Archive for June, 2008

Photowalking Colorado

Monday, June 9th, 2008

When I moved to Colorado on New Years Day of this year, I realized that a whole new world of photographs opened up to me. Every day I get to experience something new, something beautiful, something that just begs for a photograph. I started carrying my trusty old backup camera, my Canon D30, with me everywhere I go.

As I go through my day, I keep my camera handy and take pictures of things I find interesting. I’ve started a new blog called Photowalking Colorado where I can post these photos. This is a no frills blog where I can regularly post a photo and a quick and dirty description. That’s it, nothing more. If you like Thomas Hawk’s web site, you’ll recognize the format straight away.

It didn’t make sense to start publishing these photos here, as this blog is mainly dedicated to the art of people photography, and I don’t want to pollute your feed reader with something you don’t necessarily want.

If you’d like to subscribe to the feed for Photowalking Colorado, you can snag it here.

Click here to visit Photowalking Colorado.

 

If you visit the blog, let me know what you think! I’m always curious what people think of my photos. Drop me a comment in this post or leave one on Photowalking Colorado.

Cheers!
Tim

Reader Highlights

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

It’s been a really long time since I highlighted some of the reader submissions to the Sublime Light Flickr Pool. I think some refreshing is in order.

But first, let me hand out a few updates about the blog. First off, long time readers have undoubtedly noticed a significant drop in the posts over the last six months. As you know I moved from Texas to Colorado during this time, and right about the time I was ready to pick things up again, we decided to start a new business. We’re opening up a retail store in our new home town. In addition to that, we’ll be opening up a studio location for our portrait photography business.

Needless to say, I’ve got my hands full.

Despite my neglect of this blog however, the traffic keeps picking up. More and more people find this blog every day, and of particular interest is the Portrait Lighting For Beginners series (which I will someday finish).

To date Sublime Light has around 600 feed subscribers and gets around 500 extra visitors a day that don’t subscribe. These visitors come from more than 110 countries! Some of these are a little surprising to me (I honestly don’t know why, but they are). For example, 30th on the list is Qatar. Or how about Vatican City. How cool is that?

You guys are coming from all over the world and are coming together based on your love of photography. Awesome!

Reader Photos
OK, enough of that. Let’s see some of my favorite photos submitted to the pool recently.

I’ll start off with Rex Lisman, the pool’s most prolific photo adder guy. Rex’s specialty seems to be senior portraits, something I haven’t dabbled in much but would like to.

I really like Rex’s style of putting these teens in a nice relaxed natural setting in Arkansas. There’s some really beautiful landscape there, and that certainly can’t hurt things. One thing I like about Rex’s work is that even with the strong settings, he still manages to get your attention on to the subject.

© Rex Lisman-http://rexlismanphotography.blogspot.com/ 1
© lisman-1783

Next on to our next biggest contributor, Anthony HB2007. Warning, don’t click to his photostream if you’re at work. Whoops. IT guys, it was an accident, I swear.

Anthony’s photostream is full of beautiful models, which certainly can’t hurt your images. Some are fully clothed. Some are…well…shall we say less than fully clothed. But there’s one thing he does well, he puts the right light on the right model.

Take this image for example. Soldis, his Icelandic model has some of the most arresting eyes I’ve seen in a long time. Anthony put the light directly on her face to really accentuate those eyes. Beautiful!

Daylight Robbery!

TimpWeb created this next very unique image. There was clearly some post production going on here, but I really like the departure from typical portraiture. One commenter says it looks like a movie poster. I’d have to agree!

guardian angel

From time to time fabsenstylsen posts a unique photo to the pool. There’s something about this next one. I dig the lighting. I’d tell you more about fabsenstylsen, but I never took German.

Neulich beim Grillen...

There are lots more fantastic photos in the pool. I’d encourage you to check it out. I’d show you more, but I’m out of time. You’ll just have to go have a look for yourself. Better yet, join the 263 members and post some of your own!

UPDATE: Now how did I know that Anthony’s photostream would receive a bunch of traffic after this post went out?

Capturing The Rockies In HDR

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

I really love the Rocky Mountains in spring. All day long I listen to the sounds of hummingbirds whizzing around, sounding just like those flying cars from the Jetsons cartoons. The breeze kicks up and the smell of earth and pine needles fills my lungs with every breath. From my front deck I look down to the Cache la Poudre river below and watch the kayakers and rafters braving the rapids below. When I’m not careful and leave a bag of trash out, a neighborhood bear comes and flings it everywhere in the middle of the night. OK that part isn’t so cool, but how cool is it having bears around?

It’s really quite beautiful, and photogenic. It makes me want to grab my camera, take a hike, and take a photo. It also makes me want to play with high dynamic range (HDR) images more. The colors that are everywhere just beg to be shown off in photos! Simply taking a photo and bumping up the saturation won’t do.

I’ve been a subscriber to Trey Ratcliff’s Stuck in Customs photoblog for quite some time now. If you like HDR, you simply must check out his site. He’s been all over the world, so much so that he could possibly say he has no home. His site is full of HDR images of exotic far away places, and some of his hometown of Austin, Texas (where I moved here from five months ago). Knowing that he has a HDR tutorial, I read up on it and decided to make some images of my own.

Hewlett Gulch
This past weekend I took the family on a little late morning hike to Hewlett Gulch, just a few miles from our house. Not the most beautiful part of the Rockies, but enough to get my HDR juices flowing.

With a 30 pound toddler on my back saying “hi” and “bye bye” to every flower, rock, and blade of grass, I huffed and puffed my way up the canyon. With a potential killer photo around every bend, I couldn’t let a little out-of-shapedness stop me from moving forward. Boy I’m looking forward to the day when my son can hike on his own.

If you look through my Flickr stream, you’ll see all the HDR photos from the day. You may notice that I found myself naturally preferring to keep the HDR “surrealness” down to a modest level. With HDR you can really go over the top and make your images look quite, well, freaky. Cool, but freaky. There was only one photo that made me get my freak on (at left). We came upon his fireplace out in the middle of the woods. There were still ashes and everything. It was quite odd, and the scene had a strange feel to it. So I really punched up the HDR look.

If you haven’t tried HDR yet, I’d encourage you to give it a try. It’s a lot of fun, and you can get a free trial version of Photomatix. Just be careful, it’s a little addictive. I’ll be posting some more HDR photos as I take them.

And as I figure it out, I’ll post some results of my next experiment: HDR panoramic images.