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Posts tagged with "photography"

Fifteen Pairs of Hands, 1996, by Bruce Nauman, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.
I love applying new processing to old photos.

Fifteen Pairs of Hands, 1996, by Bruce Nauman, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.

I love applying new processing to old photos.

Scenes from the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Keep Fear Alive, National Mall, Washington DC, October 30, 2010.

Oct 9

iPhone 4 and HDR

One of the new features in the iPhone 4 is the ability to take high dynamic range, or HDR, photographs.  The way that this is achieved is by taking one normally exposed image, one over-exposed image, and one under-exposed image, then digitally blending the three together.  The ultimate goal is to give you detail in both the shadows and the highlights.  After all, film and digital photography has a relatively narrow dynamic range and it has to trade detail in one for the other.  By contrast, your eyes can capture details in the deepest shadows and brightest highlights without much effort.

I’ve been playing around with it for the last few weeks and I am mildly impressed.  For a cell phone camera it turns out a surprisingly good image.  Take the above images, for example.  I was shooting into a sunset on a partly cloudy, late summer evening.  The brighter image is how the iPhone’s camera would normally “see” the image.  The second has been processed using the HDR feature.  Notice how much more detail there is in the sky, how much more dramatic an image it was.  Given the conditions in which I was shooting the darker image is more like what my eye could (and did) see.

What it didn’t do so well is preserve shadow detail.  The HDR image lost some detail and darkened up the field and the stands more than is necessary.  It also introduced some strange motion artifacts around the moving players.

But after playing around with it for a bit in iPhoto I was able to get the results seen in the third image.  Here I boosted the exposure about 1/3 of a stop, then pulled the contrast back just a bit.  This lost me some detail in the sky, but kept the pitch (aka “soccer field”) about as bright as the original photograph.  Is it art?  Hardly, but it is a usable image that I can post to Facebook or Flickr without too much shame.  And it more accurately captures what the scene looked like than the normal image would have.

So while it is not a perfect imaging solution, the iPhone 4’s HDR capabilities do a pretty good job of producing quality images in tricky lighting situations.  While I wish the quality was better, it is a nice little tool to have in your meatball photography tool kit.

Ah, the beauty that is the iPhone 4’s forward facing camera: taking nerdy self portraits to the next level.

Ah, the beauty that is the iPhone 4’s forward facing camera: taking nerdy self portraits to the next level.

Fifteen Pairs of Hands, 1996, by Bruce Nauman, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.

Fifteen Pairs of Hands, 1996, by Bruce Nauman, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC.

...and we thank you for your patience.

Grad school has been intensely busy over the last month and unfortunately it has cut sharply into my posting/processing/photographing time.  However, I did manage to blow the dust off the ol’ portfolio.  Enjoy!

Oct 8

"You like me! You really like me!"

My juvenile sense of humor forces me to trot out my “favorite” Sally Field moment whenever I get a dash of recognition.  It might be well-deserved, but it makes me feel awkward and self-conscious and I retreat into a world of self-deprecating humor and increasingly obscure cultural references.

Today’s “aw, shucks!” moment comes courtesy of The Pioneer Woman, who graciously included one of my photographs in today’s PW Photo Assignments post.  The topic?  Portraits.  The subject?  Kara.  And yes, she is darling, at least during those moments when she forgets to behave like a temperamental 14 year-old and flashes the camera her best Mona Lisa smile.

Oct 2

Just Another Feckin’ Photo Blog?

This micro-blog is about photography the same way that “Bull Durham” is about baseball.  Which to say: not much at all.  See, I’m not just a guy who loves photography and hopes to make a buck off of it some day.  I’m also pursuing my Masters in Museum Studies from Johns Hopkins University and I am an accidental stay-at-home dad.  I read way too much, don’t watch enough TV, study hard, rise well before dawn, try to keep the kids from being a menace to society, and when I have free time I make photographs.

So with the many balls that I have got in the air, can one reasonably expect this to stay on topic?  One cannot.  The best thing to do throw your hands in the air, admit defeat, and post whatever comes to mind regardless of its relevance to photography or museums or family or whatever.

Sounds delightfully screwed up/doomed to fail, no?  Si! And that will be part of the fun…