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My book is finished!

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Even though it won’t go on sale for another couple of months – It’s on sale now!, things are starting to happen really quickly now. I’ve finished most of my involvement of the book, and I’ve handed it over to the project-, copy- and technical editors, designers, and publishing boffins.

They never told me quite how much work it is to write a book on macro photography. It’s been a hell of a ride, and I’ve loved every second of it.

I was first contacted by the publishers on the 10th of August last year. Today, nearly six months later, I am sending the last files of the last chapter to the publisher.

The book is already on Amazon.com (and on Amazon UK, too!), although it’s not due to go on sale for another few months, and even though the cover image isn’t the one that will be used on the final book.

58,560 words. 232 photograps. 288 pages. 10 chapters. 2 appendices. 164 days. And my name on the front cover. My first book.

macrocover.jpgSure, there’s still a lot of work that needs doing (a few more photos need to be sourced, I need to do the Author Reviews of each chapter, and there are a lot of other bits and pieces), but the vast bulk of the work is behind me.

I can’t express how I feel right now, but I can’t stop grinning.

Once the book has a proper, official release date set by the publishers (John Wiley & Sons — yup, that’s the same guys who do Cliff’s notes, the For Dummies books, etc), I’ll post some excerpts for you guys, so you can see what it’s all about. For now, I’m going to re-claim some of the life I haven’t been living over the past 5 months or so, and heading to the pub.

The most obvious poll ever…

n

Would you buy my Macro Photography book?

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Time for some Frame Storming!

Just after we run our ‘photography with rules’ article, Popular Photography magazine comes along and beats us to it with an even better idea, by declaring January 21st as ‘international shooting-all-the-time’ day!

The concept? Take a photo at least every 5 mintutes for 15 hours of the day. But surely, that is complete and utter madness? Well, no — much for the same reasons that stream of consciousness helps writers getting in touch with their inner voice, and much like brain storming is a much-loved route to corporate grandeur, forcing yourself to keep photographing even when your shutter finger hurts and your ideas are drier than a nun’s hoo-hoo can be a way to develop as a photographer.  

 

Charge up your camera, load it with at least a 1GB card (or have seven or more rolls of 36-exposure film on hand), and be prepared to shoot, shoot, shoot.

Your assignment is to take at least one picture every five minutes during the day. You get eight hours off for sleep, and another hour for…well, stuff you wouldn’t want to involve photography. That’s a minimum of 225 photos.

Your subjects are all up to you. This is to become a better photographer, not just a photo opportunist. That is, you don’t want to be someone who only gets a photo when a postcard-style setting presents itself.

We improve as photographers by forcing ourselves to shoot; by finding the photograph when there doesn’t seem to be one; by studying the light — every kind of light we encounter — and seeing the photo potential in it. Capturing a great image of Angelina Jolie under a softbox is easy. But how about that candy wrapper in the gutter? Or that group of friends posing under a mixture of natural, incandescent, and fluorescent light? Can you still make an outstanding photo when the subject and conditions aren’t perfect?

The time pressure, not to mention the pressure to make as many of the 225-plus photos as good as possible, will be intense. Maddeningly so, I suspect.

But I’m willing to take the chance because I know that by the time January 22 dawns, I will have grown as a photographer. And maybe I’ll even have produced a few amazing images.

I love the idea. If you do well, you can even win a Pentax K100D, so check out the full write-up over on Popular Photography, and get those batteries on charge.

My extra challenge: If you do the frame-storming challenge, put it all into a flickr stream, and tell me how it went!

(thanks, matt, for the tip)


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Dogma photography

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As a kinda-sorta follow-up from my most recent critique, where several of the commenters mentioned that they felt that their photography got better when they imposed rules on themselves, I started thinking: Which other constraints can you put on photography?

First of all — why? Well, in a machoistic kind of way, making rules about the way you take photos is a creative way to think about photography. Take this restraint, for example: For a day, only take photos that have a strong diagonal. It means you start thinking about framing your photographs in a completely different way than you would otherwise. Perhaps you don’t get home with a single photo that is actually worth using, but the lessons you learn from the experiment will come in very handy for later photography assignments. 

 

So, what sort of constraints should you be considering? Well, if you are hardcore enough, why not try and work through this list, from start to finish? If you do decide to try — as always — post a comment to the thread, because I’d absolutely love to see the results of this.

Give it a shot. At worst, you lose a bit of time, and at the very least, you’ll become a more experienced and varied photographer out of it. Perhaps you are even helped towards developing your own photographic style?

Try these rules…

Squaring circles is a long-standing Flickr meme: Taka a photo of something round, and crop it so it becomes a square photo. There are nearly 50,000 photos to use as inspiration, so it’s a good one to get started on!

The Don’t-look-now challenge: Take a series of photos without looking through the viewfinder. Learn to estimate the field of view of your lenses, and try to frame the photos according to the ‘feel’

The 5 shot challenge discussed towards the end of the ‘thinking of photos as paintings’ thread: Take a maximum of 5 photos in a day.

The car challenge: Include a toy car in your photograph.

The ‘my lightmeter broke‘ challenge: You can look through the viewfinder to focus and frame, but you can’t look at what the light meter tells you. Set your camera to fully manual and an appropriate ISO value, and see how well you can estimate shutter times and apertures.

The 20-step challenge: Take 20 steps, then find something to photograph from where you are standing, and click the shutter. It’s an observation game more than anything, but it’s a lot of fun, especially if you compare your results with friends walking the same route or similar.

The interloper challenge: Subtly work a person doing something silly into otherwise good photos. Get them to do Phoons, for example.

Interpret this: Take a line or a verse from a piece of music, and try to illustrate it through photography. If nobody can guess what song it is, try again.

The shoot-from-the-hip challenge: Walk through town, and see how many people you can photograph without being noticed.

Create a longer-term project. Have you seen Smoke, where the main character has to take a photo of the same street at the same time every morning? That sort of thing. Or perhaps you can convince your family to document the tides of time?

Find patterns, whether there are any or not, and start a project bigger than yourself. Like the exactitutes project, which is studying stereotypes and how people let themselves conform to them

Try taking square portraits in black and white, like in our Newyear’s challenge.

The focus challenge — set your lens to a focus somewhere in between infinity and the closest focal range, and don’t change it. All your photos have to be taken at this focus.

The goofy challenge: Collect photos with a common theme. Need some to get you started? Try this PhotoJoJo thread, or have a look at my own project: Locks on toilets.

Frame Storming is like brain storming: Keep taking photos for a whole day, regardless if you have any inspiration or not.

Take a photo a day for a week, but you can only take them on a low-quality camera: A web-cam, a mobile phone camera, or similar. It’s a good way of doing abstact stuff because you can’t get everything you want to into the frame most of the time, and makes you focus on composition and lighting — you have no other parameters to play with!

Face-off challenge: Take a series of portraits, but you’re not allowed to show any part of their face.

Finally, if you are getting the feel for this whole ‘photography with constraints’ thing, try Digital Photo Challenge. They’ve got weekly challenges (along with 24 hour challenges etc). I once tried to submit a photo to every challenge for 6 months. It’s a nightmare, but the commenting and the feedback you get is a great development tool. Just don’t be disheartened: The photos that win aren’t always the best photos: DPChallenge is a bit of an elitist society. Still, worth trying it for a laugh!

Can you think of any other challenges? Post them in the comments!


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Competitions on Photocritic

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IMG_9827-copy.jpgThe hawk-eyed among you will have noticed that we’ve got a couple of new features here on Photocritic. The most noticeable is a competitions calendar in the sidebar on the Photocritic home page.

You might have spotted that I’ve every now and again included some competitions into the site. This is because I love the idea of using competitions to turn you into a better photographer. Sadly, keeping a complete list of photography competitions up to date is damn near impossible, especially because that would detract from some of the other things I would like to talk about here on Photocritic. Instead, I’ve teamed up with the gang over at Photo Competitions. You should probably subscribe to their news feed anyway, but just in case you forget about entering a competition, you will have a reminder in the sidebar!

The other news item is that I’ve started promoting Earth Shots a bit more, by including their ‘photo of the day’ in the sidebar of the article pages. I really enjoy their photos, and quite frequently they serve as a reminder of why I became a photographer in the first place — to capture some of the beauty we surround us with.

Photo Competitions and Earth Shots — Welcome to Photocritic!


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Turn your camera upside down

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upsidedown.jpgHave you ever thought about why digital compacts with built-in flashes have such an obvious shadow on them? Well, obviously it’s because the camera is too damn small to get some distance between the lens and the flash. Quite apart from the problem with red eyes (which, luckily, is easy to avoid), it means that the shadow thrown on your subjects is annoying. 

 

You can reduce the badness of built-in flashes in many ways: You can create a flash diffuser (another one), but these generally only work on off-camera flashguns, or larger built-in units. For compacts, you can try building an on-camera reflector, which helps lots.

If you have nothing at hand, though, you might just like this nutty idea: Turn your camera upside-down! I have no faith in the method whatsoever, but if nothing else, it will make people laugh, so this tip falls in the same category as the Pez-dispenser in your hotshoe or the umbrella-hat flash diffusor!


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Who uses macro photography?

As some of you know, I’m currently writing a book about macro photography. As part of this, I’m writing an appendix on the commercial uses of macro, only to realise that I don’t know that many professions that use macro- and micro photography as part of their everyday life.

So… I’m turning to you, my faithful and lovely readers, to appeal to your wisdom. Can you think of any fields where macro photography is used regularly?

I’ve come up with the following:

  • Forensics
  • Research science
  • Food photography
  • Jewelry catalogues

… What else can you think of? Pretty please leave a comment — you can be anonymous if you want to!


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Quick Poll: Your favourite subject?

Sweet and simple: What’s your favourite thing to take photos of?

(If you want to add something that isn’t on the list, just click ‘add’, and you can type in your own

What is your fave photography subject?

  • Add an Answer

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(also remember that you can look at — and vote on — our past polls!


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Wanna write for us?

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pencils.jpgIf you’ve been following Photocritic for a while, you can’t have missed the fact that we’ve had some world-class Guest writers involved recently. RJ Davis’ article on paper negatives was very well read indeed, Anna’s introduction to portraiture went down a storm, and Alecu’s rally racing photography article was rather well received, too.
 

Would you be interested in writing something?

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Do you love photography? Would you like to have a go at writing for an extremely popular photography blog? Check out this post, and read a couple of our earlier contributed guest articles to see what I’m looking for.

Also, don’t worry if you feel your writing isn’t good enough. It’s the factual content, and the opinions that matter. I’ve worked as an editor for a long time, and I’ll work with you to turn your writing into a sharply written, publishable piece. Unlike all the drivel I normally post in my Photocritic blog, then :-)

(Pencil tips image courtesy of Stansholic.com)


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Dammit, you blinked!

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blinkandyoullmissit.jpgIf you’ve ever taken a photo of a group of people, you’re probably used to the chant of ‘oh no, I blinked’, usually from that obnoxious little blonde that you can’t stand the sight of. But did you know that there is actually some science behind taking photos of people, and whether they blink or not?

Behold – the guide to avoiding people’s half-closed, semi-drugged looks! 

 

People who always blink

As a photographer, you eventually come across people who always seem to blink in photos. They probably aren’t aware they are doing it, but they are – and rather consistently, too. This isn’t a coincidence, it’s actually an effect of the way modern flashguns work. New, high-tech flashguns use a pre-flash to measure the light available, and then shoot the ‘proper’ flash a fraction of a second later. This happens so quickly that you don’t even notice it – it looks like a single flash. Some people — especially some athletes and top gamers — have very fast reactions, however, and will blink as a reaction to the first flash, so by the time the photo is actually taken, you are photographing their half-closed eyes.

So how do you avoid it? Well, there’s nobody who can react fast enough to close their eyes on a single flash (it’d mean you would literally have light-speed reactions, and that’s physically impossible), so all you need to do is to avoid the first flash. There’s no button on a flashgun or a camera anywhere that says ‘turn off pre-flash’, but there are settings you can change that does this.

sidebyside01.jpgKnowing that the flashgun uses the pre-flash for measuring light gives a hint: Just prevent it from doing light measurements! You can do this by using the flashgun in manual mode: Set the flash output yourself. To find out how much flash you need, either learn how to use your flash (there’s a rather excellent article about this on the Digital Camera website), or just use the trial-and-error method.

Alternatively, you can use the Exposure Lock function (circled in red on the D400 400D on the left here) that exists on most advanced cameras. By pressing the button, you are forcing the camera to do the light metering it needs to do. When you are ready to take the photo, it won’t bother doing any measuring, which means that there is no pre-flash, and your photo-victims won’t be blinking!

Avoiding blinking in groups

I found a wicked little article on LiveScience.com titled Picture Perfect: How to Make Blink-Free Holiday Photos, which goes into the science of taking blink-free photos of people. It’s actually quite a funny read (if you’re a geek, like me)

“At any given moment for a typical person, their eyes are likely to be blinking about 4 to 5 percent of the time,” said physicist Piers Barnes of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization. “This is fine if you only want to take a photo of one person, but once you start adding extra people, then your chances of getting an unspoiled photo start dropping.”

Excellent, yeah? Thought so. Now go read the article :)

(The livescience article is via this comment)


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Photograph of the Year competition

Sweet baby jesus, I’m actually rather hyped about the PhotographyCorner’s 2006 Photograph of the Year contest. They’ve got a massive $14K worth of prizes, too.

n

Do you enter photo competitions?

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I’ve always thought that competitions are a great way to sharpen up your skills as a photographer. There are a lot of sites out there where you battle it out for bragging rights (Digital Photo Challenge used to be my favourite, but they went down-hill a while back), but there are an increasing number of competitions where you can win serious stuff as well.

The newest kid on the block is PhotographyCorner, who are going all-out with their competition. They’ve got some big-name sponsors, too, including iStockPhoto, Bibble Labs, Lensbabies, and Lowepro! No wonder, then, that they’ve got $14K worth of prizes up for grabs.

The competition is fierce tough, with lots of really high quality entries. You can get an idea of the level that is on display on the PC 2006 PotY website. Even if you decide not to enter, it’s worth having a click-about to get some ideas for your next projects.

If you’re up for entering, check out the PhotographyCorner.com 2006 Photograph of the Year Contest page for more information, and then get your entries in. I’d suggest you do enter, even if you don’t have the biggest of faith in your photography skills – The only way to improve your work is to practice, and entering compos might be just what you need to kick your inspiration into high gear!


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New year's challenge: Square portraits!

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thumb-besquare.jpgRight, I don’t have a lot of time to do a post today, but I just thought out something pretty cool – You all know what I look like, but I have no idea what you all look like. So how about a square portrait challenge?

Rules: The picture has to be perfectly square, has to be in black and white, and has to feature yourself.

…. Go!

My entries, to serve as some inspiration, or something, are below. Take the photo, post it on Flickr, Deviantart or something, and then post a comment below!

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besquare-5.jpgbesquare-7.jpgbesquare-8.jpg

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Don't ignore Paper Negatives!

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brass.jpgSo, you fancy yourself a bit of a photographer, do you? Awesome, that makes two of us. Or, judging by the number of people regularly visiting his blog, a few thousand of us. If you’ve ever played around with pinhole photography (and if you haven’t, you totally should), you’ll have stumbled across Paper Negatives – or the idea of using photosensitive paper rather than film – to make photos.

My good friend R. James Davis (check out his website, his photograhy rocks) recently wrote a wicked little piece about what Paper negatives are, what they are, and how (and why) they are used.  

 

Not all photography is as simple as squinting into the viewfinder and pushing the clicky shutter button. Enter the world of alternative photographic processes, and take a look at this, one of my favorite little monsters…

The paper negative is an analog photographic technique which involves replacing the usual film with photographic printing paper. Roll-film formats are sometimes used, but most work is done with large-format cameras, which normally use sheet film. The larger sheets of paper are much easier to work with. In general, paper negative photography utilizes only black and white papers, although it is possible (but more complicated) to use color printing papers as well.

The paper negative process was developed by William Talbot in the 1830s. His process, the calotype, was the first by which many positives (prints) could be made from a single original negative. Although the materials and some of the methods have changed, the basic process remains the same: expose a sheet of paper coated with silver halide emulsion; chemically develop the image, producing a negative; expose a second sheet of paper by placing the negative on top and shining a light through; chemically develop the positive on the second sheet. Repeat as necessary.

Where and why are they used?

Modern paper negatives are used by those experimenting with pinhole cameras and those who wish to capitalize on the medium’s limitations–and therefore expressive potential. Good paper negatives are a challenge to produce: the emulsions have very limited exposure latitude and tend to be extremely contrasty.

Further, paper emulsions are pretty insensitive to light, and usually sensitive to green and/or blue light, so exposures tend to be long, even with normal-aperture lenses. Use a pinhole in place of the lens, and you’re going to be there a while. Reciprocity failure usually extends exposure time even further. Indoors, under tungsten lighting, exposure time may be several hours, mainly because of the general dimness of the lights and their low color temperature.

Why bother?

What attracts photographers to paper negatives? Well, they’re cheaper than sheet film; have characteristic limitations which can be exploited for artistic effect; and, well, for being so simple, they’re a challenge to master. Plus, there’s lots of room for experimentation, both in exposure and chemical process. And finally, it’s satisfying to hang up a nice photograph you went through hell to make.


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Merry christmas and NY!

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fireworks.jpgWow, I can’t believe it’s Christmas already. If you celebrate it, have a fabulous celebration, and if you don’t, have peaceful time anyway!

As for new year’s – I’m going to Edinburgh again this year, to celebrate Hogmanay. Knowing those nutty Scotts, it could get quite mental, but I’m looking forward to it lots.

Updates will probably be somewhat limited over the holiday season for various reasons, but I’ll be back stronger than ever in 2007!


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A new meaning to 'tele-photo'

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Mobile telephones start having better and better phones – most of them are currently between two and three megapixels, and the vast bulk of them even have digital zooms on them. But what about optical zoom? Well, not a lot of that, yet…

At first, I shunned cell phone cameras, but after I bought a decent-quality Sony Ericsson with a 2mpx camera, I’ve actually used it quite a few times. Quality still leaves something to be desired, but some times it’s better to have a bad photo than not to have a photo at all.

Now, it seeems as if the accessory companies are warming up to the idea of camera phones, with a series of telephoto lens attachments for cell phones. Tele-Phone, meet Tele-Photo… 

 

The units are made by Brando, and are available for sale right now.

Itching to get in close with your cameraphone? Check out this telescopic lens attachment, which turns your Nokia or Sony Ericsson into a zooming machine. Slightly more conspicuous than just snapping off a shot normally, the lens pops onto the back with a mount, and gives you up to 6x optical zoom.

Find out more, and see some example shots, check out Esato, Digital Lifestyles, and over at Gizmodo UK.

The lenses are available from Brando.


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The Lensbaby lens

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lensbaby1.jpgWhy would you put a $100 lens on a $8,000 camera? Well, because even the professional photographers have to go back to their roots, and re-learn the passion of photography. The Lens Baby can help.  

 

I use the Lensbaby with my Canon EOS 1Ds Mark II. Of course, the logical first question is, “Why put a $100 lens on an $8,000 camera?” The only answer is that the Lensbaby offers a new frontier in creative freedom, fun, and challenge. With the soft accordion focusing collar, I can shift the area of sharp focus by shifting the lens in any direction. And, with each shift, surrounding areas are rendered with a soft blur or streaking.

Of course, similar effects can be created in Photoshop CS, but there is a huge difference in seeing the effect as you shoot versus adding the effect in the post-capture processing phase.

Read more about the Lens Baby over on Zuga, and once you’re convinced, check out the Lens Baby website for more information, and how and where to get one!

Do any of you have good experiences with the lens baby? Why not add your review – or a link to your review, if you’ve posted it elsewhere – below?


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Olan Mills update

A couple of days ago, Photocritic broke the story about Olan Mills going under. It was a weird one, because I don’t generally run corporate news stories like that. However, the story struck a chord with me, because I know what it is like to be struck down without a job as a photographer, and how much trouble it can cause.

I know that this type of thing is a nightmare for those concerned: Sure, the people who were waiting for prints are ripped off, and are left without presents and money, but the real victims of this one are the studio staff and day-to-day employees of the chain. Strangely, it appears as if our article was the only one considering much of this aspect (except for the Mirror, who ran the tabloid-a-licious headline “1,000 workers sacked by recorded phone message“). Other news media also picked up the story, including local press (2, 3), but other than that it has been oddly quiet.

Except from right here, of course. Lots of Olan Mills employees found the Photocritic article. Among the stories, there are some truly moving stories of the adversities the staffers and lower management of Olan Mills, along with a dose of fear about what is going to happen in the future.

Not exactly the kind of Christmas story you want to read, but it’s worth having a look

Comments on this thread are turned off, please add any comments or insights you might have to the original thread.


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Getting your camera repaired

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konicaminolta_dimagez2.big.jpgAnother long-term reader and frequent-commenter had a question for us, and because I’m such a nice guy, I couldn’t let this one go, because I feel his pain: He has ruined his camera, and doesn’t know what to do next… 

 

I’m facing having my camera repaired, and although its not a DSLR, its not a point-and-shoot either. Its a DimageZ2 and I think its good until I save up for a full DSLR. As you know Sony bought out Konica Minolta’s Digital imaging side so now I’d have to send it to them for repair and its not much less than I paid for it in the first place.

So in general is sending a unit back to the MFG for repair always the best? Are the other resources and are these places also willing to work on consumer cameras. An extra question: are they nice? I went to a a camera store to ask about repair and I didn’t leave with a good feeling

Ai, Stu, it seems as if you’ve got yourself a nasty pickle there, mate.

If your exhaust on your car breaks, you can generally replace it with an off-the-shelf solution, or if a window in your house gets broken, you have lots of choice for who repairs it.

Digital cameras are vastly different: They share very few parts, and the ones that are shared (imaging chips, card reader units, all that stuff) is generally soldered in, so they can’t easily be replaced. Even if you could replace, say, a card reader, the time it would take to un-solder the old unit and re-solder a new one would make the whole thing un-worth-while. Instead, the repairmen will replace the faulthy part and everything that is connected to it. In your case, you don’t mention what’s actually wrong with it (Electronic? Battery related? Mechanical?), but in the example of the card reader, you’re looking at a main board replacement. Generally, the manufacturers don’t make a lot more main boards than cameras (they make a few, in case of warranty faults), so if your main board breaks, you are basically shit out of luck.

That’s the way with all consumer electronics, unfortunately: If the remote control for your TV breaks, you might have to buy a new TV. If the screen on your mobile phone goes, you need a new mobile, and if your camera kicks the bucket – even if it’s a really small and nominally cheap part that breaks – it is generally not replacable, and you’re left without any camera.

There are very few manufacturers who actually offer repairs for compact digital cameras anymore. If anything goes wrong with your camera in the warranty time, they’ll send you a new one, because it isn’t economically feasible to get an engineer to fix it. Because there are so few people who deal with it, most manufacturers won’t have a distribution network for parts in place, and all borked cameras will get returned to the manufacturer, instead of distributing parts. This means that the only people who can actually do anything about a broken camera are the manufacturers themselves.

The case is much the same for dSLR cameras, in fact. Generally, they don’t break (although they might need a sensor clean or similar every now and again) but if they do, you’re out of luck, and the item has to be replaced. For cameras which are in abundant supply (such as the popular consumer cameras from Canon and Nikon), a number of spare parts are available, both off ‘scrapped’ cameras and freshly produced parts destined for the repair industry. Professional dSLR cameras are a different matter altogether, because they are built for heavy abuse, and generally have more servicable parts (shutter mechanisms, mirror lock-up mechanisms, movable parts etc are all designed to be easily replaceable).

To answer your question – I wouldn’t hold in high hopes that anyone can put humpty dumpty back together again. Sorry. If I were you, I’d hurry up and put a d-SLR on your Christmas list…


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Becoming a photographer

The other day, I got an email – somewhat out of the blue from Miranda, who wanted to interview me for her High School paper on careers. She chose ‘photographers’, and found me somehow – presumably via this web-site.

Anyway, she sent over a list of quite interesting interview questions, and as I’m a right rambling mofo, I went on and on and … etc. But anyway: I figured that there might be quite a few other people out there who are young, aspiring to be photographers, and have questions about how to go about it, so I decided to just publish my answers.  

 

What is the most important thinfs to know when entering the field of photography?

You need to have a serious, sound technical knowledge of how cameras work, how light works, and how it all combines into a photograph. Without this knowledge, you will never be able to get the pictures you want. However, there’s good news: The technical side isn’t that difficult, and can be learned.

The second thing you need can’t be taught or trained, it’s something you either have, or manage to build up over time. It’s an eye for a good photo. It’s a difficult yet important part of being a good photographer.

The final thing you need to be is a people person. Photography is usually about the people in front of the lens, and if you can’t make them relax and be themselves, the photos will never come out well.

What is your favotrite part about photographing?

My absolute favourite part about photography is being able to show people things they could have seen, but never did. That’s one of the reasons why macro photography is such a big passion of mine.

Also, I did a whole article about this – see here.

did you go to school at all for photography? If so how long and did this help in your carrer?

Nope, not at all.

Do you think it is important for one to go to school for photography or anything related?

Not really. As I say, you do need to take a good picture, but there’s no reason why internet research and a lot of practice can’t make up for it. if you’re planning to set up for yourself, it makes more sense to take a course on how to run a business – the pitfalls, challenges, dealing with staff, taxes, all that kind of stuff.

Ultimately, you have to be able to take a good photo. I’ve seen people who’ve finished photo college with a decent grade who couldn’t photograph their way out of a wet paper bag, and I’ve seen non-formally-trained amateurs who would put Magnum photographers to shame.

what is the biggest challange in photography?

Understanding people, and what makes them tick. Photography is very much about telling stories, and while you are using a visual medium to do so, you still need to be a good storyteller, and have an eye for what appeals to people

What is your favorite thing to photograph and why?

I really like doing portraits of people close to me. Invariably, they tell me they aren’t photogenic, and frequently, I prove them wrong. There’s something special about managing to capture people you know well, because you know their quirks and mannerisms – things they might not even be aware of themselves. When they say ‘this photo looks a bit odd’, their spouse / friends / families say ‘but that’s SO you!’. That’s a thrill.

> ~Do you believe that in some cases being a great photographer can come naturally?

If you mean to ask ‘is talent a part of being a photographer’, then the answer is yes. As I said, I think the main part of photography is the part that can’t be taught – you have to build up a visual thought pattern, and you have to be able to visualise an image, the lighting, and all that.

It all depends what you want to do with your photography career. You can work at some crappy photography studio somewhere, which rakes in the cash by taking formulaic, boring, and utterly pointless portrait photos. Individually, the photos are quite good, but after you’ve seen a week’s worth of their output, you realise that every pose, every lighting setup and every shot is exactly the same. That kind of stuff is soul-crushing, and it’s not photography: you’re merely a technician in a machine, limited by the limit on time and creativity.

The time it takes between the first time you pick up a camera and when your photos start turning out the way you envisioned depends heavily on talent, so yes, that part can come naturally.

When did you first get interested in photography and why?

Honestly? I totally don’t remember. I think I’ve always been interested. I’ve had SLR cameras for as long as I could walk, and I bought my first digital compact camera (a Casio QV-2000) in 1998. I’ve just never looked back.

Are you a Freelance photographer or are you hired on to a newspaper, magizene, etc…?

I was never a staff photographer, but I freelanced for about 3 years, before I decided I’d rather have photography as a hobby than a job, and changed my career path. I’m now the web editor of a car magazine.

Do you prefer being freelance or being hired on?

Both have definite upsides. Freelancers generally pull in more money over time, but you have to work hard to get to that point, and you have to put up with all the hassle of running your own company.

Beign a staff photographer means more regular working hours (well, it normally does, anyway), higher job security, and you don’t have to worry about getting your own equipment.

Personally, I would strongly suggest starting out as a staff photographer if possible. You’ll get a lot of silly jobs and all that, but the connections you’re building are invaluable, and it helps having been part of a working environment, so you learn the language used, and know what your picture editors are looking for.

Do you prefer Digital or film photography and why?

Digital. All the way. Because it’s faster. Because it’s faster, you learn quicker. Immediate feedback means that when you realise one set of camera settings isn’t working, you can immediately make a change, and see what happens. That level of control means that you can take note of what happens when you do A, B and C, so the next time you’re facing a similar problem or situation, you’ll start doing the right thing immediately.

Also, for the time being, as long as you are working on press / magazines, there’s no real reason to shoot with film anymore. If you’re an advertising / studio photographer, the case might be made for medium or large format, and if you’re a hobbyist, you should definitely have a go at photographing with film, doing your own developing and copying and all that.


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Adobe to hand out Photoshop CS3 Beta?

According to a press release on the Adobe site, the company is about to release a Beta of Adobe Photoshop CS3… 

 

Adobe is delivering a widely available Photoshop CS3 beta to enable customers to more easily transition to the latest hardware platforms, particularly Apple’s new Intel-based systems. The beta is available as a Universal Binary for the Macintosh platform, as well as for Microsoft® Windows® XP and Windows Vista computers. The final shipping release of Adobe Photoshop CS3 is planned for Spring 2007.

The software can be downloaded http://labs.adobe.com, in the early hours Pacific Standard Time on December 15. Right now!

It appears you can try the beta for a limited time (3 days? 28 days?), but that it will be usable for a longer period if you have a valid CS2 serial number. I haven’t had time to download it myself yet, but if I find out anything more I’ll update it. If any of you get it and learn anything interesting – post a comment!

Update: Someone already posted a first preview and screen shots, too!

(via)


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Olan Mills goes bankrupt

olanmills.jpg

Just heard a disturbing piece of news, which was confirmed by the Olan Mills website yesterday: Olan Mills has gone into administration, effective immediately.

According to my source, the UK chain has tried to sell its business for a while, unsuccessfully. The staff have been told they will not be paid for this month, and the area managers have been told to lock up the stores and go home. There have been reports of some store employees taking equipment home (cameras, computers, studio lights, etc), holding it as ‘hostage’ against unpaid wages.

Can anyone shed any light on if this affects the US company as well? It’d be rather surprising to see one of the most famous portrait studio chains go tits-up…

 

Is the closure of Olan Mills affecting you?

View Results

 

 

 

When I posted this blog story the first time around, there was no news about this on Google News or anywhere else, but the UK website posted the following:

Olan Mills Holdings Ltd / Olan Mills Ltd (both in administration) (“the Companies”)

Richard Philpott and Myles Halley both of KPMG LLP were appointed in the High Court as Joint Administrators to the Companies on Thursday 14 December 2006.

Following an initial review of the business and its finances, the administrators regret to inform you that the Companies are unfortunately no longer able to continue trading. All stores have now closed and we are unable to fulfil any outstanding orders or appointments.

The administrators are also unable to make any refunds of monies paid. If you are owed money by either of the companies you will need to register your claim by writing to the administrators at 2 Cornwall Street, Birmingham, B3 2DL giving details of the amount you have paid.

At this stage we do not anticipate that any funds will be available to enable a distribution to unsecured creditors.

It is obviously a worrying situation, because Olan Mills was a major employer in the photography sector in the UK. It is possible to argue that the quality or type of work they were delivering was a bit on the ‘conveyor-belt’ side, but ultimately, this item of news about people and their jobs…

So, what do you guys think that the closure of Olan Mills is going to mean for photographers? Will there suddenly be a lot of portrait photographers looking for jobs — which is bad for the industry as a whole, because employers can get away with paying even less to their photographers? Will this closure be the forewarning of the closure of other large chains? What can we, as photographers, do to help each other?

Sadly, I don’t have any of the answers – several of my close friends were affected by the closure, and they are facing a particularly depressing Christmas this year, with no money and no jobs to go to in the new year. My condolences to all who are affected, and the warmest wishes of a healthy rebound in 2007. Just don’t give up hope.

Finally – what do you make of all this? The comments that have been coming in have been insightful and heartfelt so far, but I’d love to hear from more of you.


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