Photography


Sleepy Raccoon

Ups and Downs of the Week.

Red Sox – They won tonight, but lost last night. Just like a .500 team will do.

Funky Reggae Pah-tay – We had a few visitors tonight. Love this Rokinon 35mm f1.4 lens.

Funky Reggae Pah-tay

This guy has been hanging around in the trees out back. He could be here to pick the carcass of the Red Sox season, but he’ll have to wait. They are still showing signs of life. Amazing.

Turkey Buzzard

Turkey Buzzard

I stopped by to see how the corn was progressing. It’s coming up nicely, although you can see a few areas where the heavy rain collected and stifled some growth.

Cornfield Progress

Cornfield Progress

Cornfield Progress

While I was there shooting pics Jeff showed up with his new toy. This amazing looking machine is used to spray the crops. Here he was getting ready to spray herbicide to kill weeds and unwanted plants.

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Sprayer

Ups and Downs of the Week.

Rokinon 35mm f1.4 Lens – Loving this thing. Very sharp lens.

Red Sox – Back to their losing ways. Right now they’re locked in an epic battle of mediocrity with the Baltimore Orioles. They can’t buy a run, it seems.

This week I traded 35mm lenses with a super-talented photographer and filmmaker named Mark Linsangan. I sent Mark my Canon 35mm f2 auto-focus lens and he sent me his Rokinon 35mm f1.4 manual focus lens. I hope he is as happy with his new lens as I am with mine. You can check out some of Mark’s photos here and his videos here. Thanks, Mark!

UPDATE: He’s taking great shots with it already.

I had some fun today with the lens. This shot was in a field of mustard (I believe) that was so yellow in the bright sun that it was blinding.

Fields of Gold

And an early rising moon.

Spring Moon

I also stopped by my project cornfield. More on that later. But here’s a rat’s eye view of the corn also shot with the Roki 35. It’s beginning to look like a corn stalk.

Corn Begins

Every year about this time there is a day when I look out at the woods behind the house and think, “Wow, that’s really green.” It’s usually right after a rainy spell like we’ve been having the past few days. Well today was the day. All the leaves are out in their full glory. The green is overwhelming.

Green

Ups and Downs of the Week

Mom – Mom’s birthday was Wednesday. She’s doing quite well. We had a good time last weekend while I was there. I need to do that more often. Love you, Mom.

New Tripod – The new tripod worked like a charm on my trip to MA last week. So easy to set up and use. Should have bought one ages ago.

Red Sox – I didn’t expect a great season, but this is pathetic.

My cornfield project is progressing. The corn has just started coming up.

Corn Begins

Corn Begins

This is a *really* big field. This panorama shows how wide and deep this field is. I need to check with Jeff (the farmer) to see how many acres it is.

This technique involves using a filter (or in this case, filters) to slow exposure times enough to blur motion while leaving non-moving objects sharp. In brightly lit situations you cannot have shutter speeds in the 20-40 second range without way overexposing the image. But if you can “drip feed” the incoming light to the sensor by shooting through very dark glass, you can slow the shutter speed to 30 seconds or more. This can make waves or other water movement look silky. It can also make crowded areas seem empty of people or vehicles as long as those things are moving fast enough to not register on the sensor. Here are some examples of Black Glass photography on ocean waves. These were taken during the sunrise and sunset shoots from yesterday. I used three stacked filters with a total of 11-stops of darkening. Each stop reduces the incoming light by half, so these 30 second shots would have been taken at 1/60th of a second without the filters. At that speed, the water would have shown all the detail of the waves and current instead of looking silky.

Black Glass Photography

Black Glass Photography

Black Glass Photography

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