D700 Pass for Now



Flag Display, originally uploaded by jjvornov.

I’m really pretty pleased with my decision to commit to the Nikon system last year. The D300 is a great image capture device for me, doing everything I need at this point.

In retrospect, moving up from the D80 to the D300 was a good decision, mostly because I find matrix metering in the D300 to work much better for me than the D80 did. My presumption is that it’s a matter of tuning the system for consumers vs advanced shooters. Using the two cameras with spot metering results in relatively similar images in the end.

What would a D700 do that the D300 doesn’t? Presumably I’d get another stop or stop and a half of sensor speed. But I don’t run into the D300’s limits frequently enough that it would really make a big difference.

There’s the advantage of wide lenses being wide, but I’m fine with the 12-24mm f/4 DX lens providing me with an 18mm equivalent. I’m learning to use my stable of lenses most efficiently- the 24-120mm f3.5-5.6 staying on the camera most frequently, with the 105mm f/2.8 for when I want macro or really sharp images.

This image shows something more- the capture is a first step. The editing and the post processing are so much more central to creating images now. This is another Capture NX2 postprocessing exercise. I set out to make the flags really stand out with local contrast changes. I’m still learning how to best apply curves and u-point adjustments, but it’s easier to achieve in Capture NX2 at this point than in Photoshop.

Fear



Cornfield Storm, originally uploaded by jjvornov.

Why is that I so frequently take the camera out and fear that I will be unable to create a compelling image? You would think that after a while I would know that the odds were pretty good that something would work out.

I wanted to get an image of Baltimore County along one of my cycling routes. I stopped at the end of the day, but approaching storms clouded out the sun and left me without interesting end of day light. But once the sun had gone down, the sky became more interesting being itself lit from within.

This was captured with the D300 and the 12-24mm f/4 DX lens. No tripod. Postprocessing was entirely in Capture NX. There was some noise in the sky, but the noise reduction in NX2 took care of that quite nicely. WIth the U-points, it was easy to keep the smoothing effect of the noise reduction out of the corn stalks where it would otherwise kill the nice sharp detail.

I like the lighting in this. The highlighting of the stalks under the bright sky area doesn’t exist at all in the original capture. It was added using a coloro control point to pull up the highlights which reads very nicely as an eerie lighting of the foreground by the bright sky area. I did it to get the eye to be pulled back into the sky region from the sharp foreground.

Reverse Periodization

The kids are all out of school and I’m in a bit of a lull in the travel schedule. Since I decided to try hard to work my exercise program around my schedule rather than allow my schedule to kill my program consistancy, I had thought about a “summer base” season. I began on the bike in earnest earlier this year, but I didn’t try to build up miles in a typical base. I just went from running and indoor intervals to longer outdoor riding sessions combined with hard interval rides when time was short. I tried to time longer travel weeks to be recovery weeks or I piled up effort at one end of the week knowing the other end of the week would be spent in airports, on planes, recovering from jet lag or photo walks in cities.

I was happy to see Chris Carmichael put together a similar program for Outside Magazine this year. It’s an interval based twelve week program building to a 3 and a half hour long ride, very similar to the idea that I had going into the spring. So much nicer to see some emphasis in these programs on speed in addition to long endurance riding.

Now that the time pressure is eased a bit and the days are long, I’ve upped the hours and dialed down the intensity. Joe Friel mentions it in cycling “training bible” and has written about it on his blog:

Joe Friel’s Blog: Summer Base: “I’d highly recommend it as a way of kicking off the second half of the season. “

June may be the first month where I top 30 hours of training. Hopefully July into August will be similar. I’ll then dial back the hours and up the intensity as fall arrives. It’s something of a reverse priodization where power and intervals are emphasized early on and as time on the bike increase they are used to build endurance.

An Important Image



Considering the Source, originally uploaded by jjvornov.

This is another in the recent Nikon D300 midrange zoom images I’ve been collecting. What’s significant is that I used it as the subject as I began to explore Capture NX2 in earnest.

With the previous version, I thought that the conversions were clearly the best available for the Nikon NEF files. I used the control point technology for overall tonal balancing. But I’d move to Photoshop (via Aperture roundtripping) for local contrast adjustment with curves and then use of the NIK Efex filters plus selective sharpening and blurring.

In the new NX2 any adjustment can be a control point, including curves and sharpening. So instead of using masks in Photoshop, I can use the more direct U-Points of NX2. I’m lacking the handful of Efex filters I favor, but I could purchase them for NX2. That would put almost all of the editing I do directly into NX2.

One point that’s lacking is the ability to directly round trip with Aperture. Now I export the master NEF into a folder, open in NX2, save as TIFF and then drag back into Aperture. If I choose edit with NX2 in Aperture, Aperture first insists on converting to TIFF itself and sending that to Capture NX. It would take a real integration for Aperture to send a NEF, but then for NX2 to send Aperture back a TIFF.

I’m sure I could automate part of this using Applescript and Automator but getting the file back into the project where it belongs seems a bit tricky.

Back to Basics



Magnolia Blossom, originally uploaded by jjvornov.

I feel like I’ve taken a step back in my suburban landscape images. I’m concentrating on capturing smaller objects. It’s the lingering influence of the Alphabet exercise and seeing things through a zoom lens. I’m more actively working to capture the feel of an object rather than responding to a rendered scene before me. It’s easier to do in the summer when the light is less dramatic.

Sigma DP1 Lensmate Announced

Rows
It’s remarkable how many more views my Sigma DP1 images get on Flickr compared to the D300. It’s a camerat that obviously interests a large number of photographers.

The good new today is that Lensmate will be making a 52mm adaptor.

Lensmateonline – Sigma DPI: “The Lensmate DP1 lens adapter has a 52mm filter thread. This size has some advantages over the OEMs 46mm size. The availability and selection of 52mm filters is greater than the 46mm size and many DP1 users already own 52mm filters. The larger size allows the stacking of filters and hoods with less likelihood of vignetting. “

I held off on the official Sigma hood and adaptor hoping for this. I have a set of 52mm filters for my Nikon 24mm and 50mm combo, including my warming filters and polarizaing filters. These will be a nice addition to the travel set. While you’ll often see that standard filters don’t work for digital, I find that comes from a misunderstanding regarding effects on white balance. The filters have the same effect, but our cameras are set to turn everything into unfiltered light. But this kills color light, as in late in the day as well as color filters. I get nice effects by shooting in the middle of the day with a warming filter plus polarizer as we did with film, but then being careful in post processing not to “dewarm” the pciture. You get a nice saturation push and contrast lowering with the filters, just as you did on film.

My last big series with the warming/polarizer combo was last year’s trip to Italy in the Riomaggiore set at Flickr.

24-120mm Nikon VR Consistancy



The Blue Tree, originally uploaded by jjvornov.

In using my 24-120mm over several days, I find that do have more shots that look “soft”. But most are sharp and plenty contrasty.

Once I started getting this feedback, I began to realize that I’ve been trying to push the lens past its limits. I try hand holding the lens zoomed out to 120mm and using shutter speeds of 1/4 second. It’s amazing how good some of these images actually are.

I also find that many images have shallower depth of field than I expect. I presume that it’s partly due to having been shooting with my 24mm for so long that I forget that at 80mm and f/5.6 the front and side of a tree trunk won’t both be in perfect focus. Moving up close with the 24 mm and it’s floating CRC element gives a different rendering regarding front to back focus.

So I need to be more conservative in what I ask the VR in the lens to do. And I need to gain an intuitive feel for DOF across the 5x zoom of the lens.

10 Years On

In April of this year, I celebrated my 10th year of not actively practicing medicine. It was a great choice for me, given the frustrations I had with the health care system within academia 10 years ago. I can only imagine how much worse it must be now.

Essay – Fed Up With the Frustrations, More Doctors Change Course – NYTimes.com: “%u201CIt will take real structural change in the work environment for physician satisfaction to improve,%u201D Dr. Mark Linzer, an internist at the University of Wisconsin who has done extensive research on physician unhappiness, told me. %u201CFortunately, the data show that physicians are willing to put up with a lot before giving up.%u201D”

I’m glad that I was willing to take a chance on a change in career direction back then.

A Photo Editor – An Endless Stream Of Photography

Last of the Light

Yesterday I finished reading “Art and Fear“, a classic small book on making art by David Bayles and Ted Orland. It’s a beautiful little book that fits my conception of art as personal process. With the internet, it is now so much easier to communicate with one’s work. I’m actually quite happy that having been working consistently for about 2 years and have actually arrived somewhere. I have two interesting streams going- color digital images examining the effects of light in the suburban landscape and monochrome film images examining motion in urban settings. There are lots of images that don’t fit, many that are unsuccessful, but the body of work has, over time, actually moved somewhere.

Digital imaging has made it much easier to create and manipulate images. And has made distribution much easier as well. I fear that the volume of work produced can be discouraging to image makers. As “Art and Fear” makes clear, one’s own art is likely to go unappreciated by the world. And even successful artists have the problem that their current output is always competing with their earlier, better known work.

There are always those who want to dismiss most of our work because they don’t see the value:

A Photo Editor – An Endless Stream Of Photography: “Anyway my point here is that there%u2019s so much going on in this business that%u2019s not worth paying attention to. I%u2019m not even talking about the amateur stuff that%u2019s gone from the shoe box to flickr or on the personal website either . . .”

Personally, I’ve found over and over, that what at first seems like a unitary “Internet” or “Flickr” is actually a complex web of communities and neighborhoods. One generally finds oneself enmeshed in a community where the stream is actually small enough to deal with on a human level. While there’s a romantic notion that artists can labor in obscurity, my observation is that art grows best among a group of like minds. It may remain obscure, but it will be appreciated by its maker and at least a small audience.

Owning the Frame

Own the Frame

I didn’t realize that Vincent Versace had started some real blogging at the Acme Educational Site. I think it’s a great idea because his ideas are very densely presented in “Welcome to Oz”. And I think that there’s lots of capture related thinking that isn’t really developed there.

As I’ve been shooting, I’ve had this thought from Vincent intruding on my process: “Own the Frame”. For as long as I’ve photographed, I’ve avoided cropping unless absolutely necessary. I try to have the discipline to compose in the viewfinder. When it looks like a picture, I trip the shutter.

But try this on for size:

VIncent Versace: “The problem is that we operate under a belief that one actually composes a photograph. Unless you are in a studio doing a still life, where you can move the objects in your image around, you don%u2019t compose a photograph, you frame it. That%u2019s a big difference in how you conceptualize your images. “

For the last year or two I’ve been afraid of capturing images like the one on this page. These formal compositions is where I started and remain a comfort zone for me. However I now have a better context for them as details of the suburban landscape. Yellow curb paint is definitely a color of suburbia. And we may not have jewel like mountains, but we have lots of jewel like asphalt.