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#1456 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 414
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Quote:
I wish you success and joy in what you hope to do. I think you need more work on your website, (as you have already said). I would have a look at the competition, to see what you may be up against. What I found useful was the “Art Directors’ Index to Photographers” books. (I don’t know if they are still published any more), but you can buy past editions, I have the “Europe Edition 12.” They show top work, which I think you would find inspiring. Rotovision are/were the publishers. I’d also look on the web; whatever of advertisements for the field you intend to work in (Jewellery, etc.). Here is a link to Rotovision; there is stuff here, which would be relevant to what you may be doing. http://www.rotovision.com/ As John says, follow your calling; I believe in instinct, I hope you make the right decision. Best of luck.
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I am always of the opinion with the learned, if they speak first. - William Congreve. |
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#1457 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 414
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Quote:
I’d like to see the shot I suggested in post # 1434 in B&W. Of course time maybe of the essence. Keep doing the business.
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I am always of the opinion with the learned, if they speak first. - William Congreve. |
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#1458 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: In the Green Mountains
Posts: 4,084
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This one I took quite a while ago... July 22, 1967 in fact, at the Village Theater, which would later become The Fillmore East. I was only 16, and the Byrds were the first band I ever wanted to hear play live.... this was with (L to R) Chris Hillman, David Crosby, Roger McGuinn, and Michael Clarke. Also on the bill were The Seeds, the Vanilla Fudge, a "special guest appearance" by Richie Havens, and then the Byrds... it was my first ever real concert experience and I been hooked on live music ever since. Came across the slide and thought maybe some of you music lovers may dig it.
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#1459 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: In the Green Mountains
Posts: 4,084
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Great pics by others in the thread, of course... Homer, Ianant, JKelman... I applaud all of your efforts, as always.
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#1460 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 414
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Mike, we are of similar vintage, I was 15 when you took that shot. Way before I got into photography. It’s nice to see some retro pics. My more serious stuff came in the early 1980’s.
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I am always of the opinion with the learned, if they speak first. - William Congreve. |
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#1461 | |
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AAJ's Big Nose
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 7,159
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As far as reprocessing an earlier image? Yeah, time is the issue. This year, especially, it always is. But I'll be working on some for the next batch for ya. Cheers! John |
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#1462 | |
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balladeer
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: the windmill area
Posts: 4,901
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I love this one B, really beautiful colours. That pond seems to be an inspiring place.
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#1463 |
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AAJ's Big Nose
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 7,159
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Photos from 2012 Enjoy Jazz Festival
Working my way through photos from my recent trip, full set of photos from Enjoy Jazz here, but a few selected ones:
Portico Quartet ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Michael Wollny's [em] ![]() ![]() ![]() Bill Frisell/Bill Morrison, The Great Flood ![]() Manu Katché Group ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Manfred Brundl Silent Bass ![]() ![]() Manfred Eicher ![]() Jessica Gall ![]() James Farm ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Herbie Hancock ![]() ![]() ![]()
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#1464 |
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String Fondler
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Not hell. Not yet.
Posts: 2,034
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John, those are good
I think, the best I've seen you post here. There are some minor focusing and softening issues, but that is to be expected given how steady you have to be doing these kinds of shoots. Looks like you did some sharpening of some of the pics too? Or maybe this is just after converting to jpeg and uploading to whichever site is hosting the pics, if that is indeed what you did. I can see the pixellation. Anyway, what ISO setting did you use? And what aperture if you can remember, or ball park?
This kind of shooting is tricky. You have to look for or follow the light and that you did. Keep up the hard work.
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You're only granted one set of gonads during this lifetime. Make sure you use it wisely. |
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#1465 | ||
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AAJ's Big Nose
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 7,159
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Quote:
But I do think I'm getting a better hang of the D800 and the software. I appreciate your comments - both the compliment and constructive criticism, as I rely on better photographers like yourself and others here to help me improve. Unless I want to schelp either a monopod or tripod (i have both, but on the road, it's not always practical to carry with me), I have to rely on my own "arm-tripod" and occasional places to balance the camera when I shoot, especially in lower light. As you probably know, live show shooting isn't always in optimal conditions. That said, others do better than I, so I know it's not that it's impossible, it's just me...and hopefully I can fix that! Quote:
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#1466 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Birmingham UK
Posts: 414
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Hi John, Here’s some constructive criticism,
I think your monochrome shots should have more contrast. They would have much more impact. Half close your eyes at them for some idea. However, it’s a fine line overdoing it, and having the tendency of making them look vulgar. It maybe, as I have stated before, time being the essence. You may not have had the time to fine-tune them, as you so desire. Yes, you are definitely getting better with sharpness, (it’s not all negative). I am glad you are enjoying what you do, and I hope you can continue to make a living out of it. Keep tryin’ as you say, and you’ll continue to get better. I am never satisfied; I always want to do better. That’s a healthy attitude to have so long as you give credit to yourself when you have done well, but still yearn to do better, to improve even more. Best of luck, Pope.
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I am always of the opinion with the learned, if they speak first. - William Congreve. |
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#1467 | ||
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AAJ's Big Nose
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 7,159
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Quote:
Quote:
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#1468 |
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trumpet
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: New York City
Posts: 5,810
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I like the shots, John.
Damn, Herbie has some rig! |
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#1469 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 857
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I have some suggestions that may be helpful. Concert shots are very difficult to capture well due to the low ambient light in contrast to the bright stage lights.
Set the camera to spot metering. Begin by using shutter priority mode. Given the quality of the D800 camera and density of pixels I would set this speed to the lens focal length divided by 0.75 so that a 100 mm lens would have a minimum shutter speed of 1/150 second. Set the camera to auto ISO with the max at either 3200 or 6400. Be careful if the camera always defaults to the widest aperture, it is telling you that it's too dark. If the light is not changing, switch to manual mode as soon as you begin to nail shots. WATCH YOUR HISTOGRAM and EXPOSE TO THE RIGHT. Most of the image data is in the right of the histogram. Images may look blown on your camera LCD but can be recovered in LR when you pull the exposure down. This will give you the best image quality from your raw capture. Expose to the right does not mean clipping the image. You cannot recover clipped data. It takes practice and familiarity with the camera to get this correct. You should set your LCD to negative contrast for a more accurate historgram. I bet you find an immediate increase in sharpness and a reduction in noise. If you shoot raw, you need to apply import sharpening. I would default to try to capture detail. Using Lightroom consider the following settings: Amount: 50 Radius: 0.7 Detail: Keep this low on high ISO images, about 25 Masking: I always hold down the alt key and adjust to taste. Less masking means more areas are sharpened. Noise reduction and sharpening are related to one another. Your best way of addressing this is to set up import parameters that apply NR for different ISO settings. I set mine up by shooting a scene at base ISO and another at the peak ISO. Once these two endpoints are set, I just math out a linear change for the inbetween ISOs. It take some time to set up but you only do it once in LR and it get applied to every image that you import. John, you're very good at this. Keep it up and you'll have a body of work that could be part of your retirement nest egg. With your access to musicians try to find unusual shots that others do not have access to. On stage are common, back stage less so. Follow the light, it's all about the light. |
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#1470 |
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String Fondler
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Not hell. Not yet.
Posts: 2,034
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Ditto. You were getting nice results long before you even had the new cam. The reason I asked about your ISO settings is because I do the most insane things to shoot at ISO 100, yup I said 100, even in impossible lighting situations and I have pulled it off. How will take a bit to type up, maybe later on I'll explain, but why I do that is because I don't like seeing digital noise in photographs and if there's too much of it, it looks no where as artful as noise or grain from a film shot. In fact many times noise from digital cams just looks plain bad, or awful, especially in dark or shadow areas of a photo, so I try to avoid the high ISO shots. Prior to asking you that question, I had googled and researched a bit on what photogs were doing at night with these newer cams to get the kind of results they were getting. I was amazed that so many were shooting at ISOs of 800 and higher, so Sunday night at Somethin' Jazz Club I did some experimentation at ISO 800 and as it turned out I was able to take one of the best photos I ever did. It was not exactly a walk in the park, I had to shoot with a superfast prime lens at it's widest aperture which is 1.8, manually focus (since autofocus is practically a joke in poor light) and I had to be able to hold the camera still at a snail's pace shutter speed of 1/50 of sec. At those speeds of course you can get motion blur if the musician makes a rapid movement(s), but I've experimented shooting at 1/50 many times before at live shows in horrid light and pulled it off. There are tips and techniques but I don't want to get into too much writing about all that crap right now since I don't have time. Maybe later. In addition it is not practical to try and do this for most of the times one may want to shoot in the very challenging situation that a live gig presents. There are a number of problems and challenges. I know of no zoom lense that works on a Nikon with a 1.8 aperture, so getting those close up intimate takes is a no no. And even if there was one, I would not be able to afford it. Can't even afford to spend money a decent 2.8 zoom, not even third party. And then of course I don't want to shoot at 1/50 either if I can avoid it. So what's to do? One option is to experiment with shooting at even higher ISOs than 800 and I will now that I see from your shots and around the net that you could get damn good results. One of my ways to get around the challenges was to use a much dreaded option called flash. It is a headache, in many ways. One is you have to know how to do it without blasting away and destroying the ambient light in the place. It's a headache, you have to constantly weigh and measure how far you are from your subject then adjust your flash power, so that just enough falls on your subject as a fill without destroying the ambient light. I said I didn't want to talk about any of this crap in the least but I did anyway. Anyway, this time I'm out!
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You're only granted one set of gonads during this lifetime. Make sure you use it wisely. |
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