The Light of a Winter Sunset

29 12 2008

A few days ago I had the idea to go out and shoot the Christmas decorations in downtown Hamburg as long as they are still up.  The weather was cold and windy, but so what…  I waited until the late afternoon, dressed up warmly and went out.  But before I got to the shopping area my attention was caught by the great light of the nearing sunset, so I took a small detour…

For this next image I waited for 5-6 minutes for someone to walk through, but no one did, and I moved on because I didn’t want to miss the good light.

20081226_94384

Overall none of the images have much merrit, but at least I was out with the camera again, and that felt good.





Landscape Photography in Sweden

30 08 2008

I’ve just come back from a week-long trip to Sweden’s west coast. Since photography has been coming very short lately, I’d mentally prepared myself for six days of intense photography — get up before sunrise, photograph, take a nap during lunchtime and go out again in the late afternoon. But I had two days of rain and two days of cloudless sky, so the photography was concentrated in two days only. Oh well, at least I was able to relax some — not a bad thing either!

I traveled by car, so I brought along most of my gear, but in the end I used my typical set almost all of the time: Canon 30D, 17-40/4, 50/1.8, 70-200/4 and my trusty cardboard finder, all in a small shoulder bag.

A quick glance through the photos reveals lots of photographic junk, a few images with potential and one image that clearly stands out.

With very minimal Photoshop help, this surely is my finest landscape photograph so far! How do you like it?





Corrugated Water Tanks

10 08 2008

Finding time for photography during the last 3-4 months has been tough. I’ve been trying to compensate by forcing myself to go out even for short periods of time, but I feel rushed and nothing really good comes out. And it takes much longer to “get in the zone.” Also since the time is limited, I prefer to visit places that I’m already familiar with, that’s why some themes keep popping up.

Anyhow, here are three images from my last trip to Hamburg’s HafenCity. I don’t find them too bad, but no great art either…





No Time, a Little Short on Inspiration

20 07 2008

During the past three months I’ve had to invest lots of time and concentration into my job, and my photography has unwillingly taken second place. But it’s fighting back and recently I’ve make a couple short trips to the underground stations and around some metal bridges.

More posts and images will follow.





Back from India

8 04 2008

I’m safe and sound and back from my second trip to India, which took place between March 12 and March 28, 2008. Before the trip I thought I’d travel by train and bus, but the first day was so hectic and chaotic, that I decided to rent a car instead. This way I was able to follow my own route and make my own schedule, so it was a good decision. Mind you, the only way to rent a car in India is with a driver, but considering the driving conditions there, that’s a good thing. I swear, the most important safety feature of an Indian car is its horn!

I spent the first and the last day in Delhi and during the remaining twelve days we drove 1650 km and visited Jhunjhunu, Mandawa, Jodhpur, Ranakpur, Udaipur, Ajmer, Pushkar, Jaipur and numerous places along the way. I wanted to see Jaisalmer too, but that would have extended my trip by 400 km, which in turn would have meant 2.5 extra days of sitting in the car instead of photographing, so I decided against it.

The trip was not an easy one. Traveling, even by car, is very taxing, and on the days on which I was not traveling, I usually got up before 7 am, photographed until about 1 pm, rested in the hotel until about 3 pm, then photographed again till sunset at 6:30. The weather was extremely dry, with temperatures of about 35° C (95° F) during the day and about 20° C (68° F) at night.

I didn’t visit any spectacular sights on this trip (no Taj Mahal or ghats in Varansi), so I mainly photographed people going about their daily business and what I call “still lives” — scenes of colorful inanimate objects. I came back with 1187 RAW images (9 GB of disk space) and I’m sorting through them right now. It will probably take me a month till I look at all images, perform basic edits and rate them with 1 to 5 stars.

Photographing people was relatively easy as many of them want you to take a photo of them. In many cases people asked me to come into their houses and photograph them and their families. They didn’t care about seeing or having the pictures, they just wanted me to photograph them. At the same time, being a foreigner with a fancy camera, I was always the center of attention. I was usually surrounded by a group of kids that made lots of noise and every time I wanted to take a picture they either jumped in front of the camera or in front of the person that I wanted to photograph. The only way that I found of dealing with this situation was to take a picture, let each kid take a look at the image, touch the camera, then quickly move away and hope that they won’t follow me.

The second problem was people smiling on the photos. No matter how poor or tired they were, or how hard their job was, as soon as they saw me, they stopped working, stared at me and smiled for as long as I was around. How do you take a candid photograph in such a situation?!

On the positive side, I felt very safe during the entire trip, regardless of when or where I was. OK, I got pretty tired of bargaining for everything I wanted or hearing how everything that I touched was made out of pure gold/silver/diamonds, but that’s another story.

The food was great too, but that’s because I ate where the locals ate and stayed away from the tourist places. Be very concerned if someone takes you to a restaurant with a souvenir shop inside! That’s a 100% guarantee of lousy food, bad service and ridiculous prices. At the beginning of the trip I was quite selective about what I was eating or drinking, but after a few days I started trying pakora and samosa and drinking juices and lassies from the local markets. Man, are these things tasty! And inexpensive — a freshly squeezed papaya/mango/pineapple juice costs only about 0.15 EUR!

Anyhow, if you are thinking of making a trip to India, simply go for it! Just be prepared for a bit of adventure and lots of great experiences!





“Holi” Celebration in Udaipur

28 03 2008

Hi friends, I’m back from India! The trip was great, everything went well, and I’m now sorting through the photos, trying to decide what to write about first.

Holi

I guess the highlight of the trip was the Holi celebration which I experienced in Udaipur. I hadn’t planned the trip explicitly around Holi, but was very happy to be part of it. What a splendid festival! Once a year the pious Indians let themselves go and celebrate Prahlada’s belief in Vishnu by symbolically burning of the evil on the first day and playing with powder in many different colors on the second day — throwing it in the air or rubbing each-other’s faces with it. As the sun gets higher and the alcohol consumption rises (most Indians do not drink alcohol on any other day of the year) the games become rougher — water guns and water balloons get thrown around, instead of purely organic colors, chemically-based ones come into play, and when these are over even cow dung starts flying in the air.

Holi

Most traveler books suggest that tourists spend Holi in the safety of their hotels, but to me it was clear — there was no way I’d miss the colorful spectacle. So I made a few rounds during the earlier hours of the day. The atmosphere was spectacular, and I was not the only photographer out there and definitely not the only tourist.

Holi

Even though I stayed away from the roughest parties and returned to my hotel at noon, I got a good bit of color on my face and even more on the photo bag. But after an hour of blowing, brushing, scrubbing and washing I was able to get it all off.

20080322_92112.jpg

And I thought India is already colorful on a normal day…





India 2008

11 03 2008

Finally — I’m off to the land of explosive colors, smells and sounds! The sunrise is at 6:25 and the sunset at 18:33, so wish me good light and good luck…

20070327_83826.jpg





Leaving on a Longer Trip?

9 03 2008

So how do you prepare for a longer photographic trip? I’ll be leaving on such a trip in a few days, so I’ve been thinking about what to take along:

  • Since I’ll be going “into the wild,” I thought long and hard about which pieces I really need and which are just nice to have. Since I’ll be doing “situational photography,” I will be taking a very universal kit: a dSLR, an extreme wide-angle zoom, a wide-angle zoom, a fast normal prime, a tele-zoom and an external flash.
  • A tripod might be the key to sharp pictures, but I want to be very mobile, so I’m leaving it at home. But I’ll be taking a small bean-bag, just in case.
  • Since the trip is very important to me, I’ve borrowed a backup body — in case my primary one breaks, falls down, gets wet, lost or stolen.
  • Which camera bag should I take? I have two, and for the first time I’m taking the larger one.
  • Where will I store my images and will I make backups? A laptop is too much hassle, but I want to make backups. So I’ve decided to take enough memory cards (12 GB) for all good images from the entire trip (95 RAW images per day). And I have an external drive for making backups.
  • How about batteries? I’ll have four batteries for my primary body, one battery set for the flash and one for the replacement body.
  • How about charging the batteries? I’m heading for India where they have five (!!!) different types of power sockets, and electricity is still not all that reliable (I know that thanks to this page). At least their power is 230 V/50 Hz , so a simple mechanical power adapter should be enough.

And now, just a few days before departing, I’m taking care of the following:

  • Write down all serial numbers of all equipment. Actually I’ve done this a long time ago, but I’ve just checked that all newer items are also on my list.
  • Charge all batteries.
  • Clean the lenses and viewfinders.
  • Clean the camera sensors. I guess I’m a cheapskate as I simply brush my sensors with a clean cotton pad (Q-Tipp, for those in Germany). I brush the sensor in a snake-like line, then take a sample image at f/22. If the images shows bad dust spots, I brush again and take another shot. I only worry about the bad spots because the other ones will not be visible at f/8 or f/11.

One thing I’ve not done yet, but will try to do before my next important trip — buy travel camera insurance.

20070325_83385.jpg





Abandoned Factory in Hannover

7 03 2008

How photographically fascinating can a place appear if the weather is cold, the wind is blazing, and the light is flat? Well, not very much. Especially if the place is an abandoned old factory with broken windows where the wind is howling from all directions. If I’d not made plans to go together with a friend of mine, I probably would have glanced through the window and quickly gone back to bed. But I had, so I didn’t. So lesson number one is: always go with someone. This way you have additional motivation in case you start feeling a bit lazy.

Entering the old factory is forbidden, but we found a whole in the fence and got in. It was 7:20 am, and yesterday we would have had beautiful morning light. But today everything was middle gray and it was raining lightly. And yet the old factory was fascinating — large hangars, lots of twisted old metal, broken up doors, broken windows, glass lying around everywhere.

The Eye

And there were tons of really cool graffiti sprayed all over the walls. We only had about 90 minutes for walking around, but we’ll definitely be going back — on a warmer day, with sunshine and with more free time.

Silent Witness





Sunset Looking East

3 03 2008

Sunsets are usually only pretty if you are facing west, but I guess I was looking the other way…

Sunset Looking East








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.