Monday, September 11, 2006

Monday Special: Join Strobist's Flickr Group for Free!

Have you joined Flickr's Strobist Group?

You haven't?

Well you should. Strobist readers are doing some really good stuff over there, posting their pictures and joining in an ongoing discussion.

Take this example above from Strobist reader Martijn, who really needs to take a minute to show us how he clamped the camera to the outside of the moving car...

If you haven't yet joined the group, it's easy. Just register at Flickr and find the Strobist Group and click to join.

And today only, we are cutting the price in half to, well, free. Okay, so it's always free. But you really need to get off your duff and join, so you can join in the discussion and show us your pictures, too.

We have over 1,500 members. But we really need to see some stuff from you.

(And nice shot, Martijn)

Sunday, September 10, 2006

They're Baa-aaack: Kingston SD 512MB Memory Cards: $5.50


EDIT: Yikes. They want to charge $7.99 shipping. FOR EACH CARD. No thanks to the shipping shell game, and thanks to the readers who figured this out and posted the comments. -D

If you missed out on the Kingston 512MB memory cards in the Amazon Outlet last month, they apparently got another batch in. I dunno how many they got this time, but they are available for the time being.

Amazing. We used to pay that much for a single roll of film.

A Blast From the Past: Flash Bulbs

Say you have to light up a large area and you think your trusty SB-24 might not hack it - even on full manual.

Who you gonna call?

Meggaflash, that's who.

They are the last company still quietly manufacturing these anachronistic little one-shot lighting wonders. But business is good enough so that they are working with a backlog.

In a world of TTL do-everything, computer-controlled strobes, flash bulbs are still being used for a variety or purposes.

I knew that they were still around. They are used as props for period movies - and just about any other movie that requires the effect of a shooter's flash. The brightness lasts long enough to be convincingly captured on the 30-frames-per-second film.

But these babies have some qualities that their more recent, electronic successors can only dream about.

The power is chemically built into the flash bulb. That means no (big) batteries to lug around. The flash holder/reflectors take small batts that provide just enough current to light one of these babies off.

And light off, they do.

They'll give you enough lumens to light darn near anything you can imagine, if you use the right model.


I'd like to see someone light up this valley with an electronic flash, for instance.

In addition to being favored by architectural types who need to "add a little fill" to the side of a large building at twilight, they are also highly prized by spelunkers, who use them to light huge, underground caverns.

You can see a lot of cool stuff on a site run by caver Chris Anderson, who also has a very good primer page on flash bulbs that will point you in the right directions if your imagination had started to redline like mine has.

There's also a gallery of his stuff to give you some ideas.

I don't know what I am going to to with these things yet, but something is gonna present itself soon.

And I really like the idea of combining the high tech of a new digicam with the old-school brute force of a flash bulb to get a photo that just not be done any other way.

Chris' primer and gallery are really worth checking out.

If any of you are using this stuff - or have idea for what they would do with such an insane amount of power in such a small package - I'd love to hear about it in the comments section.

Saturday, September 9, 2006

Discussion: View With a Room

Before I get to the specific discussion on this assignment, I want to pull back a little and take a look at the bigger picture.

To this point, we have worked our way through several different areas of photography, and I hope you are starting to get a sense of how some of these different assignments fit into a common thread.

First, with the Headshot assignment, you started with a very limited subject. The goal was to get it clean, simple and elegant. We moved on to a couple of different environmental portrait themes, first concentrating on physical surroundings and, next, aiming to create a specific connotation.

The water assignment, couched as a "break," was designed to show you what you could do with the simplest of subjects and a craftsperson's approach to composition, lighting and design.

With the current assignment, we took that same idea and increased the scale. Since you are not all sporting 10,000 watt-seconds of strobe, you had to pay careful attention to the ambient and learn to work with it.

The final assignment will allow you to learn all of the skills you have explored up to this point.

But first, let's get this penultimate assignment wrapped up.

View With a Room was an exercise in composition, design, camera angle management and learning to "go with the flow" on light - while helping it out a little, of course.

For me, it was a chance to peek inside many of your houses. (Looking at my house and some of really cool places you guys live in, I have decided that somewhere along the line I must have chosen the wrong profession...)

As usual, click on the pic for the Flickr page, where most of you have posted lighting info. And the others will be posted shortly. (Hint, hint.)

Leading off, we have a simple composition that was probably a little harder than it looks to light. You can't go too far into that ceiling from the camera angle with light before you start to ruin it by blowing the ceiling out.

Most of you did a very good job of balancing the ambient in windows, too. The secret to getting it to look natural (as many of you apparently found out) was to leave it a little hot, but not blown out.

Either you are starting to think pretty well, or your flashes weren't powerful enough to finish the job.

I'll give you credit for the former.

The photographer responsible for this little corner shot did not give himself enough credit. It's nicely done, and the accent light behind the bowl on the table is just the kind of thing you can do with a small flash to add a finishing touch to a picture.

Perfect? No. Stunning. No.

More "quiet," I would say. but this would make a nice secondary photo in an architectural spread.

Room details are just as important in this genre as in other areas of photography. Give the designer choices like this to go with your lead shots, and you will get more photos run.

There are a lot of cool (uh, warm, actually) layers of composition and light in this shot from Japan. A composition with a very Japanese feel, if you will.

I love the way the window square of light on the left wall echos the color of the floor lamp.

And the sheer window in the back is brought up to just the right level. Wispy, but not screaming.

Nicely done.

Having done a few rooms like this one, I can tell you what a pain-in-the-butt job balancing all of those displays can be.

This was a well-executed job.

Using the strobe not to nuke the room but to subtly call attention to the gear rack on the left was elegant thinking.

I would be remiss if I did not spotlight this bathroom shot.

It transcends the room genre into that of a still life. It looks like it was shot on 4x5, with its crisp lines and detail. Maybe with a huge, expensive soft box over to the left.

Only this shooter did it the Strobist way, actually making part of the bathroom into a soft box. Good thinking, for sticking a small flash in the shower and shooting through a white shower curtain.

And, finally, this gem from an amateur in Spain.

Less is more in this beautiful, hauntingly simple photo of a bedroom.

Note the leading lines that draw your attention to the center of interest: a lamp augmented by a snooted, CTO'd flash.

This is so spare and elegant, it could easily be one of those sense-of-place photos that runs across two pages in the New York Times magazine.

The fact that the bed is not neatly made adds to the story. Or highlights the photographer's laziness. Not sure. But I like it.

The sheets, being white, we dropped down a couple of stops to have plenty of detail, but enhance the mood.

Very, very nice photo.

And good job to all. I am off to Florida for what I hope will be a successful NFL season opener.

Continue discussion on View With a Room here.

Last of all, Moishe from Midwest Photo Exchange (who is sponsoring this Boot Camp) e-mailed me to say that he scored a big load of the compact, 5-section stands. So strike while the iron is hot by phone, e-mail or web if you have not been able to get one yet.

Friday, September 8, 2006

Bits and Pieces: Sept 8th, 2006

Thanks for your patience over the last couple of days on the Room Assignment post, folks. It's been one of those weeks where the shooting - and everything else - forces me to step back a little bit.

I was getting my gear together for a trip when I got a frantic cell phone call from my wife, telling me that my five-year-old had fallen off a set of monkey bars and broken his ribs. I got down to the hospital to find out that I had misheard her, and was relieved to find out he had actually broken his wrist.

He's doing fine, and fully prepared to be the "celebrity kid with a cast" for six weeks in kindergarten.

I am flying to Florida to cover the Ravens' season opener against Tampa Bay for the weekend. So, ironically, I will have much more time for some longer-form writing for Strobist.

Till then, some bits and pieces to hold you as I try to grab some time to work down the hopper of some very cool stuff I cannot wait to toss up on the site.


Strobe on a Rope-Rope-Rope

This was mentioned on the Flickr discussion group, and I had a 'D'Oh!' moment realizing I had not mentioned this one before.

Nikon shooters with no PC jack on their camera and/or flash may want to consider grabbing a couple of SC-17's to use as an extended synch cord. They stretch to well over 5 feet each. And you can daisy chain up to three of them together for a nice, long, durable synch cord. The flash end of the cord has a 1/4x20 screw socket, serving double duty as a light stand (or tripod) connector.

They go for about $30 each on eBay, but you sometimes get lucky. Especially keep an eye out for someone selling a vintage Nikon SB unit that includes an SC-17. The deal is usually much better.

And these things are so useful to have around. I keep a second one in my trunk, just in case. You can mod them to use CAT-5 wire as an extension cord, but IMO it is easier to just grab a couple of used ones and chain them up.


January workshop Sold Out

In case you did not notice on the sidebar, the January workshop is sold out. The first hurdle (discovering the interest level) having been overcome, future workshops will hinge on the feedback of the guinea pigs attendees of the first workshop.

If it works as well as I think it will, we'll keep the idea rolling.


In the On Deck Circle

There are just not enough hours in a day. But I do feel much better working and posting at a sustainable pace, and I appreciate your patience and support.

That said, I have been chomping at the bit to post several ideas I have waiting in the wings. And I am going to use them as incentive to make me find the time to get the Room Assignment after-action done and posted ASAP. (Those things take more time than you'd think.)

As mentioned the other day, we have the super-portable, super-powerful, "why-didn't-I-think-of-that" flashes to explore. After that, a killer photo (and the full how-to) from a long-time mentor of mine on how to light a comet.

And this one is pure Home Depot DIY Bootstrapping Goodness, too.

The photo is so cool, it been my favorite framed photo (that does not contain my kids) on my wall since he did it about 10 years ago.

And of course, the final (whew!) Lighting Boot Camp assignment, which will really make you think.

Thursday, September 7, 2006

Portrait tips

Some portrait lighting tips, you never know when you might need 'em.

Flickr'er and Strobist reader Randy January tipped us off to Studio lighting on a budget technique on ePHOTOzine, a how-to article on making a one light portrait setup look like a five light setup for high key style portraits.

Working closer to the ambient, Frank Van Riper presents Anatomy of an Environmental Portrait in the "Camera Works" section of the Washington Post.
By Mike H.

Wednesday, September 6, 2006

Room Assignments are In.

Just a reminder that the Boot Camp Assignment #5 deadline has closed.

I am pulling all of the room photos and working on an after-action article. I will finish and post it as soon as time permits. (It may be a day or two.)

Looking ahead to assignment #6, you may want to start thinking of who you can hit up as a model for this final task.

To complete it successfully, you will need all of the skills you have sharpened on the first five assignments.

As for the next two weeks, there are a couple of really cool things in the hopper. One of them is a super powerful, highly portable, very cheap flash that will fit in the palm of your hand and run on flashlight batteries.

(Being a newspaper guy, I try to keep a "budget," -- a stable of stories and story ideas -- in the pipeline.)

-D