learning how to use a DSLR

Yes, but is it ART?

Well no, not if it's one of my photographs.  

There are photography purists who eschew the Phaustian Phrivolity of Photoshop.  It must all be done 'in-camera' they shout.  Or rather, intone, in hoarse sibilant whispers...   

Interesting thing about purists.  There are usually some sort of unspoken parameters around the purity that they espouse.  So the vegan accepts that their transport to work is probably powered by an engine using oil, diesel or gasoline, all of which have come from the sacrifice, albeit billions of years ago, of millions of tiny animals and plants.  All those millions of tiny screams....  Aha - I use a bike I hear you cry - yes, it has bearings that are greased, a chain that you need to oil.  But I walk! - yes on tarmac'd pavements, billions of tiny animals, PRESSED into roadways.  Now that's not awfully nice, is it? 

I'm not really being serious, I don't really have it in for vegans, and life is tough enough for them without us giving them a hard time I think.  All that cardboardy stuff they have to eat for starters...  Stop Stop STOP.

Apply the same argument to musicians - Maxim Vengerov, astonishingly talented violinist, imagine hearing him warm up in the green room before going on stage to play the Sibelius Violin Concerto, and saying to him "You shouldn't really need to DO that you know, if you were a real violinist you wouldn't need to practice at all.  You should have been able to do it from birth.  And by the way, are those GUT strings you're playing on ???"

So back to camera purists - the argument is that you should just get it all right 'in camera' because that's pure art, everything else is fakery and devilment.  

So we find the same parameters around the concept - first, you need a camera - well, that's not natural, is it, I mean, were you born with one?  if so, my commiserations to your mother that must have been extraordinarily painful for her.  

But seriously, modern cameras do tons of stuff for you, set the tone, focus the lens, visualise the world through fluorine coatings to reduce flare, balance the aperture settings, exposure, shutter speed, and compensate for the hand tremors you acquired when you were drinking 7 pints last night.  

Landscape photographers often use Neutral Density filters in front of the lens to bring the brightness of the sky down, so the picture is evenly exposed.  I would ask, have you ever picked a bunch of Neutral Density filters from the side of the road?  Or grown a peck of flash units in your shrubbery?  Or perhaps you've hand drawn a condenser microphone on fine parchment paper and clipped it to your camera?

The thing is, back in the day of film cameras, a true photographer was a rare thing, struggling with a technological beast that couldn't even focus on its own, let alone get the lighting and exposure right, and most of us (me included) would use up reams of rolls of film and hardly get a decent shot out of them.

Personally, I'm a bit of a tart, and that is because my Art needs Work.  I have shown some of my 'before' pictures here, in previous blogs:  Nobody want to look at that stuff, do they?

I'll admit, I've toyed with the fakery of posting something like a close up of a bug, with an accompanying caption saying "I set up this shot to take advantage of the moonlight striking the carapace as the beetle opens its wings for the first time", implying this magic was somehow all planned, when in actual fact the real caption should have read "I took about a million of these, hand held, in my back garden, using high speed continuous shooting with my eyes shut, and blow me, ONE of them came out OK".

I particularly like it, by the way, when someone posts a picture of something with an obvious flaw in it, and then pretends that was part of the composition.   "The out of focus grandmother scowling in the background gives a sense of history..." etc etc etc

From my perspective, photoshop is just a continuation of the magic you can make with modern cameras,  

Without special astrophotography software like Autostakkert2! (it really is called that) you wouldn't get decent pictures of nebula and constellations at all because the light is so faint - and the technology allows you to stack photos on top of each other and use them to strip away the blurry bits and anomalies - here for example, we have two images of the moon, taken with the same camera and lens combination.   

One of the original photos.  Canon 5DSr, 100-400mm lens, teleconverter, 1/250, f14, ISO 640

The final image.  Stacked from over 300 of the original shots

Pretty unbelievable, isn't it?  Genuinely is taken from the same photo.  So there's definitely some good reasons for a little bit of experimentation, I think.

I can understand that photographers sometimes go a little overboard and you get those horrible over saturated photos that remind you of early postcards of Torquay.

And who among us hasn't used photoshop for the odd visual gag.... 

I have two dogs.  I also don't have hordes of swarming wildebeest outside my back door.  Usually.

This particular photo was sent out at Christmas and had several relatives asking me pointedly "How many dogs do you have NOW????"  The Wildebeest, not a comment.  Well, it is Leeds - as my bank manager in London once said "Leeds.... they have sheep all over the road up there, don't they?" to which I responded - "Not so much, not since we got the wheel..." 

So to finish with, two more photos, both of these were taken using a macro lens, and compiled of about 30 photos, with different focus points on the flowers, stacked and merged shamelessly in Photoshop.  

Oh the scandal!

Until the next time!

Canon 5DSr, Sigma 150mm macro lens, 1/160, f3.5, ISO 100

Canon 5DSr, Sigma 150mm 1/15, f4, ISO 200 (same flower, indoor lighting)

First Days with a DSLR

So how did my love story with cameras start?  

I mucked about with a bridge camera for a few years before a kind photographer took me to one side and carried out a simple demonstration.

"See, these two grains of rice..." he said, laying them side by side like grubs undergoing military training,  "That's a bridge camera picture sensor.  And take this large postage stamp.... " he placed this next to the military grubs.... "That's a DSLR camera sensor.  Your dreams of getting an A2 sized poster print from the first one are somewhat dashed, no?" 

He had a point.    So after much geeky research, I bought my first DSLR - a Canon 70D (roughly equivalent to a Nikon D7100 - see how nice I am, I even translate into different languages...)  

I think in the end I went for the camera with the most bells and whistles that I could afford, and an 18 - 55mm kit lens, a surprisingly capable lens, although in terms of build quality, it had a sort of crunchy crisp-packet quality zoom and was entirely plastic.  I think it floated in the bath and if you had enough of them you could probably make a pretty decent feature necklace out of them. 

This is from my first evening with the camera.  It is almost the first photo I took - the actual first photo is of the manual, so nobody wants to see that... 

This shows one of the more obscure advantages of having a flip-out viewing screen, you can photograph your dog without her realising you're doing it.  

This picture was AutoSetting Everything, and I was hooked.  No more bridge cameras for me.  

However, as ripples radiate out across a pond from a falling pebble, so there have been repercussions as a result of moving to DSLRs:  When I had a bridge camera, it seems I could travel around the world, I had something called money which assists this.  So I have many photos of Singapore, New Zealand, Venice, Rome, Iceland, New York, Rarotonga. 

Now I have a DSLR and the various bits of kit have the potential to be so wildly expensive, I no longer seem to have this money commodity and I find I can't afford to go anywhere.  

I've got awfully good at photographing my home city of Leeds...  

In The Beginning...

Every so often on a photography website, you'll come across an article about how to fulfil your interest in cameras, and still keep your family and friends.  How to go on holiday without being an utter pariah for the people you travel with, and the people who cross your path.  How not to turn every family occasion into one where you are hunting among the guests pointing a bottomless circle of black glass at them and asking them to 'just be natural'.

One day, I hope to find that balance;  but not today.  

Life's a continuum, isn't it? and so it is with photography.  When I first got a camera, I was far, far over one end of the spectrum, and thus I have very few photographs from that time.   I used to find people's reaction to my camera so un-nerving that I hardly ever got it out.    

As I have got older I have learned to confront the world more, and to care less what it thinks. Nevertheless, you will not find street photography one of my strong points, or portraiture.  You will never see a picture on my website of an aged Yak-herder looking suspicious.  My photos currently have a common theme, peace, tranquility, very few people.    

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Basilica di Santa Maria Assunta, Torcello

See, in some subliminal way, even this building is NOT LOOKING AT ME.

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Grand Canal, Venice

And these ones, are quite clearly asleep...

 

Nevertheless I'm getting better at this.  When my partner says 'Oh god you're not bringing your camera, are you?', I don't put it away, I still bring it.  

And as the continuum develops, I hope one day, not only to bring it, but to take some photos as well.  

All things happen in time.

This does, however, stand in the way of good photography.   So, in the interests of becoming a better photographer, I'm learning to push the boundaries a bit.  This blog will be about that journey.  And who knows, by the time I reach the end of it, maybe I will have reached the far side of that continuum, the wedding photographer, the one that makes you do star jumps in your wedding dress and marches around barking orders at your mother in law.

Every cloud has a silver lining, eh?

This isn't a blog that will teach anybody about being a good photographer, at best, sharing my experience may make other budding photographers feel they have a companion along the way, but hopefully as time passes, the photos will improve, so if you don't like the blog, you can just look at the pictures! 

To end on a positive note, the thing I really like about the photography world is the good nature with which so many people approach it.  In spite of having the capacity to be a massively tekkie, 'boys' toys' type of world, there doesn't appear to be a gender bias, men and women get equally enthusiastic about it, and there's absolutely tons of stuff to learn.  There isn't a great deal of negativity either, the camera market is dominated by two big players, Canon and Nikon (with some other players who are trying AWFULLY HARD) and people are generally very nice about whatever equipment you use.  There is an abundance of spectacularly good photographers out there, and they generally seem to be a very tolerant bunch. 

Apart from the annoying ones, of course...

Distant view of Leeds.  No people...