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Archive for August, 2006

Lomotomizing photographs

We've told you what Lomography is, how it works, and we've even established that, while the results are rather special, Lomography doesn't magically defy the laws of physics (aw, shucks). But what do you do if you cannot be bothered to actually buy a Lomo camera? Enter the 21st century: What we can't do with cameras, we'll replicate digitally! The upside of this is that there are quite a few different ways to Lomotomize* a photo!

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Photographing Formula One

So, you start taking photos. First, you take photos of an apple. Then, perhaps, you move on to people. If you're serious, you move on to slightly faster-moving items, such as running people, or even bicyclists. Move over, Ansel, you haven't seen anything until you've seen Andy Lees' photos - he's one of the world's top Formula 1 photographers, with a massive library of pics from tons of race tracks. Interesting enough in itself, perhaps, but far more excitingly, the man's written a guide to how he works, which was where my ears stood up and my attention was well and truly captured...

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Is Lomography physically different?

I've written about Lomography once before (if you have no idea what I'm on about, you'll probably wanna have a peek at that post first), and briefly talked about what it is, how it works, and how there seem to be a huge bunch of nutters who love the art-form (I'm one of 'em). The question that remained, though, is 'how can a camera allow you to take special photos'? After all, all cameras adhere to the same laws of physics and optics - so how do Lomo photos manage to look so distinctive and different?

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Writing a book!

Hi all, A while ago, a publisher asked me if I wanted to write a book on a topic within Photography. I'm terribly excited and humbled, and I can't wait to get started properly. Of course, this means that I won't have quite as much time to update Photocritic over the next couple of days, but I still hope to manage an update every third to fourth day or so :) I'm hyped to shreds about this project! I will probably need a bit of help from some of you guys over time (Here's your chance to have some photos published, perhaps?!), but I can't divulge too much at this time - I haven't even signed any contracts or anything yet, although I'm reasonably certain it is going though. Stay tuned, as they say on radio. Perhaps I should say "stay bookmarked", instead... - Haje

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Canon 400D / Digital Rebel XTi

I don't normally write about camera equipment launches - there wouldn't be much space for anything else on this blog if I did - but it's rather worth noting that Canon are launching their brand new baby-brother of the digital SLR family, the 400D.

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UK – Young Fashion PotY

If you like clothing, photography, and are between sixteen and twenty-five years of age, you'd be bloody nuts not to enter the Nikon Young Fashion Photographer of the Year awards!

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Make your own digital photo frame

Displaying photos is becoming a strenuous task. With services such as Photobox, you can print your photos cheaply, but who wants a stack of paper anymore? Alternatively, you could go the digital photo frame route, but the price of these devices is a bit silly, for what it is. Unless... Well, the answer is in the head-line, really. Why not make your own?

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Tell me about photo blogs

Are you a photographer occasionally writing about photography? Post a comment. Do you have your own photography blog? Post a comment. Do you know of a site who runs DIY projects that sometimes are about photography? Post a comment. Do you have a website which has some original angle on anything? Post a comment. Do you run a page which has nothing to do with anything I'd be remotely interested in? Post a comment anyway. See a pattern yet? Exactly - I'm very curious to find out more about what makes my readers tick - and of course, I'm looking for new sources from where I can pilfer ideas for interesting articles for Photocritic. Too shy to post a comment in public? Send me an email instead - get your submissions in to hajejan@photocritic.org! You can even send press releases, if you are a company, but if they are crap, prepare to be ridiculed.

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Aerial photography for a living

As some of you might have cottoned on to, I work in automotive publishing*. As such, I wade my way through thousands of press releases. Most of them are completely pointless, some of them are interesting, and others again spark my interest. There is a lot of amazing photography that happens when trying to show cars from their best angles, for example. When the World Cup was raging at its hardest a couple of months ago, I saw a photo something quite unlike the others. Basically, it was a single photo, taken from the air, of 400 Toyota Yaris cars (you may know them as Toyota Vitz or Belta, depending on where you live) parked in the shape of a St George's cross. Today, I stumbled across the blog of the photographer who did the photos...

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Panographies: Panoramas on Steroids

Do you ever look up at the sky, a towering office building, or an expansive landscape and wish your photos could capture everything you can see with your eyes? We do, so of course, there is a way to do it. Otherwise, why would we bother writing about it? :)

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So, the 550D and the 50D cost practically the same, and have different advantages. Which one would you buy?
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My books

Macro Photography Photo Workshop

Macro Photography Photo Workshop by Haje Jan Kamps My day job, if it can be called that, is being a writer. I've got one book out there so far and it's awesome, so go ahead and buy a copy! It's available from Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk, and most decent-sized bookshops, too!

To find out more, check out this post! If you want to know more about the 'being a writer' thing, check this site out.

Put another dime in the jukebox

Put another dime in the jukebox In front of you, five hyperactive men with guitars, drums, and microphones. Behind you, five thousand fans. In your hands, a camera... You're going to need more than just a little bit of good luck to pull this one off. That's where this book comes in.

With nearly a hundred fantastic gig photos, and a ton of info about how to get involved in taking photos like this yourself, you can't go wrong. Buy this book. Grab your camera. Good luck.

Street Photography: London

Street Photography: London Take a Canon EOS 450D. Attach a Canon 50mm f/1.4 lens. Hit the streets of London. See what happens.

Sounds simple - but the results are anything but. Moving, intense, and personal, Street Photography: London is a great collection of the people of London, their passions, and their dreams. Look for yourself!


About

This site is all about learning more about photography, from the incredibly insightful (rarely) to the dreadfully mundane (also, hopefully rarely) via just about everything in between.

If this website seems a little whimsical and random, then that's because the author of this blog, who for the occasion is confusing himself by writing about himself in the third person, is slightly whimsical and random himself.

Enjoy!

- Haje