July 30th, 2009
Ok so it’s been almost two months since my last post! The irony is that because I have been very busy I have a lot to write about, but because I’ve been really busy I have not hand any time to sit down a create a post.
However, I do think this blog is important, as important as any other part of the job I do as a photographer. With that in mind I’m going to be trying to hit two posts a week. And posting more pictures, after all this is a photography blog (I’m not going to repeat the cliché concerning a specific volume of text).
In the meantime here’s a list of cool stuff I’ve seen on the internet:
MG
Tags: more filler material!
Posted in Blogging about the blog, Links, News | 1 Comment »
June 7th, 2009

Images (c) Dilip Krishnan & Rob Fergus
I was reading through the proceedings of this year’s SIGGRAPH (Special Interest Group on GRAPHics and Interactive Techniques) conference - as I’m sure we have all done at some point in our lives - when I came across a very interesting paper.
The conference generally concerns computer graphics and image analysis however the following title has a very practical application in photography: Dark Flash Photography. No we’re not talking about Joey Lawrence’s promotional images for the film Twilight, but instead a way to take flash photographs without people objecting, or even noticing!
The gist is that you can ‘hide’ the pulse of light outside the visible spectrum thus making it appear as much as 200 times dimmer than a regular flash. This requires an IR enabled camera and suitably modified flashgun. The use of flash for photography can range from an mild annoyance to a dangerous distraction in certain circumstances, which leads to the use of shutter speeds far slower than would be ideal. The dark flash solves this problem but creates a new one.

left to right, IR image, natural light image, combined image, long exposure natural light (for reference)
Capturing light in the IR part of the spectrum doesn’t allow natural looking colours to be recorded. Dilip Krishnan and Rob Fergus solved this problem by taking two exposures, one with the dark flash and one high ISO natural light photo immediately after it. The clever part is that the dark flash image can be used to guide to de-noise the high ISO image far more effectively that any other noise reduction technique. Simply put if you see an edge or spike in the natural light image and there isn’t a corresponding edge in the IR image then the point is probably the result of noise. The actual process is a little more involved, I’d recommend anyone technically minded to have a look at the original paper.
The result is a clean image with natural looking colours. The post processing required is complex, and there times when the approach wont work well if the subject moves between the two exposures (shooting fast paced sports for example). However if you have an IR enabled camera and like black and white images I can see this being a very valuable technique when in many circumstances, and indeed the only real solution to the problem of dazzling people with flash.
MG
Tags: computer science, event photography, flash photography, image science, infra-red, maths, science, strobist
Posted in Lighting, News | 4 Comments »
May 30th, 2009
I originally got a macro (close up) lens mainly to do jewellery/product shots, I didn’t really intend to do much nature photography with it. A while ago whilst doing some late night internet shopping I had a moth buzzing round the lightshade being a nuisance. I turned the light off hoping it would go away but it just landed on the computer monitor instead. I tried (and failed) to get a shot of it using the monitor as a lightsource (it was too dim). I then decided to have a go with the flash not really knowing what to expect. Considering it was all done with no preparation I was pretty pleased with the result. Here’s the set up if you don’t believe me!

The chance to do some more nature macro photography fell into my lap recently - though I warn you if you are at all afraid of spiders then I strongly suggest you don’t click through to the second part of this post!
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Tags: macro, moth, nature, opportunistic, spider, strobist
Posted in Behind the Scenes, Lighting, Tutorials and guides | 4 Comments »
May 21st, 2009
Came across this interesting project today - the goal is to devise a scheme to compress an image so that it can be transmitted in a single tweet, which comprises a mere 140 characters - barely long enough to describe the four course meal you’re part way through consuming.
To illustrate the magnitude of the task at hand, that opening paragraph weighs in at about two tweets. Quasimondo’s solution utilises some neat tricks.
Firstly using Chinese characters increases the available storage as the set is larger than the standard western character set (which presumably enables anyone fluent in Cantonese to exchange essays over twitter).
The clever part as far as I’m concerned is the decoded image is generated using the Voronoi tessellation, which means each of the multi-sided shapes that make up the image can stored as a single point with x and y coordinates (plus a colour).
This enables large and potentially complex regions to be transmitted very efficiently. This does, however require the careful placing of points to generate salient shapes, whereupon the next clever idea is utilised. The points, or ’seeds’ are generated randomly at first and then mutated over many generations of a genetic algorithm to find the arrangement that best replicates the original image.
Click the thumbnail for a more complete description from the man himself.
MG
Tags: image science, maths, twitter
Posted in Links, Random musings | 2 Comments »
April 27th, 2009
Conventional wisdom states your money is better spent on a good quality lens than on the camera body. And for the most part it’s a very good piece of advice - something like the Canon 85mm f/1.2L will produce stunning images mounted on a 1000D body, whereas even a Nikon D3x will struggle to take decent shots with the 18-55 kit lens in anything other than favourable conditions. There is, however an curious anomaly in this trend that occurs at precisely fifty millimetres.

By and large telephoto lenses are easy to design, optically but require some very large [read expensive] elements if you want a fairly wide maximum aperture. In contrast wide angle lenses have to bend light much further and apertures can only be so large without the use of sophisticated [read expensive] optical corrections.
The humble 50mm, once the standard ‘kit lens’ bundled with new SLRs happens to sit at the crossover point. The focal length is long enough to employ a simpler non-retrofocus design, which is tried and tested, with inexpensive elements keeping the manufacturing and assembly cost down. As a result you get a very large maximum aperture and good optical performance for what is relatively little money.
And mounted on a full frame 35mm body the selective focus is sublime…
MG
Tags: 50mm, band photography, event photography, fun
Posted in Random musings | 1 Comment »
April 23rd, 2009
I am now on twitter so go and add me if you want to know more about what I am up to. I promise I will only post about photography projects, updates and interesting things I come across, not about what I’m eating for breakfast!
Anyone who’s seen my flickr stream and/or blog post knows I’m a big fan of the Orbis ring flash adaptor. They recently held a competition and although I didn’t win I was pleased be in the top 10 - considering the high standard of photos selected! My image (which accompanies this post) along with the other finalists & winner have been added to the Orbis samples gallery here.
MG
Tags: orbis, ring flash, ringflash, twitter
Posted in News | 2 Comments »
April 15th, 2009
I came across “Dave Cross’ Fix it challenge” via Scott Kelby’s blog. Basically each week Dave posts an image in need of some serious retouching, participants fire up photoshop and do their worst, posting the resulting images in the pool from which winner is chosen. I had been on the look out for something to practice my photoshop skills on, and being a highly competitive person I couldn’t resist having a go.
This week’s image is a period photograph of a woman standing in front of a painted background. My immediate thoughts were, on top of fixing the obvious damage, I would attempt to restore the colour that would have been present - had colour film been invented at the time! This is something I’ve not attempted before on a photograph so it’s an ideal learning opportunity. In the end it turned out to be somewhat more challenging than I had expected! What follows is a step by step breakdown of what I did and why I did it…
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Tags: fix it challenge, Photoshop, retouching
Posted in News, Photoshop | 3 Comments »
April 9th, 2009

The above image was shot during a talk I gave to the University of York photographic society (thanks to Jens for letting me volunteer him for this demo). The topic was light, more specifically how nothing to do with light (and therefore colour) is absolute - it’s all relative.
The rim light coming in from the right has a strong yellow coloured gel in front of it but what if you don’t happen to have a yellow gel handy? Well all is not lost, provided you have a blue gel. By putting a blue gel on main light, the rim light - despite being white* - is yellower than the main light:

White balance is the process of picking an arbitrary point on the spectrum and declaring it to be “white” (something our eyes do without us realising). By choosing the white balance in order to make the blue light white, the colours shift accordingly and we end up with this:

which is surprisingly like the first shot (especially since I grabbed a yellow and blue gel that looked about right, without actually testing!)
Ok, so this isn’t the most useful technique in the world, after all if you one colour gel you’re likely to have others as well! But what about if you can’t gel one of your lightsources, what if one of your lightsources is the sky?
MG
*as in the colour of daylight. Residents of another planet would probably have flashes which produce a different colour light as “white”.
Tags: gels, Lighting, relativity
Posted in Lighting | No Comments »
April 3rd, 2009
This headshot of Oliver, editor of law journal Ebor Lex, done in a standard meeting room in a very short timescale. I thought it would be an interesting subject for a “stream of consciousness” post showing every shot that was taken during set-up and and trying to explain what was going through my head at the time. This is not supposed to be a perfect example of how it should be done, merely a record of how it was done.
It’s important to have some idea what you’re trying to achieve before you start so I decided I wanted something edgy, like this shot but with a more traditional background. That look was achieved by having a pair of softboxes very close to the subject, angled slightly toward the camera so I started off with the lights in that position.
No light meters no modelling lamps, what follows is exactly what I saw on the back of the camera at each stage…
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Tags: headshot, Lighting, on location, portrait, softbox, step by step
Posted in Behind the Scenes, Lighting, Tutorials and guides | 5 Comments »
March 31st, 2009
Posts have been a little scarce recently as I have been very busy. This does mean however that I have a lot to talk about, so stay tuned! In the meantime here are a few interesting things I’ve come across recently.
♦ Firstly, one of the reasons I love the internet: honest product reviews by people with no mandate to keep manufacturers or editors happy, such as Scott Kelby’s review of the Jobo photoGPS, a piece you’d be unlikely to find in a photography magazine! (ps if you haven’t read it already check out The Online Photographer’s review of the Nikon 24-120mm ƒ/3.5–5.6G, which is in a similar vein)
♦ Canon have announced the latest in the line of affordable DSLRs, a market segment it created back in 2003 with the release of the Digital Rebel. Check out a hands on preview of the new 500D here. The one good thing about this announcement for amateur photographers (who want to shoot pictures, not video) is that it will likely push down the cost of the 450D.
What’s wrong with the new 500D? Well they’ve equipped it with a 15 megapixel sensor, when there are widespread concerns that 15mp was too much for the 50D. To put this in perspective, 8mp is still fine for the professional sports shooters using the 1DmkII. The 35mm film that was used by some of the worlds top photographers for over half a century barely equates to 8mp. According to the stats of people visiting this site in the past year, the vast majority of users screen resolutions only correspond to a 1mp image (and that’s if it fills the entire screen). Don’t get me wrong, high resolution is not in and of itself bad, but I really can’t see including a 15mp sensor in an entry level camera as anything other than a marketing gimmick.
♦ At some point I’ll write an essay on film vs. digital, and my whole take on the debate. But to summarise, my position has always been that no matter how sophisticated the technology becomes it will always be the artistic vision and skill behind the equipment that dictates the ultimate result (until such time when computers become truly intelligent, at which point us photographers will be totally out of a job).
The sentiment was echoed by Michael Johnston in a recent post on The Online Photographer, but this time accompanied by a video which demonstrates the point far better than I could hope to do.
Disclaimer yes it’s a viral ad for Samsung and as a result you have to take what you see with a pinch of salt. But the point is it doesn’t matter if the entire thing isn’t 100% real, having seen “One Man and His Dog”, I know it could be done!
Tags: advertising, megapixels, review
Posted in Blogging about the blog, Links, News | No Comments »