Saturday, March 10, 2012

2012 Gear

Oh dear, only March and the gear spending has already been off to a flying start this year.
I say gear, but that does include media. 25 sheets of A2 Canson Photographique Rag in fact. I'm looking forward to printing digital this year. So far my head has been jammed with much Colour Management knowledge. As such, I've just purchased a Spyder3 Elite Calibrator. Yes, yes, the Spyder4 was just released, however if you're currently looking for a premium calibrator at a friendly price, ImageScience has their Elite's marked down significantly. I wonder why I even bought an Express in the first place. I've been wondering this about a few purchases. It's not until you learn more about the processes that go on behind the scenes, that you realise the importance of having more control over how your monitor operates.
Good things come in threes. My copy of Lightroom 3 arrived last week, on the same day they released Lightroom 4. I'm not so concerned. I basically just need a cataloging system up and running. If I ever feel the need to upgrade, I'll be able to do so. Then again, after what I said moments ago, I really should think carefully...

Sunday, September 25, 2011

WINNING

Well. I didn't win a camera. But I still got one.
For the next month, I'm one of Olympus' lucky test drivers for the new Olympus PEN Lite E-PL3.
I can't wait to take this camera out for some street photography. It's light and far more discreet than a dslr, and the results should be interesting!

Friday, August 19, 2011

Gear and online buying

For school this semester we're doing darkroom, which of course means a bit of spending.
Although I try to support local Australian stores where possible, as a student, this becomes increasingly difficult with prices being double what that are, compared to an American online store such as B&H.

I buy main pieces of gear within Australia - such as my Pentax K5, Sigma f2.8 28-70mm, Sigma 18-200mm, flash units etc. I like to know I have a warranty for this gear. Or more importantly, an individual I can look at and explain my issue to, face to face.

When it comes to accessories and media, smaller scale items, my budget forces me off shore.
School items such as paper (Ilford MG Fibre, Ilford MG Fibre Warmtone), film, focus scopes, flash diffusers, spare batteries - are around 50% cheaper at an online store with huge buying power, like B&H. When a group of us get together and buy all of our bits and pieces, we still come out well after shipping.

When the savings quickly add up into the hundreds of dollars and the cheapest shipping takes less than five days to arrive (my most recent order arrive this morning after I placed an order on Monday afternoon), it's difficult to help the local stores and spend more money, when I could buy more for the same price.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Exhibition at Kelvin Bar

I'm a killer mess without deadlines but somehow managed to get my work together for Kelvin Bar.
You can see (and buy - if you have enough drinks) my work. Pieces from the Chelsea 902 series, a few self portraits and BIG versions of Explorations are on their wonderful purple walls.
Kelvin Bar is located at 84 High Street, Northcote. Melbz.

I've also started obsessively writing ideas in a notebook. Which may or may not be a good creative outlet. It was in the other room today when I had an idea at work and I wasn't able to write it down and felt a bit confused as to what should happen. It could also encourage (excuse?) my rabid anti-social behaviours, as I discovered when I was at Old Bar the other night and spent the 20 minutes in between sets scrawling.

Ideas keep revolving around pay phones. They're a dying breed, you know.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Forgetfulness and some exhibiting.

Whoops. Forgot to post.

However I do have some nice news, which is that Kelvin Bar in Northcote is going to be exhibiting my work, if I actually get it framed. It's to be my first non-school related exhibition of work, which means if I eavesdrop long enough, I might actually get some brutally honest feedback. Fingers crossed and whatnot.


Aside from that I've barely shot anything this month. It's holidays, but that's far from an excuse. Trying to re-coup the mind and get 'RE-CReaTiVe' like. We'll see.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Lady Gaga 'Edge Of Glory' - or the tale of a shaky camera.

Checking out Lady Gaga's 'Edge of Glory' video for the second time, I realised that there were a few things going wrong. Not just that Gaga was missing about twenty costume changes, or that her hair wasn't changing size or colour. Low budget Gaga is a bit unusual, but the crane work (camera on a crane) was just shoddy. Most likely a mixture of choreography, rehersal, the camera operator and Gaga herself, the camera work during the 'balcony' scenes is clunky and strange.

The balcony scenes feature the most amount of movement by singer, Lady Gaga, and as a result, such a scene would usually be tightly rehearsed to prevent jerky movement or incorrect composition.
My initial thought was that she was improvising the movements. However, for a music video, this seems unprofessional for both parties (crew and talent), especially considering Gaga's has previously prided herself on her sharply choreographed videos and dedicated artist.


Examples of Lady Gaga's head being cut off throughout the video:

1:44, 2:30, 1:53, 2:49, 4:49


These are a few specific examples. Watch the video yourself to get the overall effect.

I understand there may have been a 'raw' look that they were trying to achieve, especially as the song is an 80s style anthem (and who can resist a Clarence Clemons sax solo). Knowing what kind of entourage Lady Gaga has, is there any way someone could get away with shooting her badly? Or was this an error of an overzealous starlet, and an obliging crew. Afterall, Miss Stephanie Germanotta and the Haus of Gaga (Lady Gaga's creative team) did indeed co-direct the video.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Floating



I'm hoping that some time soon, the work of Denis Darzacq may make its way to Australian shores.
Here are links to my favourite series', 'La Chute' and 'Hyper'.

Darzacq looks at suspension of motion using people in familiar spaces.
This has been a favourite theme of mine for awhile now. My own interest generally lies in the differentiation of falling and flying, and the moment that can fall be between them. What comes up, must come down, but there is a moment of suspension.

HYPER 07-09
http://www.denis-darzacq.com/hyper-vignettes.htm

LA CHUTE
http://www.denis-darzacq.com/chute-vignettes.htm


Photo from:
http://shapeandcolour.files.wordpress.com/2008/06/darzacq21.jpg