Sunday, January 30, 2011

light, exposure


This one was a simple concept, try to take a picture just at the right moment of the morning - not too light and not too dark. Too dark and my camera makes only grainy pictures. Too light and you wouldn't be able to see Venus. 'Course, you can't see Venus with the picture this small, so some of my intentions got lost in translation (there is a dot, if you look hard enough, diagonally down from and right of center. It's perched just atop the tips of a few delicate branches). The manual settings of my camera allow for selecting the ISO as low as 80 and as high as 1600. I ran out the front door of my house to get this shot... leaving the tripod inside. The light was rising too fast and I didn't want to miss the shot by trying to find the tripod, so I set the ISO at 1600 hoping I could escape a blurred shot. The sacrifice was that the blue sky isn't as richly colored as it looked to my eye, but there was enough texture from the clouds... and it is what it is.



Breakfast. Maybe not of champions, but of... photogamers. My intention was to get a crisp shot and I did have to use the tripod to get it. At this point my use of manual settings is... intuitive manipulation. For this I started with the ISO setting (for some reason 800 ISO was giving me the look I wanted. I don't understand this stuff I just spin dials until the screen shows me what I like). From there I played with the f-stop and manual focus... again, until it looked good to me. As it turned out with this shot the image of sliced red apple, cheddar cheese, Parmesan cheese, bright white cup, red handled knife all set on a slightly grease stained cutting board... just didn't look that interesting once I downloaded the shot to my computer. Hence the tweaking - sepia was finagled by using photo editing software.


I took shot after shot on this day... the hoar frost is so attractive to me it was fun to play with what was and wasn't in focus, what was or wasn't in the background, what was and wasn't in the bright light. Besides playing with focus for this shot I used a low ISO and then played with the shutter speed to see how richly I could draw out the drama. Speeding up the shutter speed just a touch faster than what the camera indicated (green light) I got the balance of richness without being too dark that intrigued me most.



I was walking the dogs in the back yard saw this one teensy little leaf resting on the snow. I herded the dogs away hoping they wouldn't pee too close to it! After puppydogs were done and back inside I pulled out the trusty ol' camera and dove into that intuitive manipulation (aka: manual settings exploration). For this shot I did end up editing out some of the blue. No matter what dials I manipulated, spun, twisted and turned I couldn't get the snow to look the way it looked to my eye. Any advice?



My main effort here was to allow my obsession with crispness to be put on hold. The sky was layered with clouds and the sun occasionally pierced a layer, blindingly. I admit that I did initially tweak this to intensify the dark ridge of trees at the horizon. But the crispness that I could create ended up challenging me. What is my fascination with hard edges of black and white? So I restored the original (I did take it as B&W on the camera) and eased into allowing this to be just as it is. Fast shutter speed, 200 ISO. A dark shot allowing "cloud drama."

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