Wednesday 4 July 2012

Standard focal length

This is the third of three exercises looking at shooting with one focal length; in this case the standard focal length of around 27-32mm for my Canon 450D. Most of the images below fit within this range, but I have added a couple that demonstrate the principle that there is limited graphical strength to help the image, this ensuring viewer is concentrated more on the subject.

Images were taken in Bath city centre and, on a later date, at Bath racacourse.

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/60, ISO 200 focal length 32mm
 An uninteresting image included to demonstrate that whatever the focal length, if your positioing is wrong then the shot will not work.

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/60, ISO 200 focal length 28mm
 To a degree, the same message here, although the focal length does allow us to see that none of the several people in the image are concentrating on the busker as the main focus of the image.

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/45, ISO 200 focal length 28mm


A better shot allowing some context  as we see some tourists with the Abbey in the background. Important to remember that using standard focal length allows for the inclusion of more context to people shots.

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/45, ISO 800 focal length 45mm
Similarly here, the standard focal length allows for inclusion of the title of the mobile van and even that it is obviously situated in a position of heavy pedestrian traffic. Again, a contextual image.


Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/60, ISO 200 focal length 35mm
 This almoat
Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/40, ISO 200 focal length 35mm

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/60, ISO 200 focal length 35mm

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f9.5, 1/60, ISO 200 focal length 32mm

Canon 450D with EF24-105 f4/L IS USM lens; f13, 1/45, ISO 800 focal length 45mm

Monday 2 July 2012

Close and involved

For this exercise, a wide angle lens is to be used. The idea is to take images close to people, endeavouring to put the viewer "right inside the situation". Not quite sure what this means - probably obvious once you see i.

I found this exercise challenging in concept, but a view of some other blogs suggested my ideas of taking random images at several opportunities was broadly correct. To be frank, I considered some of the posts to be rahter unimaginative, and several images where there was no apparent benefit from using a wide angle lens.

The images below were taken mostly in my photographic session in Bath, with a few at the end taken at the racecourse. All bar the forst one and the last three are taken using a wide angle 10-22mm lens. I have deliberately included some shots that do not work as well, in order to show comparisons.



This image is perhaps the closest to the brief of getting close to the situation. The image was taken blind by placing the camera on my lap and just shooting after viewing subject in Live View. Works well: the man's intense concentration on the subject in his lap is captured well.




This works well too - a deliberate angle to change the aspect, the shot was taken looking up almost from the ground. The wide angle lens captures the movement of the diablo in the foreground as well as the operator.



This singer provided another opportunity - the bag rather spoils the foreground.




Not a great image of this Big Issue saleswoman who was a rather reluctant subject. The wind did not help either.



The wide angle works very well here, capturing a close up of the expression as well as the sign, which must be in the shot to explain the context .The natural curvature created by the wide angle of the lens away from the subject helps to concentrate the eye on him.



Sometimes you get lucky. I was sat down looking for something to take when up popped a group of German tourists with their group leader. The wide angle captures the leader gesturing as she speaks, the rathe mixed attention of her group, and the subject of her talk in the background.



Not sure about this image of some boys in Bath tourist office. Not close enough to make the wide angle work, I think.



Definitely was close enough to the subject cleaning his sausage stall at the end of the day. The slow shutter speed actually works (unintentionally it has to be said) to exaggerate the  swiftness of the scrubbing action and the consequent head movements.





The wide angle here captures both the lad with his Spanish flag and his friends sat on the pavement.




This is the best image in my opinion. You do get a good sense of closeness to the subject (I was very close, amazing he did not notice) studying the form; the parading horses provide the context for his intense expression.



Similar here, I like the subliminal context of "Bath" in the newspaper as the punter looks off shot.



This was taken very close but works less well with minimal context and the man on the left filling up too much of the shot. Taking the image form behind works a lot less well than the two taken from the side above.

Not an easy exercise but I did pick up two things:

  1. The opportunity to get some context into the image yet obtain a good close up - the images of the punters and of the banner holder are best examples;
  2. That different angles, in particualr looking upwards can work well with wide angle - indeed essentially at times. The first two images and the German tourist image show this well.

British Journal of Photography July 2012

http://www.circelation.co.uk/floydphotography/olympians/olympians-2.jpg


By comparison to the iPad version, the July paper issue id disappointing.

The them is London, ahead of the Olympics, and the main articles are on on Zed Nelson's Tale of Two Cities, previously reviewed as part of the Bristol Festival of Photography, and on Steven Gill, another photographer from Hackney.

Gill's work seems uncoordinated. One of his main works was burying images of Hackney Wick; "Not knowing what an image would look like once it was dug up introduced an element of chance and surprise which I found appealing" he says. An example is this image:

gill_stephen_buried.jpg
Stephen Gill: Buried, Nobody, London, 2006. Accessed from http://www.photographyinprint.com/?p=4 2 July 2012
This is lost on me, as are a number of the images on http://www.stephengill.co.uk/portfolio/about. Many of these images would be seen in derisory terms were they not shot by Gill.

Much more taken by the portraits of  hopeful atheletes taken by Paul Floyd Blake, particularly the published images of the disabled swimmer Roise Bancroft:

http://www.circelation.co.uk/floydphotography/olympians/olympians-2.jpg
Floyd Blake P. (2008)  Private collection. Available from http://www.floydphotography.co.uk/ [Accessed 2 July 2012]
A very nice image, beautifully lit and winner of Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2009.

There are more graduates images, including a satirised set by Luke Smith. He wished to take images of heis and other children at parties and events but found some resisitance from other parents and officials. His series of spaces absent of people (and ironically entitled George after his son) he aimed "to get viewers to fill the void, hoping they would identify with the collective sense of loss he was trying to capture in his polemic about the censoring of images of chldhood", but also in Smith's own words, "to deflect this paranoiac way of seeing back onto them....frocing the viewer to recognize their own societal standing".  An ambitious aim and not sure that some of the featured images achieve this.