footage of wild dolphins.

My mum turned 60 in early November, and I didn’t have the 5D back from camera hospital, but I managed to fluke a shot on film that I liked.

Sue and Danny

December was a very lean month. Some cycling.

#27

And a few self portraits for the 52 week project.

26/52

And that pretty much rounds out 2009. I don’t think I took enough photos last year. And that showed in the amount of quality images taken. The big lesson from 2009 is to get out there and shoot more often. Cycling has certainly cut into my photography time, but I should still be able to do both and get some good photos.

Thanks for looking and I hope you found it interesting. Another instalment in 2011.

Canon EOS 5D Mark II Firmware Update available.

EOS 5D Mark II

As I mentioned last week, the 5DmkII firmware is being updated and is now available on the link below.

Changes listed on the Canon site….

1. Includes a function to enable the manual exposure setting when shooting movies.
2. *For details on how to use this function, please download the PDF files from the bottom of this page. Disables the function of the depth-of-field preview button when images are played back or when the menu screen is displayed on the LCD panel.
3. Fixes a phenomenon where the peripheral illumination of images cannot be properly corrected, even if the images were captured with the lens peripheral illumination correction function set to Enable.
4. *Digital Photo Professional software version 3.6.1 or later (for Windows and Macintosh) can be used to automatically correct the peripheral illumination of RAW and JPEG images that were captured in the Peripheral illumination correction setting with cameras that have Firmware Version 1.0.7 or earlier. Fixes the algorithms of the Auto Lighting Optimizer function when Custom Function C.Fn II-3 Highlight tone priority is enabled.
5. Fixes incorrect indications on the Arabic, Romanian, Spanish, and Ukrainian menu screens.
6. Changes the battery information displayed on the camera when using the optional Battery Grip BG-E6.

Canon EOS 5D Mark II Firmware Update.

norbs, a photographic history. PtIII.

Well, around this time the past 2 years, I have published a yearly round up of my photographic journey. The 2008 and 2007 articles have been reasonably popular, so I will try and make the 2009 edition a good read as well.

The previous 2 years have been contrasting in that the 1st year was a real learning experience. The 2nd year seems to have been a year of experimentation. Looking back at the previous 12 months, it is hard to say what was the overall theme. I think maybe I had a better understanding of light.

Gull on GoldGull on Gold

I was more confident of being able to use light to my advantage. Knowing when shooting into the sun would work. When some blown highlights wouldn’t ruin the photo. And maybe using some of my better quality equipment to take advantage of certain situations.

"Really, does Barry need to do that?"Really, does Barry need to do that?

That photo of Barry the seagull flipping his head over is still to this day one of my favourite photos. The shallow depth of field and the fact the the one seagull not conforming is just out of focus really makes me chuckle.

March 2008 rolled around and I thought I would have a go at some high speed photography. Cue the fish tank and golf ball. I rigged up a couple of $5 flashes I had acquired, set the camera up with a remote, turned the lights out and flash!

Splash #2Splash #2.

It wasn’t quite that easy, but I was very happy with the result. And the people on Flickr voted with their Fave buttons. The set up for the golf ball shot can be seen below. The spotlights were just to show what was going on.

Splash setup.Splash setup.

My fascination with seagulls was still as strong as ever, and baiting them into frame with hot chips is always fun.

Zoomed Chip CatcherChip Catcher.

The high speed photography needed to be revisited, so I rolled the dice and came up with this.

3 and 6, where are you?  (PSD)3 and 6, where are you?



April last year was Sydney Royal Easter show time. I really can’t recommend the show enough for photographers. It is a gold mine if you are willing to wander around for the day.

Winner!Winner!

Dust in the airDust in the air.

YummoYummo

April also saw me trying to make a cheap as chips right light for macro photography. The 3 small LEDs gave off a surprising about of light, but not really sufficient to help with macro photography. Self portraits on the other hand.

Cpt Rough's $12 Ring LightCpt Rough’s $12 Ring Light

April 25th sees ANZAC day in Australia. A time for the old and young returned servicemen and women to march in remembrance. Once again, it is a photographers gold mine. The old Diggers and the respect and dignity they show is really something to admire.

.A returned serviceman.

May, and things are starting to cool down. Autumn is with us, which means the sun is rising later in the morning, which makes sunrise photos a little easier to achieve. When you go out and the water is still and it looks like a sheet of glass, it is happy days for the lucky photographer.

Ocean BathsOcean Baths

And when the local wildlife puts on a show, it is even better.

If I have told you once.......“If I have told you once……”

I did a trip down to Canberra for a mates 40th, and it is quite a nice place in Autumn.

4S4S


It was about this time that a package arrived from Belarus, containing a Zenitar 16mm fisheye lens. I promptly named it Vladimir. He produced images like this.

U turn?U turn?

Just as promptly, I sold him. Fisheye just doesn’t excite me. I know in the right hands they are amazing, but it wasn’t for me.

June 2008 saw me out and about quite a bit, but I didn’t really take many quality images. Given the running around I was doing, my favourite photo of the month came out of my back yard.

DropsDrops

In July, in the very car park below, a Flickr friend of mine turned my photographic world on its ear.

Cruising at MaccasCruising at Maccas

Harry, being the generous guy he is, gave me one of his old film cameras. A Canon EOS 1000F. Life was about to change for this hack photographer. I had now been using a digital SLR for about 2 and a half years. I knew very little about film, but I did like some of the images I had seen people taking on film. So I loaded the camera up with some Ilford B&W film, and off I went.

South Coast MusicSouth Coast Music

There is something about film that I fell in love with. I still can’t put my finger on it. There is an undefinable X factor to it. You don’t get the immediacy of digital, so you are certainly a lot more careful with composition and exposure settings. I love it.

With in a fortnight, I had the following collection.

Fil-LmFil-Lm

it was the start on an eBay addiction. I can’t help but buy cheap film cameras and see how they work. I never thought I would embrace it like I have. I even started to develop my own negatives to scan into the computer. What was happening?

The negs up close.The negs

So July was all about the film. August was here and that meant 1 thing. ROADTRIP! August 23rd was the day and I was off. What a great trip. Places like Dubbo, Bourke, Louth, Tilpa, Broken Hill, Menindee, Ivanhoe, Hay and lots of places in between. I won’t dwell on it, just show 3 of my favourite photos from the trip here.

Toorale StationToorale Station


Blue and YellowBlue and Yellow


FleeceFleece

Again, I had the time of my life, and I am very lucky to have a wife who lets me go away and have my boy time.

September rolled around and I had a trip to Sydney for work. I stayed with my good mate Macca and we got up early the next morning for some sun rise shots.

Dawn DipDawn Dip

Much to my surprise, this photo was selected for printing and hanging in an exhibition in London! The Photomonth 2008 exhibition is huge, and 16 Flickr photos would be on display there. And mine was one of them.

PhotoMonth 2008 - Freedom 2008 Exhibition

I was pretty happy with that little win. In late September, a group of people from the Wollongong Pictorial Mafia held an exhibition of their own. It was a terrific show, with some very talented people showing off their photos.

2x the mugness2x the mugness

October was a quiet month after the previous months excitement. A nice shot of a calf was about the best of October.

Should I stick my neck out?Should I stick my neck out?

November, and more filmy goodness. I had been watching numerous TLR cameras on eBay for a while, but they were always too expensive for me. Until…

New Old ToyNew Old Toy

Medium format film. Something new to me. Would the photos turn out? It was pretty much completely manual, with no meter.

DannyDanny

Well, slightly over exposed, but I am happy with it for a 1st go at a portrait.

December was very quiet. Some photos of our friends daughters was the only big deal of the month.

January saw a trip down to Albury, and on the way I spotted this sunset.

SkeletonSkeleton

Some more work with the Yashica down the beach was fun, and resulted in this shot.

Making TracksMaking Tracks

I also did my 1st gig photography in January. I have posted about it on here a little while back.

CamCam

End of January and my 1st roll of film out of the latest film camera, a Holga 120, is ready to go. The details are here.

Monty, Elvis and the roll of film.Monty, Elvis and the roll of film.

So that about wraps it up for another yearly update. It has taken a few days to get all the information together, but it is good to look back at the last year and what I have managed to capture both with digital and film.

Please feel free to leave any feedback, I enjoy your comments.

norbs, a photographic history. PtII.

Time for a yearly update.

Carrying on from where I left off, just on a year ago. February 2007 to February 2008 has been not as much a learning experience as an experimenting experience. Now that I have a bit more confidence in my abilities as a photographer, I have started to try different styles and
techniques. Many times, completely stuffing a chance at a good phot, but it has been rewarding none the less. In late February 2007, I once again upgraded camera bodies. Out with the 1.6X crop of the 30D, and hello full frame goodness of the Canon 5D. Here is the 1st shot I took out of the box.

All photos can be clicked on for a larger view

Holy moly Batman, thats some severe vignetting! As it turned out, it was actually the 50mmf/1.8 lens had been dropped and theplastic backing had come away slightly from the body. Only about 1.5mm, but with the added size of the 5D’s mirror, enough to upset things. Once that was sorted, it was situation normal again.

March saw a few trips out, the 1st being to Olympic Park at Homebush one night with a couple of blokes from Flickr. I was starting to concetrate more on composition than just wildly snapping things and hoping for the best.

That photo fo Homebush Park railway station was one of the better ones from that night. The lowlight abilities of the 5D certainly made shooting at night alot easier. And, the fact that it didn’t have a built in flash certainly made you think about things.

A trip to Melbourne for a party in March also got me out and about. It was about this time that I started taking photos that I knew I would turn into black and white in Photoshop.

It must be part of your development (bad pun) as a photographer that you go through phases, and see things slightly differently.

I knew when I composed this what I wanted. Some motion blur on the trams, but the rest as sharp as possible. I now knew enough to be able to execute this. Obviously I was no world renowned street photographer, but I know a few months earlier I wouldn’t have been able to figure out the right aperture settings to get that shot.

Did somebody say phase? It took a storm of biblical proportions to jolt me out of the B&W phase. Laying in bed one night, it sounded like a 767 had landed on the roof. After laying there blinking and rubbing my eyes, I soon realised we were having a cracking thunder storm. Oooh,
lightning shots. Something I had never tried before, but hey, how hard could it be?

Actually, it was alot harder than I thought. A couple of things. It is usually persisting down during a storm. And the other thing that makes you slightly cautious, are those bloody great arcs of light crackling around the sky and looking for a path of least resistance to the ground.
I took the above shot huddled under a petrol station awning, shaking like a leaf. The noise and light was unbelievable. It was one of those storms you dont get to see very often, or when you do, you dont have a camera handy.

As I said earlier, it was a time to experiment. And part of this was getting out and about a bit more. I had driven past this site at White bay thousands of times with out giving it a second look. But when photography becomes a hobby, ney, passion, you see things differently.

Not a great shot when seen large, but I loved the colours and feel of this one. And I could see potential in these derelict night scenes.

Obviously March was a busy month. I cranked out some macro work.

And old hard drive stripped down is a fascinating thing to look at and photograph. Well I thought so.

Also in March, the Sydney Harbour Bridge had a little celebration.

75 years old and they were expecting a massive crowd. Not being a huge fan of crowds, I headed in really early and got some shots I was very happy with. This one of the Cahill Expressway was taken in a very strange light and I knew it would lend itself to some slight desaturation in post processing.

April is a favourite month, as it is usually Royal Easter Show time. But this year, a friend of ours gave birth to young Jack, so it was my 1st chance to take some shots of a new born.

proud parents Paul and Ruth seemed happy enough with the shots to ask me to photograph their wedding. Gulp. But that was some time off. 1st, lets get to the show.

Fasion and Style indeed.

And how often do you see this?

An empty Show Bag pavilion?

Walking around the local neighbourhood at night, things are transformed, and something as simple as a speed bump, can look entirely different in long exposure photography.

Late April in Australia, we celebrate ANZAC day. A day for our war heroes to march and be proud. I would urge anyone who hasn’t been to a dawn service, to get to one. To see these proud and brave men is a humbling thing indeed. It poured with rain last year and yet there they
were, in their thousands. It is a day full of emotion, and you dont have to be a terrific photographer to be able to get photos like this.

or

Before April was out, I got over to Cockatoo Island with a bunch from Flickr. Another must see for the Sydney photographers.

May saw me leave on my 2nd photographic road trip. This time I was headed for a mates 40th at Broken Hill. As it was, his mother got very ill and passed away. But I didnt find out til the day before i got to Broken Hill. Before that I had visited Bathurst, Parkes, Dubbo and
Cobar.

For someone who has never been to the outback before, it is a terrific experience. This is such a big country. With a few side trips and driving about, I had covered nearly 1500kms by the time I got to broken Hill.

Just to the west of Broken Hill is the old mining town of Silverton, a photographers dream location. red dirt, clear blue skies and derelict buildings.

In total I took about 2500 photos on the trip, of which, 139 are here.

Easily, one of my faves from the trip is the Moo Quartet.

June was a quiet month, we moved to the south coast and I had a cracking flu most of the month.

July was the wedding I had been asked to shoot earlier in the year. I had bought a new 50mm f/1.4 lens just for the occasion, and just as well. Lighting was terrible in a marquee out the back of a house. It was a top wedding, but hard work for me as a very amatuer photographer.

probably the best shot of the night wasn’t even of the happy couple.

So my 1st wedding, and probably the last. I have nothing but respect for people that try wedding photography. It is a lot of pressure.

August, lunar eclipse time. Not nearly as exciting as I thought it would be, but I did manage to cobble this little montage together that was well received on Flickr.

Some odds and sods from September.

October started off with some more experimneting with some new ND filters. Hills Hoist take off.

And with the vege patch going in, it was time for some macro fun.

November, and I was lucky enough to spy a full rainbow, and have the camera, and a lens just wide enough to squeeze it all into frame.

It was also my 1st wedding anniversary, so the bride and I went away to
Bawley point and Mollymook for a few days. I had just acquired a Canon
80-200 f/2.8 lens. A magnificent piece of kit.

Both taken with the “Magic drainpipe”.

November 24th saw the people do exactly what the sign said….

December was pretty quiet, but I managed a couple of animal shots I was proud of.

Both very different, but finally I was confident enough to try shots like this, knowing that I was half a chance at suceeding in what I was doing. It had taken the best part of 2 years, but I was finally getting somewhere.

January, 2008, and another animal shot.

I thought lightning was hard to shoot. At least you can open the shutter and leave it for 10 seconds and hope you jag it. Bloody Flipper wont pop up where and when you want him to.

February 2008. More experimenting. First, lets turn a very good camera into a pinhole camera.

Not my best image ever, but one that was very satisfying none the less.

Some more experimenting.

One of my better photos.

And that rounds out another year of norbs and his dSLR. Obviously I haven’t learnt as much in the last 12 months as what i did in the previous 12 months, and I dare say, the calibre of photo taken may not be a huge improvement, but it does show with some persistance and sheer
bloody mindedness, you can achieve some reasonable results.

I hope it helps people get out and press that shutter button.
Photography is an incredibly rewarding hobby.