Showing posts with label flora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flora. Show all posts

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Dubai Back and Fro...

Well, been to Dubai for 3 days this week and I couldn't have much time to take some photos or work on some pictures. I received and invitation (as I've mentioned in previous post) from HIPA to attend to the ceremony of awards giving.
The stay was fine and Dubai is a nice place to stay (I couldn't imagine there was no traffic jam!), but unfortunately way too expensive for my budget. In just 3 days I've spent what I would've spent in Ireland for 5 days or more!
Despite the beautiful atmosphere it was hard for me to take any pictures from there, and the sum was a total of 3 images only and 2 of them were, well, fine.

Dornige Schönheit
Canon EF 50mm + 20mm tube, f/22, 160-1sec, ISO100.

I went strolling outside of the hotel after breakfast on the 18th, first without any camera just to check my surroundings, but then I went back to my room and got my stuff and went out again to catch some weird looking plant (but then I've realized it is abundant in UAE). Weird for me at least as I'm no botanist! In here, I've used an extension tube (20mm I think) and took several shots with and without flash, but I think after all Dornige Schönheit was the most stable of all. I did took shots from above but I needed a larger zoom to hide my other hand which was holding the stem. Lately, I've been using the extension tubes a lot with my 50mm lens as I see it a nice and fast substitute for the heavy 100mm macro lens and would give a single hand the power to control the camera body properly more.

Columns and Columns
Tamron 70-300mm @300mm, f/8, 500-1sec, ISO100.


I've walked and wandered further away and took some shots (mainly of abstract nature) but lot of them didn't turn well, and finally reached a construction site where I've noticed some raising columns under construction - probably the only thing that really caught my attention.
That night there was the ceremony which I went to Dubai for, the HIPA awards ceremony. Nicely done and I got the chance to see such amazing photos indeed. I'm checking with HIPA to see if the ceremony will be published on youtube.

I do realize that lot of people are surprised for the fact that I didn't take much pictures and I didn't go out a lot in Dubai - but this is back to the simple fact that I don't really consider it a vacation (or completely a vacation let's say). I would spend a vacation in a calmer place like the countryside or a sea village probably, but not in a big city. Also, I'm not a shopping person and I didn't go there for shopping in the first place, and photography-wise, the urban scape is not greatly inspirational for my mind. However, it is a nice city with nice people and there were lot of things to think about by observing my surroundings - Culture, attitude, and arts. Dubai is a big city but not within the same reputation line as other big cities like New York or London. This would seem hard to explain but probably easy to observe in Dubai itself!
Anyway, after a fast roll over Dubai events, I'm back to my previous regular work with my own humble photos the week before.

Flora Mood:

Well, they say it is spring already but years of living here as a native, I sort of realized that Kuwait has no spring. It's simply: Winter, Summer. It's an On-Off case, so to say. However, some blooms and flowers had sprung already and I didn't want to miss the chance. I think after my last workshop with my teacher about geometrical plays in floral arrangements, it seems that I'm (or my mind is) more aware of floral arts and the inside arrangements of floral lines.

Aglow
Canon EF 50mm+ tube, f/16, 50-1sec, ISO400.

These images were taken the week before I travel on two days, when I started packing my camera and taking it with me to work. This time, however, I decided not to take my tripod. In fact, a tripod can be a hassle in such situations specially for one heavy and cranky tripod like mine!
Quinquenia
Canon EF 50mm + tube, f/20, 60-1sec, ISO400.
As you may notice from Aglow above, that even f/16 can have a shallow depth of field in such situations (with extension tubes in used). Lately, I've been using the tubes a lot (I've mentioned that already above) because it is fast and easy to get a close up and ALSO because I can use 50mm lens which has a maximum aperture of f/1.4. This is of course a very shallow depth of field and when you compare it to f/16 which still has a shallow depth, f/1.4 might not be that good as an option. However, adding this value to the range of stops available is pretty valuable and I wouldn't know when would I need it. Anyway, in both shots here, Aglow and Quinquenia (and also shots that would come later) I was forced to raise the ISO little bit and use the on-camera flash. Here comes another advantage for using extension tubes: the length of the 50mm lens with an extension tube (be it 12, 20 or 36mm) is shorter most of the time (I'm talking here about connecting only one tube) and it gives a good close-up abilities. This relatively shorter than 100mm macro lens length makes it feasible and possible to use the on-camera flash easily because if the lens is too long like the 100mm lens, then a shadow cast is most likely to occur. A cast from the lens itself that is. Of course, we are talking about on-the-go photography and not the precise and making-art photography in which a photographer would spend many minutes if not hours studying the situation and settling the tripod and picking the lens and then choosing the appropriate moment.

Green Ankh
Canon EF 50mm + 12mm tube,
f/22, 200-1sec, ISO100.
The on-camera flash solved lot of problems, and mainly allowed me to use the manual mode on the camera to speed up the shutter speed as much as I like. I would say though, if I was to use my 580EX II speedlite here, I would need help or something to stabilize the plant's stem at least. In most of these situations, both of my hands were busy and the on-camera flash seemed the appropriate solution for such situation, even though a slight shadow might burst out as in Quinquenia or to a lesser degree as in Green Ankh. The on-camera flash as well helped to create that translucent look and glowing atmosphere in Aglow; but the talk about the ISO noise is something else of course.
Yes, the on-camera flash does eat out some of saturation of some colors specially if no gels are used as it is the case with Green Ankh where the plant's stem was faint in color and I had to reduce the highlights and boost the vibrancy of colors (not the saturation) to some degree. But such situations are easy to deal with in general.

Quadraspinasphere
Canon EF 50mm + 36mm tube, f/20, 20-1sec, ISO400.

As I've said before, using the on-camera flash allowed me to work with manual mode but this is not always the case. Like in Quadraspinasphere, I was not so sure where to begin with my shutter speed so I've just turned the the dial to Av and let the camera choose the shutter speed for me (in combination with the flash). Here, I was lying on the ground after putting the car shade on the floor out of my work place (and thank God no one was there to watch me do it!), thus it was reasonable to concentrate on my approach to the plant in such a low level, rather than work or think about the shutter speed. I had to crop Quadraspinasphere to make it as a quarter of a sphere as I envisioned it, but one of the hardest points in taking this picture is the fact that I have to work in manual focus most of the time. A fact that had been persistent with using extension tubes, as the auto-focusing function seems to be baffled when it comes to extension tubes, probably!
One of the tricks that I usually do in such situations with manual focusing (and with such bad eye vision like mine), and with a shaky situation (like a plant in the wind or breeze or a shaky hand) is to do a scanning with continuous shutter speed clicks. Meaning: with relatively high shutter speed (20-1sec seems fast enough but slower with flash turned on), I set the camera with continuous (or burst) mode/drive and check out a point where the sharp focus is most likely to occur (all within the viewfinder). After that, I get closer to the subject little bit (not much!) and press the shutter button and keep holding it while moving my head slowly to the back getting further away from the subject. This way, I get load of pictures of course, but at least my chances for getting a sharp image in between are more. It is a talk of probability and statistics if I should say. 

Thoughts:

There is a hard mix in thoughts right now, specially after this trip to Dubai, and regarding many aspects. In Dubai, it seemed to me that people talk about arts wherever you go, and galleries of art are displayed in public - it was like a public education concerning arts. How was this done? What elevated the level of consciousness of the people of Dubai, at least those I've been meeting on the way, about arts. Such level of thought that I didn't encounter so far in here. Needless to say, that such big city get a traffic jam only in the rush hours time (morning and evening), unlike us with 12 hours a day.
I remember back in the 1970s and 1980s Kuwait was something like that, and the simplest form of art appreciation would be seen in the National Day celebrations, when people and schools used to go out on the streets in an organized parades with props and stuff made memorizing and emphasizing the history and the identity of this country. Where did all that go? All these parades are now replaced by a bunch of sanitarium inmates going freely outside and splash each other with water and foam and traffic jams blocking the roads. Is this the identity we are commemorating?
It is clear and evident that the foreign policies and the openness of Dubai to the world made it a global center with an elevated level in most aspects of life - but do we really need to be open that much as much as to indulge in (mostly) western culture to be elevated in the level of consciousness? Logically and from the perspective of history, Arabs did conquer such place in time and now it is gone, hence, I think building over what was achieved and not merely adapting to the western way is possible; thus, creating a self-identity awareness. The thing is, where and how to start and what could spark people about such advantageous endeavor? One particular clue lies in the ruling family of the UAE and Dubai specifically. I was surprised that HIPA (which stands for Hamdan International Photography Award) was established by the crown prince of Dubai, His Highness Sheikh Hamdan and he, himself, was a contributor. He is a young man, and I thought he was old, or not-so-old type of person. I realized at this point that the upper class and those under in a community like UAE's is really entwined to some extent and the leaders themselves push people in that direction and encourage the openness of thoughts and arts. He should be an example to be followed in the region, and the ME in general. This is what I believe.

Writing this now, with a call from the main organizer in the group about another fair or expo that they want me to get involved in. I have to say frankly that I'm getting tired of this. At the time that I want to raise consciousness and arts appreciation in the group members and make them stronger in spirit facing the criticizing of their images, needless to say raise their technical skills, the management of the group on the other hand concentrate so much on the aspects concerning the group's reputation and pronouncing its name. I wonder now, how this can be done with members that don't even shoot in RAW format?!
I've been chitchatting with a friend on dinner last Friday and he made a note that he felt that the group and its responsibilities are pulling me down, and I'm pulling or carrying the heavy load of the group's well-being on my shoulders like Hercules. He suggested that if it didn't quite work well, I should quit.

I'm not memorizing all those beloved projects that I've established some time ago along with Ayvarith conlang, like the Bulughman and the Betenic for example. I need to continue and I need to spend more time with these projects that suddenly stopped in time. My Geltani project is also postponed and can barely touch it with all these responsibilities over my head. I have to say NO to many stuff just to sit down and complete some of these fantasies of my own. That might mean, for some time, saying "Goodbye" to my camera and have some rest from all the mess and confusion that I've got myself into with photography world - specifically here in Kuwait.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Affectus

After a staggering stormy week, seems this week is pacing down a bit as I'm trying to hold on to my horses and getting my life to normal, specially with photos. On the marital front, not much news and my waiting seems to bore the hell out of me, but there is nothing I can do for now. On the other hand, I'm trying to finish the load of books I've purchased some 2 weeks ago. These books are all in Arabic and I got them from the 37th books fair here, and I have to say, somehow and probably because of how the language is processed in my head, I do find myself faster and easy when I read these books. I would even forget my world while reading! Too bad not much technical books are there in Arabic though and still I do have to go back to English (and any different language if I have to).
Funny thing was, when I finished this book, in Arabic, about The Great War (WWI), I wanted to make some comments about it to the author, Omar Al-Dirawy [عمر الديراوي], but then I've discovered while surfing the net, that he died 45 years ago! R.I.P.

Cover of The First World War (Arabic)
By: Omar Al-Dirawy
This is an older press release.

Maybe if you are reading this, you might be wondering what do I have to do with WWI or WWII. The fact is simply, I like history, specially these two events. I believe our current political entities and all the mess in this region specifically, is a direct result of something that happened almost a century ago, the WWI. However, despite the gruesome facts about this war, I do believe that there are lessons to be learned from the past. Anyway, let's get back to the photography vent right now...

Flora and Flickr!
Two weeks ago, I've been into some greenhouse selling plants and other planting accessories. There is one complete block that is full of such stores and my photography group organizers worked on gaining a permission from one specific greenhouse to have a photography session.
I've said it before and I'm going to say it again and again, floral photography is not really my thing. However, I just went with the rest of the group because I didn't indulge in much activities with them lately and even though I brought almost all my tools (specially the speedlites and the modifiers), yet when I got inside the greenhouse, I've just brought a tripod and my camera backpack with one modifiers that can serve as a reflector - yet, I never used it and gave it to a member as a help.
So, where does Flickr come in? Simply, 4 images were added to Flickr's Explore pages (and one of them is not from the greenhouses anyway). Those and other images made me think about lot of things lately...

The Gentle Crown
Canon EF 100mm Macro, f/2.8, 640-1sec, ISO 400.

Peaceful Solitude
Canon EF 50mm, f/1.4, 400-1sec, ISO 200.

Zu Meinem Herz
Canon EF 100mm Macro, f/5.6, 30-1sec, ISO 200.


Raining Tenderness
Canon EF 100mm Macro, f/2.8,
500-1sec, ISO 100.
Thoughts: The fact that floral photography is not my type of thing and still getting stuff into Flickr's Explore, makes me think of how much I can do if I would really concentrate on a topic that I do really like (mainly architecture and panorama). However, on the other hand, seems it is just people nature that floral arts attracts them for its gentle approach. It is a happy thing as well because, in a world that we live in right now, who has the time to meditate at the beauty of a flower or a rose? To see people commenting and liking these images even though I prepared them without a prior thinking about the settings that I want to use, made me feel that people, even those solid types, do have emotions but probably they are just suppress them in some way and don't show it off, or probably don't know how to show it off - and all of that is exploited in a simple photo of a flower. I won't talk about my emotions right now in these lines, since they are already a mess. But yes, I do tend to suppress my own emotions and never show them off easily.

More Flora:
Other snap shots from inside the greenhouse are abundant and I'm still processing some of them. There is not much space to put them all in here, but there are some significant ones that provoked my thoughts a bit.

The Lonesome
Canon EF 50mm, f/1.4, 800-1sec, ISO 100.

The significance of The Lonesome does not come from the composition or the beauty of the image (that is if it has beauty in your eyes) but from a simple event that took place during shooting this simple isolated branch.
In fact, when I went into the greenhouse, I used my tripod a bit but then I started to take most of the shots handheld, simply because it made me feel free to compose, and (even though I was using low f-numbers, i.e. wider apertures) I was using higher ISO (200-400) most of the time. Also, despite the fact that I've brought my speedlites, I've never used them in the whole session there.
As for the shot above, my teacher criticized me (or let's say advised me) for not using a tripod and for the high ISO, and for my composition with this branch. In fact, I didn't reply directly, but what I was aiming for here is simplicity of design and a form of minimalism with an expressive mode in mind. It is true that I was using low f-numbers and the shutter speed was enough to eliminate the handshake (most of the time not always) - yet I always like to play the assurance deal. I pay less attention to the shutter speed when I work in Av mode, thus raising the ISO from the beginning makes me safe as my work and thought line go hand in hand. Another thing about the high ISO is the fact that I might need to change the f-number (increase it little bit to have more depth) thus a high ISO (but not so high) would ensure that I'm still in the handshake compensation region without having to look and do some measurements. I've became now more confident with my plugins and the way to eliminate most of the noise in my images which made me comfortable somehow to raise the ISO.

Thoughts: What my teacher told me about is true. He even mention stuff about a proper background (because other photographers in the group brought their own black board). However, I do see that I didn't use my speedlites like others did, and while I was working on giving an isolation by means of bokeh effect and shallow depth, my teacher on the other hand was thinking mostly of a solid background. While I was thinking more about abstract and simplicity (minimalism), my teacher was more aimed at the conventional composition aspects and having more elements in the scene. All of these opposites make me think if I am right in my approach. In art, there is no right or wrong, this is something I do believe in, but is it possible that my teacher is not aware of these aspects? Or maybe he doesn't want other members to "leap" into a next level without having their feet firm in a specific ground? From comments, and likes, seems photos like The Lonesome is gaining the expressions that I was working for when I took the shot in the first place - but how am I supposed to respond now to the criticism (or advices)? 
It is clear for me now that I can't use the speedlites randomly without thinking prior to their use. In other words, if I didn't plan before leaving home on using them in a certain and specific way, then taking them out with me is fruitless (as well as with the light modifiers). This, I've discovered by now in practice when I went to the greenhouse for shooting on flowers. Even though other members did use speedlites (ring and regular ones), yet my brain could not comprehend how to shape the light with a speedlite and my sole concentration was on using the light that is already there and available to make dramatic and emotionally effective images. This proves to be a challenge now: how to brainstorm an idea on location using speedlites?

Blanco y Negro:

Source: Amazon
Black and White is not something new to me of course, but after reading Bruce Barnbaum's book, The Art of Photography, I've became more influenced and more in hunt for capabilities of black and white scenes. Bruce's book is a treasure trove and so heavy with technical information concerning films and how to develop films, which made me really eager to do film photography like in the old times. Unfortunately though, this is almost next to impossible for the time being - it needs lot of chemicals and a special room to be prepared besides lot of expertise (which takes time to develop). One great advantage for film (black and white films that is) is their wide dynamic range which exceeds that of a sensor. This is one of the reasons that established HDR photography with digital cameras generally, but it is not always feasible and possible.

Intimacy
Canon EF 100mm Macro, f/4, 40-1sec, ISO 200.

Gentle Flame
Canon EF 50mm, f/1.4,
1000-1sec, ISO 200
Despite these (digital) limitations, I've been concentrating my effort on creating effective and dramatic black and white - but I have to make an announcement here that "dramatic" is not always an ultimate goal, but merely an expression to some images that I feel they need to be so.
Even though I worked before with Black and White, but after reading Bruce's book, I'm now more aware of the capabilities and the expressions that I would be able to implement using black and white photography. Right now, it is job to be done beyond the simple Curves adjustment layers to add some contrast; it is something to be thought in a whole domain of processing just like colored images, and as it was before, using burn and dodge to bring out the details from highlights or shadows, it is now thought of dodge and burn as a dramatic and a selective contrast tool.

Living from The Dead
الحي من الميت
Canon EF 50mm, f/1.4,
800-1sec, ISO 200
And of course beside the Black and White comes the tinted Black and White (not necessarily sepia) which is a weird amalgamation of colored images but in a black and white suit. I've found it that it is really hard to choose and decide for your mood when working with some images. Even though I could have done Living from The Dead in two ways, but I was determined to decide on one and only one version. Thus, I've found myself more inclined to accept the sepia version for it gives me a depth of mood and sense to the image. it might not necessarily be so for other viewers of course, but the initiating point, i.e. my feelings, should be set aright from the early beginning.

Off To Work!
As the past week was bitter in the home and personal front, I've decided to take my camera with me to work more often. Even though I did take it with me several times (along with the speedlites and the tripod) but I didn't necessarily work with them single day - simply because there were not many ideas in my mind. I've tried deliberately to work with it after my work time is over if possible, just to have some time with myself without the need to get back home so early.

Passing By
Canon EF-S 18-55mm @21mm, f/22, 60sec, ISO 100

However, it wasn't until December 5th, when I've noticed the abundance of the cloud in the sky which sparked an idea for a long exposure. I had a plan to do such clouds long exposure long time ago but never got the chance to and I didn't find any other place better than my own work place.
In the beginning I was aiming with my Canon EF 50mm lens but then I've changed my mind and changed the lenses. I wished to use the 50mm lens first for a reason: a) the stable focus ring which can make me attach filters with no external shake, and b) it is a prime lens that would provide a sharp image; sharper than zoom lenses. However, because of my location I had to change to 18-55mm to control the framing accordingly. From the early beginning I wanted to make this shot in Black and White.
Anyway, because of the bright sun, and after doing some calculation, I figured I would need 10 stops for 2 minutes only. I do have a 11.7 stops welding glass, but I didn't want to use it here and increase the time significantly (that would be more than 4 minutes). To be on the safe side, I've done 3 exposures as well: 2 minutes, 1.30 minutes, and 1 minute. Ironically, the one that worked best was the 1 minute exposure; not because of the level of brightness or overexposure, but because it recorded a nice movement blur in the sky (while the others were too washed away).
However, because of my level and the tilt of the camera, I had to correct the perspective and stretch the image. I've used DxO first but for some reason it didn't match my view, thus I had to do the perspective fix with my own hands, manually, in Photoshop. The rest is a well-known story I guess - adjustment layers, turn black and white, crop into square...etc.

Entflammbar
Canon EF 50mm, f/8, 25-1sec, ISO 100

Stinging Memories
Canon EF 50mm, f/7.1,
50-1sec, ISO 100
After finishing my long exposures and just before I pack my stuff into the car, I've noticed the shape of the little trees around the building. They were cut recently and the branches inclining upward made a good target for some abstract work. In the beginning, I didn't really know how to shoot at these trees and didn't know with what lens - beside being attached more to using 50mm. However, I've figured that the best strategy here is to shoot from various angles and sort the ideas out at home. Thus, Entflammbar and Stinging Memories came into being. Entflammbar specifically been processed heavily and I tried as much as possible to make it look like a sketch made of linear strokes from a pen. I used some burning and dodging too, and I had in my mind a vision of a banded tree top, but that didn't work well and I had to get back to the original with little burning and dodging for some areas that need some details back.

Finale:
Now, with a heavy head, I'm trying to progress through my projects slowly one by one. I've even been trying to put a daily program for myself with processing 2 images daily. I'm not sure I can keep up with this program strictly, because I know that there will be moments when I have to break this routine. I hate routine in the first place!
Ayvarith, Geltani, and even more now with the monthly competition of the group for December; pictures of coffee-related topics. Too much to blend into my brain, needless to say, into my heart too...