Archive for October, 2008

Star trails and light noise…

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

I found this post while Googling about star trails (http://www.naturescapes.net/112006/ej1106.htm). There’s some really good information in there about set-up, gear, and location.

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There is a section about your shooting location and avoiding light noise. Perhaps I should have read this part better…..


“In general I recommend 150 miles from a major metropolitan area of 1 million plus, 125 miles from cities of 100,000 to 1,000,000, 75 miles from cities in the 50,000 range, 50 miles from a 25,000 person area, and 25 miles from a smaller town. Nothing can ruin a star trail image faster than light pollution, so this also means staying well away from any roadways or any other source of light. Humanmade light is your enemy. Use your lens hood as an additional precaution.”



My plan was to shoot south into the southern Polaris and have the beach in the foreground. The shot was ruined my light noise and the lights of the coastal houses etc… Light trails need 45min+ exposure times and I was blown out with 7 minutes and that was using a 2 stop graduated ND filter!!


I gave up and sot North (above) and got an ok results over 45 minutes. I guess I’ll have to wait until I get out in the country before I try again.

Swatch product photos…

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

I’m geeking out on product photography at the moment….if it’s clean and near me I’ll shoot it.

Watches have always fascinated me when it comes to product photography. I look in these glossy magazines and see the shiny metal objects that cost more than my car (not that that’s saying much), and I admire the way the photographers use specular reflections to create texture (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specular_reflection). If you shoot a shiny silver watch alone it will look like a big silver thing with no way to discern the difference between surfaces. Specular reflections of white and black bounce cards can create texture and depth to the subject.

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The watch was lit by a ring flash front-on and 2 flashes underneath. 2 white panels of foam core and 1 piece of black cardboard were used to create the specular reflections. Next time I won’t use a ring flash and use a double diffused strobe to prevent the reflections in the watch face glass.

Triathlon Finish Line – Remote Cameras Galore…

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

Last weekend saw me shooting a triathlon festival in Forster NSW. My client was after a large amount of shots, but had a limited budget. Time for the remotes!!!!
The idea was to have 2 shooters and 4 cameras. Each shooter (Me or Murray) would shoot a main shot and have a differing images shot at the same time.

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Murray and his Remote

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Murray’s shots

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Me and my Remote

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My shots

We’re getting there. There is quite and art to getting the remote camera’s framing, focus and metering perfect, when you set the cameras at 5:30am. I’m pretty happy with these and I know they’ll keep getting better.

ACP Snowy Mountains Workshop….

Thursday, October 9th, 2008

I travelled down to Currango Station over the October Long weekend for an ACP Landscape weekend. Currango Station’s buildings include the oldest surviving continuously-occupied homestead in Australia’s Kosciuszko National Park. It is also the largest and most intact example of permanent settlement above the snowline in the country, and has great historical significance as one of the most important links to the first European settlement of the area.

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A great weekend with some good results. Many thanks to Dave Stanton and the Dee Why Camera Club for the tips on the slide show.