Monday, October 3, 2011

Photo Projects

This is a great time of year to start thinking about photo projects, and not necessarily those kinds of projects that get you out shooting.  Although when the weather is right, get out and shoot.  What I'm referring to are those types of projects that don't get done because we are always out getting new photos and never seem to find the time to do the other stuff.  The fun stuff that let's us see what we've been doing with photography all year long.  The kind of stuff that we don't want to do; like cleaning up our file system, backing up (which we should have been doing all along) and organizing our photos with keywords, tags and ratings.


Our weather in Washington can have a way of keeping us in-doors during the cold wet winter months. However; just because we're 'stuck' in the house doesn't mean we have to stop having fun with photography.  I use this time to catch up on many of the things that I like to do such as;

Creating the family photo album for the current year.  Our family still likes the old fashioned way of looking at photos, sitting together at the kitchen table and flipping pages in albums.  So I go through the past years photos month by month, pick my favorites and print them on 4x6 photographic paper (I use the Costco  brand and have for years, it's good paper at a great price and hasn't shown any signs of fading).  Then pick up an album that will hold the number of prints I finished up with and put them in the album. I try to finish each years album project by New Years Day and that gives us a fun way to welcome in the new year and offers a planning opportunity for the coming year.  I now have 10 years worth of these.  It can be time consuming, but it's the kind of wet winter project that you can take as long as you like doing and it's fun along the way to visit all that you did last year.  If you don't have a printer just create folders on your computers desktop for each month and use one of the many on-line printers (Costco, Mpix) and upload a folder.  You'll usually get your photos back within days.

Prints, framing, photo books and gifts.  Now is the perfect time to look back at your photos from the past year and find some of your best work.  Look around your house and see what walls need refreshing with new photos and go shopping for frames (Aaron Brothers has a One Cent sale twice a year - buy one frame get the second for 1 penny ~ a great deal.)  I like changing out the art in my house once or twice a year and sometimes make it a seasonal thing.  By that I mean I'll hang winter photos during the winter months and spring photos in the spring.

Now is also a good time to think about Christmas gifts for family and friends.  There are so many on-line companies that will produce coffee mugs, calendars, aprons, T-shirts, etc with your photos.  Now is a good time to start picking your favorites and placing your orders.  My mom loved getting a new calendar and an apron every year with the grand kids photo right on the front.

Organizing my photos from the past year.  This is something I try to do as I go, but it never really happens perfectly.  So, I use the dreary days of winter to go through my files of the past year, month by month, project by project and delete any files that I don't want.  I tag, keyword and rate the ones I like and then back the whole bunch up to an external hard drive.  Actually, I backup much more frequently than once a year and would advise everyone to do the same. 

So those are the activities I look forward to with the onset of our shortened, rainy days and gray skies. I don't stop shooting; but the opportunities are certainly less frequent.  With so much extra time at home I find myself still engaged with photography, organized, supply happy friends with fun gifts, new art hanging in my house and a photo album to sit and plan next year with.

Thanks for visiting and Happy Shooting.
Tom


Sunday, September 4, 2011

Packing for a trip to the Reno Air Races

I will be adding to this post in the coming days as I go nearly crazy trying to decide, what to pack, how to pack and what gear to bring along on a trip to Reno for the Air Races.  It will be hot, lots of people, lots of walking, lots of cool airplanes, lots of speed.  And did I say hot and lots of people?  Last year it was right at 100 degrees and about 150,000 thousand people.

September 26, 2011;  O.k., so it's a little later than I had intended it to be for this update but after all the events at the race, I wasn't even sure if I wanted to keep doing this especially about something as trivial as bags, packing and gear.  But a few weeks have passed, the horrific events of the race are settling in and it feels like life, at least for some, is looking normal again.  For those of whom that it is not, my deepest and most sincere condolences.  I won't report on the events here for the primary reason that I wasn't at the airfield when it happened and enough has been said in the news.  I, and a good friend of mine, had chosen to leave the airfield just before that race was to commence and because we did we were fifty miles away in an old ghost town taking photographs.  I am happy to say that no one that we knew and no one from the Merlins Magic Crew were involved or hurt.  So, having said that I'll get back to where I was with the trivial matter of bags, packing and gear.


Gear:  As far as what gear to bring that wasn't too hard.  I knew there would be lots of fast moving objects and most of them would be kind of far away.  This Air Force jet for example is traveling around 550mph and while only a fraction before this photo was taken it was level and 300 yards away, by the time I started firing it was going nearly vertical with the afterburners on.  So my Nikkor 70-300 zoomed all the way out was needed.  As far as camera bodies go I really like to travel light but for an event like this the "big guns" are needed for speed as well as full frame sensors for the best possible resolving power.  That meant the Nikon D700 had to have a place in the bag.

Knowing also that there would be lots of people, crowded walkways and airplanes parked in the "pits" with mechanics working on engines in tight spaces something on the wide side for a lens would be important so a Nikkor 24mm and 35mm also found a home in the bag.

I had planned as well to go out into the desert for some ghost town exploration and knew that some macro photography would also come into play so a Nikkor 105mm macro lens also needed a place in the bag.

Of course there's the customary batteries, compact flash cards, cables, filters, lens hoods, cell phone, iPad, gum, magazines and power bars.  Oh, and a tripod.  Plus clothes for four days.

All this was complicated by the fact that we would be flying to Reno on a Dash 8-400.  Nice airplane (a little slow) but not much overhead storage so I knew my roll-on bag (Rick Steves ~ 21" Roll-a-board http://www.ricksteves.com/) would get checked at the gate.  Knowing that I didn't want any expensive gear in that bag I broke down my tripod and put into the roll-on, batteries, cables and other stuff I didn't need access to in flight went into the roll-on and only my camera body and lenes stayed with me in a Crumpler 7million dollar home http://www.crumpler.com/US/ (funny name for a bag) and only ended up weighing about 15 pounds (still heavier than I like to lug around but for the most part it rode on my roll-on until we boarded.)

One of the things that was important to me was to not haul around a big camera bag, either on my back or over my shoulder.  Like I said, it's hot and there's lots of people and it is an all day affair.  So for me a "Black Rapid" shoulder sling http://www.blackrapid.com/product/camera-strap/rs-7/ proved to be just the right thing.  That with my camera hanging on it and an extra lens in one cargo pocket of my shorts, battery, card and cleaning cloth in the other pocket and I was set.  Hands Free and nothing hanging around my neck or on my back.

For the rest of the trip, out in the desert and visiting ghost towns, I just kept everything in the Crumpler in the the back of the rental car.

Tragic events not withstanding, the trip was good.  It took some time to adjust to what had happened and it happened on the second day of a four day trip.  Since the races were called off we decided to make the best of it and spent our last two days out shooting in Nevada's beautiful high desert and the Sierra Nevada Mountains.

















Above is Richard Massey, Artist in Residence at the Fort Churchill State Park.  Wonderful fellow who was kind enough to give us a personal tour of the park and the old Bucklin Mansion.

The ruins to the right are two of the remaining buildings at Ft. Churchill.














More photos from this trip can be seen at either; http://www.tomcollinsphotography.com/Travel/Nevada/19132364_2dgrjz#1489964033_9vrZN9v or at;  http://www.flickr.com/photos/tomcollinsphoto/

At summers end

It's Labor Day weekend and our short summer here in the Pacific Northwest comes to an end.  Actually we're having the best part of summer just now.  For us it hasn't been the best year for weather but compared to the rest of the country we can be considered lucky. 

Photography wise it's been a tough time to get motivated, up until now, because the summer was so dreary, wet and cool.  But now the sun has finally come out and everyones flower gardens are in full bloom although they wont be around long, so hence this post to say get out and get what you can.  And with the beautiful fall colors just around the corner, these flower gardens won't last much longer.

These photos of a variety of flowers shot at Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, Washington were shot in the middle of the day with the sun high in the sky.  I was using both a Canon S95 (handheld) and a 
Leica X1 mounted on a tripod and using a polarizer.

The black backgrounds were achieved using a large piece of black poster-board and handheld behind the flowers.  Because the sun was so bright the originals don't show quite this black.  They're actually a little more gray, but thanks to Lightroom and the little "black" slider, a little exposure adjustment and some cropping, I was able to get the nice, deep blacks you see here.

Part of what makes photography fun, for me, is access.  Easy accessibility is key to happy shooting for me.  I don't mind working for a shot, a hike, a kayak trip, asking for permission, deep and intense planning, but when I get one of those ever elusive ideas of something I want to take pictures of, the easier it is to get to, the more assured I am of going to get it.  I'm not lazy, well maybe a little, but I am busy.   

I was so happy with these that I went to a fabric store, bought a yard of black cotton/poly material that was dark enough to not see through, would wash easily and didn't wrinkly to badly.  I used some adhesive tape designed for holding fabric together and made a pocket at the top of the long end big enough so I could insert my walking stick into and be able to use it as a way of holding the backdrop behind a subject and still be able to release my shutter.  The whole set up cost around $11, folds up nicely and doesn't take any valuable space in the camera bag.  Just another easy and inexpensive way to control a setting without actually doing anything adverse or changing mother nature in any way.

Happy shooting.