Jul
28
2009
Going through my pictures I found some that I took at the live butterflies exhibition this year in the National Museum of Natural History. If you are into Macro-photography or just want to take good close-up shots of butterflies in a natural habitat this is your opportunity.
The butterflies are enclosed in a relatively small (natural) area so is easy to get good shots. Just be mindful to look down on every step you take. Also I recommend to dress comfortably and be ready to sweat sauna style as the humidity levels in that room must be a 101% in order to make it comfortable for the butterflies.
Here are some of my shots.
no comments | tags: insects, Macro | posted in Macro
Jun
8
2009
Yesterday, I read a post from the Strobist.com about water drop photography which is something I’ve been wanting to explore for a while; or I should say something I’ve been wanting to try again. I’ve tried it once in the past but it was a total failure. This time I did my homework and then went on to the task.
Humbly speaking, I was amazed by how the pictures turned out and very pleased by how the colors reflected on the water and the clarity of the pictures. I already have ideas of things I will do next time to get better results but that’s just part of the learning process. For those of you thinking “how boring can photographing a drop of water must be”, let me tell you I never thought doing this would be so much fun and interesting. We certainly can’t appreciate what happens when a drop hits a surface because of the speed at which it occurs, but once we’re able to freeze the moment we start appreciating the physics behind drops, tension, momentum, kinetic energy, sound and all those things some of us studied in college but never look at again.
For this attempt I used two strobes positioned left and right of the camera with different colored gels. Here are some of the pictures. (Note: There is no Photoshop involved here, I only use a batch process to add the copyright stamp, other than that what you see is what I got straight from the camera):
no comments | tags: Lighting Experiment, Strobist, Water Drop | posted in Lighting Experiments
Apr
27
2009
I know that I’m a bit late for this post but I wanted to share these pics. On March 31st around 7:00 AM I met with my friend Daniel at the Jefferson Memorial to take pictures of the Cherry Blossom in DC. We were late as we were supposed to be there by 6:30 to catch the sunrise. At that time the area was already full of photographers which I guess is normal during this season, despites the fact that it still pretty cold during this time of the year.
Below, some of my shots:
no comments | tags: Cherry Blossom, Jefferson Memorial, Washington DC, Washington Monument | posted in Places, Washington DC
Apr
22
2009
[UPDATE: 04/22/2009]
I have added link to the full size images since I noticed the quality looks pretty bad on some monitors because the images are reduced to fit in the blog.
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Last night I received a certificate from Adobe stating that I’m now an ACE (Adobe Certified Expert) in Advanced ColdFusion 8. Well great news for me but why do I mention that in my photoblog? Well considering the importance of the certificate I wanted to have an electronic copy of it. I also wanted to post it on my Tech blog as I don’t really have an assigned office so, the certificate will probably be in a drawer for sometime whithout getting seeing by anyone.
This reminded me of a post I saw once at the Strobist about photographing a historic piece of paper. I couldn’t find the post (if anyone knows the link please post it in the comments) but he explained how he gave the paper picture a 3D (more realistic) look instead of having a flat looking one. So, what a great opportunity to put that technique to test.
First the photo with on-camera flash, diffuser on, cranked down to about 1/32 and pointing directly to the paper:

Flash on-camera

On-camera flash Zoomed in
Now the picture with off-camera flash, laying flat on the table pointing towards the side of the paper. I can’t remember the flash power but it was somewhere between 1/16 – 1/32. The faded bar is part of the certificate’ design:

Off Camera flash laying down on table

Off-camera flash Zoomed in
Now, that’s some nice paper texture! The first one looks more like a scanned image (flat) and the off-camera flash looks more real. One more example of the many advantages of using off-camera flashes.
1 comment | tags: Lighting, Lighting Experiment, paper photo technique, Photographing paper | posted in Lighting, Lighting Experiments
Apr
20
2009
The first meeting of the Strobist DC meetup group was a total sucess. We had a mixed crowd, from folks with lots of baggage in photography to those who are just starting, but we all had one thing in common, we want to learn more about off camera lighting techniques.
As each member entered the room they were greet by us (me and my wife), then asked to take a sit at the hot couch. The hot couch was surrounded by 3 flashes; each one with a different purpose. One to the left of the subject looking downwards lighting only the face by using a snoot. One behind the subject, lighting only the fireplace using two gels (orange and red) simulating that it was on. Another flash mounted on the camera (front of subject) pointing to the ceiling used for fill-in flash. Here are some if the results:

Self portrait @ Strobist DC kickoff
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1 comment | tags: Lighting, Strobist DC | posted in Lighting, Lighting Experiments, Meetup Groups, Strobist DC
Apr
13
2009
I received my Lumiquest FXtra set and decided to test it right away. Below are a couple of the shots:


If you wonder how was I able to get a model so quick. Well, that’s my beautiful wife and victim of many of my experiments.
no comments | tags: Lighting, Lighting Experiment | posted in Lighting, Lighting Experiments