Category Archives: Photography

General photography natter — gear, thoughts, ideas, and the odd photo.

New Gear: Canon 28-135/3.5-5.6 IS USM

$1.899

I bought Beck her first lens for the Canon 10D she is going to start shooting with — a Canon 28-135mm. This is a terrific lens, and I think she’ll like it a lot. In fact, I may even pop the occasional photo with it! ๐Ÿ™‚

I led Beck drive the buying process, as she had some ideas of what she wanted from her first lens. Tonya from Schiller’s was extremely patient with Beck as she asked her questions and tried out this Canon and a much cheaper Tamron 28-200 lens. Ultimately, she looked at me and asked what I would buy, and of course, between a Tamron and Canon lens, I’ll pick Canon every time. We got a nice B+W UV filter for the lens to protect it, and out the door we went.

Beck’s shot a ton with her new rig today, and I think she likes it. She’s even talking about going to a basic digital photography class in a couple of months after she gets a little more used to her camera and lens. I think that’s a great idea, and will really help her get even better shots. I really do believe she will, in the end, way outdistance my shots — she has a much better eye already, and combining that with a good technical sense for shooting will make her a killer combination!

She was overwhelmed with my buying that for her, and I think she understands my desire for her to shoot. She likened me to the dad in A Christmas Story, watching his son open and load his BB gun at Christmas with such a sense of pride. That’s me — I’m proud of her, and I can’t wait to see her steps in her big new world!

Saturn and the Moon

$1.809

Once again, I went out tonight to try shooting Saturn and the rising Moon.

Tonight, I used the Celestron C8, a camera adapter and a 24mm ocular, along with the 20D (of course!) and Angle Finder C. By far, these were the best images I’ve shot of Saturn and craters on the moon. I need to get a lunar map, and orient my photos appropriately, but that’s a task for another day. ๐Ÿ™‚

Focusing was still a bear, and only one of the Saturn shots had good focus — others weren’t too bad, though. I still don’t focus as sharp as I would like, but I need to do some looking around to make sure that my expectations aren’t too high!

Equipment

$1.699

Last night and tonight, I shot Saturn with gear on hand, all without the aid of a telescope or tracking gear.

Firstly, one thing that didn’t work. I saw on a website somewhere that you could take a scope or other T-mounted long lens and use a teleconverter (like my Canon TC’s) and use that multiplier with the lens. So, my Celestron 750mm f/6 suddenly becomes a 1050mm f/8+ with the 1.4 TC attached.

Well, the 20D didn’t like that combination, and kept throwing Err 01 messages. Guess that’s not such a good combination, eh!

So last night, I shot with the Celestron 750mm f/6 on the Hakuba tripod (using its default head — more on that below) and tonight I shot with my Canon 100-400 f/4.5-5.6 and the Canon 2x Teleconverter, the combination delivering 800mm f/11, mounted on my trusty Bogen tripod with my Bogen 3030 head. Both times, I shot in RAW mode, and used mirror lockup (custom function 14). Skies were hazier tonight, and both nights there was a garish bright moon to wash things out. ๐Ÿ˜‰

First impressions? Well, just from a shooting perspective, the Bogen is built like a tank — it doesn’t move. I noticed the Hakuba doesn’t seem to handle the vibration quite as well. Now, it’d probably be worth swapping lens and legs, and seeing if that’s a function of the huge Celestron lens being on the head, or if it’s something more specific to the tripod.

The other usability item I noticed was how solid the Bogen head is. You turn the knobs, and it’s in place…. for good. The default Hakuba head just doesn’t handle the weight of the Celestron as well, especially tipped straight up to shoot astronomical fields. I’ve also noticed that with the 100-400 attached, so I think that’s just the way that head works.

Now, I love the Hakuba. It’s easier to set up and is much, much lighter than my Bogen, but this smacks of “the right tool for the right job”. The Bogen just seemed to excel when shooting astronomical subjects.

So, how’d the lens compare? The Celestron should’ve produced brighter images, and it seemed to, so no surprise there. However, focusing that thing is a bear, even with the Canon Angle Finder C attached to the body. So, the Celestron gets a nod for brighter images, but the Canon gets a big ol’ check mark for ease of use.

Image quality-wise, they both looked pretty similar, although I still need to practice astrophotography with both of them — I have a lot of room for improvement. Adding the Angle Finder C was a huge improvement though. It is really helping me with my focusing.

Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT

Looks like Canon has announced the Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT at the PMA, reported on here. With this, the entire EOS DSLR line is at or above 8mp, and is writing to CF at blazing speed.

It’s no wonder the Digital Rebels were being discounted so much at Christmas. Imagine where they will drop to now… Even monkeys will be able to afford them!

And Now There Are Two

Two photographers in the house, that is.

After finding a buyer for the 10D, Darla has decided that she would like to learn to shoot with the 10D, and have that as her primary camera. So… we are not selling it. I am elated!

Beck’s always shot better composition than me, and the only edge I had was the technical side, playing with the shot. In fact, it’s not been unusual for her to point me to a specific shot, a certain composition, and from there I would play with it through the camera. Now, though, she’ll be able to do the same kind of things with her brilliant composition…. she’ll be shooting better than me in six months!

So, she’ll be learning the technical side, and she’ll be teaching me even more (by example) about composition and feeling in my shots. Teamed up, I think we’re bordering on dangerous! ๐Ÿ˜‰

I’m thrilled, too, as that means there’s two camera bodies in the house, just in case a backup is needed, and that they both use the same accessories for the most part. Batteries and lenses, certainly, are sharable across the 10D and 20D, and I wouldn’t want to be duplicating those too much.

Now I’ve got to outfit her with a nice all-around lens for learning with. Gosh, a trip to the camera store? Darn!

First Step

$1.799

I’m as giddy as a kid at Christmas. I’ve signed up for my first real camera workshop, and it’s with one of the best nature photographers around.

Come November, I will be heading to Yosemite National Park to spend four days studying with Moose Peterson at one of his Digital Landscape Workshop Series (DLWS) sessions. I absolutely cannot believe that I am actually going to go! For two years, I’ve been looking at Moose’s work, reading about the DLWS, and pining to go, and now it’s gonna happen.

I’m already starting to plan a cross-country drive — Yosemite is about 1950 miles from here. This trip will rival the big desert trip of last April (about 4300 miles roundtrip). Something about being on the road for a couple of weeks is so appealing to me. No schedules or hard plans, coupled with the desolation of the West, the openness of the road, and the sense that it’s still untamed all beckon to me, and this trip will certainly feed that part of me.

Last night, when I talked to Darla about this course, I told her this is akin to being a pickup softball player, and having Mark McGwire teach you how to hit the ball. This event is that big to me, and as I type the words, I’m still overwhelmed at the opportunity, and the kindness of Darla to let me chase a dream like this. There just aren’t words to describe the exhilaration I’m feeling at the very thought of going to the DLWS!

I’m sure the next nine months will be some of the longest I’ve lived through in quite a while! ๐Ÿ™‚

Visitors

Not the kind from South Park — the kind from the past.

Don and Tina came by for dinner tonight. Don is a guy that used to work for me in a prior managerial experience, and was himself a manager at the company before leaving to pursue his passion: woodworking.

Don makes very nice looking (and sturdy!) solid wood furniture out of his home. The business is just starting, and he is beginning to get a reputation from his co-workers for building really solid product. That’s cool. Don jumped out on this limb last year, and basically (from our perspectives) came out of nowhere with this.

He keeps saying it’s easy to step out on that limb. You just have to want to. However, like the monkey I am, I cling to the tree that is the Corporate World, and am just not brave enough to step out and make a go on my own. Corporate World, for all its shortcomings, politics and sense of loss of control, for better or worse, provides predictable pay, and if you don’t rock the boat too much, you can last out a career’s time and make it to retirement. At what cost though?

When I look back on the last twenty or so years of working in this field, I can look back and only see one instance where I impacted the world — that was while I was in the Air Force. The rest of the time, I’ve helped feed hungry companies: saving one insurance company a cool half-million a month, helping another insurance company continue its business despite its desire to self-immolate, and keeping my current employer handling its business. And, while each has treated me well, paid me well, and worked me awfully hard, I can’t look at those gigs and derive a huge sense of impact. No one changed their mind about polluting the Earth, or preventing global warming, or saw something for the first time that made them stop and ponder. Nothing life impactful.

Now, there’s not a lot of folks out there that — through music, prose, images, sculpture or any other art — have made a huge impact on this Big Blue Marble. I know that, and it’s wishful thinking to think that I’m anywhere near that kind of talent and skill. However, I’d take a few small battles along the way, and make a little lasting impact here and there. That’d be nice.

I have to admit, Don does inspire me to ponder just what it would take to take that step. Mornings like yesterday, spent in the company of my daughter, enjoying the crispness of a late winter’s sunrise on a nice photo shoot surely make me think hard about trying the manhandle the mirrors necessary to pull off a successful solo photo career. And if not solo, then at least doing that for some organization that appreciates that kind of work.

Don — in the same vein as Karen and others — looked at my work tonight and was taken aback with what I’ve been shooting over the last year, and commented on how much better I’ve gotten. Karen’s said the same thing, and both of them question why I’m not out there, peddling my wares and pushing to make a name for myself.

I can sum it up in one simple sentence: I’m terrified. I don’t want to wager the house, car, cameras, and future in case striking out on my own were just a pipe dream, and not profitable enough to handle my family’s needs. What if, what if…..

What if a frog had wings? He wouldn’t bump his butt on the ground when he jumped. I’m that frog, and I need to figure out where my wings are…..

Winfield

$1.889

Today, Sio and I drove up to Winfield to look at the eagles, and have a little “daddy-daughter” time. This was also the first road trip for the 20D.

Unfortunately, the eagles were all but gone. There were a few stragglers, but it looks as though they have moved north, and are feasting near cooler waters. The few we did see were skittish, and didn’t let us get very close. I guess even eagles sense safety in numbers, and they were definitely outnumbered.

We did get to look at ducks, geese and woodpeckers, though, as well as some remnants of the winter — some ice and frost. She’s getting good at spotting that kind of stuff, but needs to work on listening to what’s going on around her a bit. She didn’t hear the woodpeckers until we were right on top of them!

This was a great trip, and her first photo expedition, of which she was very appreciative. It’s fun watching her develop her view of the world through her lens, and I’m getting a kick out being a part of that.

Now, my shooting with the 20D wasn’t very good. I had the thing set on ISO 1600 from last night’s astronomical shooting, and I forgot to check it until we were almost finished for the day. So, most of what would’ve been decent shots are marred with the stippling that is common when these cameras shoot at high ISO speeds. Live and learn!

Of course, enjoying the cool crispness of the air was a joy. Late winter offered us a quiet, cool morning, and made for a fun walk around the curves of that part of the Mississippi. I guess we hiked a mile or two, and headed back to truck. Perhaps we didn’t get the greatest photos in the world, but we were able to spend some time together, without the hustle and weight of the world.

That alone was worth the trip.

Apprentice

No, not the show. My apprentice.

Sio is really starting to take to shooting with the camera Mom gave her for Christmas. She’s enjoying playing with composition and light, and is sooooo quick to want to show off what she’s shot. She’s fearless — like most kids — and is willing to try anything.

I’m hoping that photography will be as tremendous a voice in her life as it’s been in mine of late. I so wish that I’d found this passion long ago, but then, I probably wouldn’t be where I am, and perhaps Siobhan wouldn’t have even been a part of my life.

I like passing this passion on. It’s like passing down a little bit of Dad to her, and I know he’d like that.

New Gear: Canon EOS 20D

Yes, I finally did it: I bought the new camera body.

After much twisting and turning on the precipice of buying a 1D Mk II, in the end, I couldn’t justify the nearly tripled cost as compared to its little brother, the 20D.

In a short time spent playing with the 20D, I have to admit that I’m impressed. The feel is a little different, and some of the controls either aren’t where they were before, or work a little differently than the 10D — that’s not inhibiting my enjoyment though!

The first thing I’ve noticed is that it is fast. Very fast. Turn the switch on, and the camera is ready. With the 10D, there was a second or two pause, which made it easy to miss the unexpected shot. The burst speed is also very fast — five frames per second, and in RAW, I can run that for two full seconds before the camera starts trying to write to my 4GB microdrive, which slows it down some, but still writes three times as fast as the 10D. With faster CF, the 20D is supposed to write almost five times faster than the 10D. Amazing.

And the picture quality seems to be terrific, too. I’ve been very impressed with the first pictures that have come off the camera as I’ve tested with it.

Overall, I’ve got to say, this is a tremendous improvement over the 10D, and worth every penny!

So, anyone need a used 10D? ๐Ÿ™‚