The Sax - Mon’t Kiara Jazz Festival 2006

ShaolinTiger posted this at 4:46 pm on Monday, July 31, 2006 —

My first attempt at event/concert type photography, it’s quite hard to get a good feel to the picture when you are shooting from below.

The Sax

Exposure: 1/60 Aperture: f/4.5 Focal Length: 70 mm ISO: 800

There’s many ways I could have cropped this, but I like the mood this crop gives and the story it tells with the ensemble and the guitarist looking on, waiting for the next cue from the sax player.

Now just need the 70-200 f/2.8 VR :)

I’ll post the rest later.

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Kek Lok Si Buddha

Michael Ooi posted this at 1:03 pm on Monday, July 31, 2006 —

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402 views - Filed under: Photography, Still Life

D80 leaked shots - and some thoughts

Chris Chong posted this at 12:01 am on Friday, July 28, 2006 —

If you’ve been frequenting the usual photography / camera forums and blogs, you may have bumped into pictures of this camera:http://static.flickr.com/63/199574472_4ad1c360d1_o.jpg

Last week, Nikon had posted a teaser on its websites worldwide about a new, upcoming 10.2-megapixel DSLR (Click here for the DPreview article).

These leaked shots (if they prove to be real) reveal the camera to be the Nikon D80 - the successor of sorts to the highly popular Nikon D70. I believe that these shots are real. Even if they aren’t, the D70 is due for an update anyway - although it’s still a great camera by today’s standards, it is over two years old.

But what does this mean to existing D70 owners? Should you upgrade? Is this camera as good as a D200 (which has the same megapixel count)? How is it different from the D70?

I’ll try to answer these questions, but bear in mind that they’re completely based on assumptions made from these pictures, which I also assume to be true. With these disclaimers out of the way, let’s have a closer look. :)

Interesting Links

FRONT

From the front, the camera looks a lot like a souped-up D50, with more rounded lines and a smaller appearance than the D70. However, it does have the D70’s front command dial on the hand grip - something which was sorely missing from the D50.

Unlike the D70 (and like the D200), the pop-up flash release and flash mode/exposure selector have been separated into two separate buttons. No big difference in operation here.

However, there seems to be a custom button located below the AF-assist lamp, which is good. Custom buttons are always good - maybe it’ll let you select your ISO settings or to an AF lock or more. I dunno, but it’s a good sign.

BACK

The back of the camera reveals quite a number of changes. Firstly, there’s a new 2.5in LCD (bigger than the 2in one on the D70s and 1.8in one on the D70). The button layout is largely the same as the one on the D70, although the ISO and white-balance buttons (with their corresponding playback functions) have been swapped. The trash button has also moved to the top left (where the bracketting and drive-mode buttons used to be)while a new ‘OK’ button has appeared where the trash button itself used to be.

However, the fact that the ISO, white-balance and quality settings are still shared with playback buttons isn’t good news - especially if you normally enable instant review. The problem is: if you want to change you ISO settings right after a shot, you may still be in image playback mode and end up switching to thumbnail view. Not a serious problem, but it’s annoying (and is one very good reason to buy a D200 instead).

More shocking, though, is that the CF card door has now moved to the side of the camera (it used to be at the back, which was perfect :(). In fact, the shape and dimensions of the door seem to suggest an SD card slot instead (just like the D50). I can’t tell for sure, as it may just be a notch that leads to a much bigger CF card door. Only time will tell, unfortunately. In the mean time, hold off those CF card purchases if you’re planning to upgrade to a D80!

Interesting Links

TOP

Now this is interesting… The drive-mode button is now located to the right of the monochrome LCD panel, along with a new AF button. My guess is that this AF button lets you select either between single- and continuous-autofocus, or between different autofocus dynamic/spot modes. Or all of the above! This may also see the introduction of a new AF module, although there’s nothing wrong with the one on the D70 to begin with. AF mode selection was one of the weaknesses of the D70 (you could do it, but it required going through the menus, which is very *yucks!*) - nice to see Nikon doing something about it.

The more observant may also notice the disappearence of the bracketing mode button. Well, I never used the one on the D70 much anyway, so Nikon probably listened to customer suggestions here as well.

VERDICT

Well, the D80 looks to be an incremental update over the D70/D70s. The only reason I’d ever buy one is if the D80’s viewfinder offers much higher magnification (maybe closer to that of the D200’s) - so I can actually keep an eye on the depths of field while I’m framing a shot. It’s a problem for me, personally - even after jamming a DK-21m magnifying eyepiece to my D70.

I doubt the D80 will have the D200’s 5fps continuous drive or weather sealing either. Only time will tell, of course. Until then, wait for the official announcement from Nikon. :)

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2,616 views - Filed under: Equipment, Nikon

Don’t point that at me!

ShaolinTiger posted this at 1:48 pm on Thursday, July 27, 2006 —

A friends son at the recent polo match, he was trying to get out of the sun, shy but cute little boy.

I like the black and white effect with the grainyness, gives it a old vs new kind of feel. I tend to like B&W for youngsters.

I used lanatirs method of effective black and white conversion rather than just desaturating

Don't point that at me!

Exposure: 1/1600 Aperture: f/4.5 Focal Length: 70 mm Exposure Bias: 2/3 EV ISO: 1250

Also recropped with space at the right to give the little fella somewhere to roam in. Cropping kids very tightly makes them seem rather too stationary.

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560 views - Filed under: Photography, Portrait

Action or Sports Photography - My First Try - Polo

ShaolinTiger posted this at 12:50 am on Wednesday, July 26, 2006 —

Action photography is something I’ve always been interested in. Capturing the moment, getting a sense of the action.

It looks hard, and well after trying it I have to say it is.

You need good light, preferably a long expensive FAST lens with VR/IS and you have to stand/sit in the sun (Unless you have those super canngih 30,000RM lenses then you can sit in the clubhouse and shoot with your beer by your side).

I recommend setting Spot Exposure Metering for the subject, boost up the EV compensation about +0.33 or 0.7 and use continuous or servo focusing (AF-C for Nikon, not sure what it’s called on Canon Servo-mode I think).

I used Shutter Priority (S for Nikon or Tv on Canon) at about 1/1000ms.

Interesting Links

If you have a slow lens though normal focusing might work better.

As I don’t have a telephoto lens I literally had to stand in the middle of the action and had to crop some shots to bring them ‘closer’ (I was using an 18-70mm lens).

I didn’t manage to get any panning shots..or any nice bokeh (depth of focus) on the horses due to lens capability, it would have been nice to blur out the distracting backgrounds.

I could freeze the shots quite nicely and clearly though with the above settings.

Have to save up for that 70-200mm VR…poison poison (Costs about RM6000).

Anyway less talk more photos.

Capturing the Fall

Polo Action

Scored!

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Swing the Stick

Chasing the Ball

Scorer

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931 views - Filed under: Nikon, Photography, Sport/Action
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