PixelatedImage Blog

Another Postcard from Jamaica

December 30th, 2010

One last full day here in Jamaica. The sun finally came out and I traded my sweater for swim trunks and my snorkelling gear. Stumbled across Tony who took me out to shoot some staged dive shots while I tried to get on top of the learning curve with underwater shooting. I’ve learned so much over the last week, though haven’t nearly had the time I wanted to work on this stuff. But, man, is it fun. I love making photographs, and I love being in the water, the combination is such fun it makes me giggle (when I’m not inhaling water and trying to clear my mask or fight the bouyancy that my, uh, hmm, extra insulation adds. Next time there will be plates on my casing to drop the bouyancy, and a weight belt for me so I can stay put on the bottom. )

Anyways, heading home tomorrow. Thought I’d drop a line and say hi. Can’t believe another year has always passed. If I get around to it tomorrow I’ll post something introspective about the coming year, etc. I get home just in time to fight for a cab as midnight approaches, then three weeks to prep for Africa, sell some furniture, and get Jessie ready for the trip in March.

Right, off to play with the fishes. :-) Happy New Year’s to all of you.

Postcard From Jamaica

December 25th, 2010

Runaway Bay, Jamaica, 2010

Merry Christmas from Jamaica. Spent today chilling. And swimming, And then, uh, swimming with a horse. Lovely here. I’m not really a resort kind of person, so when Robert came by offering rides I ran into the water with the camera. I think he was a little confused when I told him I just wanted to swim with them and not ride the horse. Anyways, having a blast, in a relaxed kind of way. I was really moved by all the happy Birthday wishes this week – thank you so much. I trust you’ve had a great holiday.

New Zealand

December 23rd, 2010


Nikon D3s, Sigma 24-70/2.8EX, 1/80 @ f/18, ISO 800

Before I send you off for the holidays and abandon you for Jamaica, I wanted to tell you about the New Zealand trip while it’s fresh in my mind.

I went to New Zealand with a hodge podge of impressions garnered from various sources: photographs, stories, and the tourism videos to end all tourism videos – The Lord of the Rings Movies. I went because I’d always wanted to go, and because I only had three weeks for my first trip to Australasia or Oceania or whatever they’re calling it now, and because of its size, Oz seems worth more time than that.

We booked a VW camper van, and like anything when The Legendary H is involved it spiraled out of control in a really fun way and when we got to the rental lot what I thought would be a small camper van was a massive RV. Our rolling home on wheels came with a learning curve, and after we’d emptied the fridge a couple times on sharp corners, we learned it could be locked. We ended in the ditch only once and in classic NZ fashion were pulled out moments later by beekeepers in full beekeeper gear and a flatbed loaded with buzzing hives. We spent most nights camped free in little places close to where I wanted to shoot that night and in the 5am early light.

Our first 5 days was spent on the North Island, the last 2 weeks spent on the South Island. If I were to do it again I’d do just the South Island; it seems to be more my kind of place – the scenery more dramatic, though none of it free of rolling pasture land and sheep. Man, the sheep! I’ve never seen such a sheep-dotted, fenced-in, green-hilled pastoral country in all my life. Favourite spots, hands-down, were Cape Foulwind (I could spend a couple days playing here), Milford Sound (touristy but in the rain it’s a magical place) and all of Fiordland National Park (bring bug repellent and the resolve not to let the Sandflies drive you insane.) Our two days kayaking in Doubtful Sound was awesome. Curio Bay was amazing too.

Nikon D3s, Sigma 24-70/2.8EX, 1/8 @ f/16, ISO 200, Singh Ray ND filters.

This trip was interesting for me because it was the first time shooting on Nikon gear, so there was alot of play involved, and the learning curve wasn’t so much steep as fun. I suspect you know me well enough by now to know I’m not about to go deep into the differences between Canon and Nikon. Beautiful photographs are beautiful photographs and only you know how you made them. But for me the switch to Nikon has been fun. The ergonomics suit me better, the focusing is great, and things like the accessibility of bracketing, a wider EV compensation, and a virtual horizon are a real benefit. But an interesting thing happened. I’ve now shot with the best that both Nikon and Canon offer. And you know what? The end result is still just a photograph.

I’m in the middle of writing a fourth book, and as promised, will tell you more when I can. But it’s less about photography and more about actual photographs. What photographs say and how they are read, what composition communicates, how to balance things, lots of visual language stuff.  And between the focus on photographic expression and this new gear, I’ve dug my heals in deeper on my brand neutrality. Photographs matter, brands don’t.

Part of that journey, and while we’re talking about brands, is my new relationship with Sigma. I shot on Sigma lenses for this trip, so now is a good time to talk about that. I took a 70-200/2.8, 85/1.4, 24-70/2.8, 20/2.8, and 15mm diagonal fisheye and shot with all of them.  So many of you have asked why I’d chose to go with Sigma instead of the top-shelf pro lenses from Nikon, and the answer’s not really complicated. First, Sigma lent me a stable of lenses so it was a no-brainer. But more than that. I am not a pixel-peeper. I never have been. What matters to me is the photograph, not the pixel-by-pixel analysis. So I thought it would be interesting to shoot with lenses I could comfortably recommend to people who don’t have the budget for top-shelf OEM lenses.

And you know what? I didn’t notice a difference in my images. Will these lenses last as long as some of the weather-proof sealed Canon L lenses? I don’t know. I’d guess pretty close, though the way i beat my gear around, you never know, and part of that is my fault. Some of the lenses stack up beautifully against their top-shelf pro-grade counterparts – the 85/1.4 is gorgeous. The 15mm fisheye rocks. The 20/2.8 is a new favourite. I never once felt I was missing something by not shooting on legendary Nikon glass. Will I get Nikon glass? Of course. At some point. Sigma has no tilt/shift lenses, and the Nikon ultra-wide looks pretty nice. I also need a 300/2.8 and could go either way – Sigma or Nikon. But bang for the buck, especially if you’re not a working photographer who beats the crap out of his gear, my experience with Sigma’s been solid (both now and in the past) and I’m looking forward to playing with them more. Might even get a low-end Nikon and shoot that just to prove again that while a high-end camera might make life easier and create images closer to client specs, it doesn’t mean the low-end stuff can’t create gorgeous, compelling, photographs. It’s time we chilled about all this brand stuff and got back to our first love – making and enjoying photographs.

Nikon D700, Sigma 70-200/2.8EX, 1/640 @ f/10, ISO 400

Anyways. 2010 is drawing to a close. My birthday is tomorrow and I’m joining family in Jamaica so you’re not likely to hear from me. I’ll check in if I can but feel free to just close the browser and enjoy your family and some time off. Thanks so much to all of you for the birthday and holiday wishes you’ve sent, and again my sincerest thanks for being part of my journey. It’s been an amazing year and your support of this blog, my books, and Craft & Vision has been humbling. Thank you so much. A very happy Christmas to those of you who celebrate it, and blessings for a full and peaceful 2011.

Final Postcard from New Zealand

December 18th, 2010

Curio Bay, South Island, New Zealand, 2010

Sitting at the Christchurch airport waiting for an outbound flight to Auckland. From there it’s a straight shot home and I’ve got 3 days to turn it all around and head to Jamaica for the holidays. What a trip this has been. Very relaxing, and a chance to shoot more landscapes and seascapes than I’ve ever done. I’m fascinated by the edges of things, places where land meets sky, sky meets water…and New Zealand has it’s share of dramatic coastlines. So if there’s a theme threading through my postcards it’s a reflection of this 3-week pursuit of the edges of things at the edges of day. Lots of early mornings and shooting late.

Will be nice to be home but home has started feeling less like home than ever as I begin to get things ready for the coming year on the road. I’ll get home, pick Jessie up from the mechanic’s, and have three days to continue the bits and pieces of the prep, as well as clean the gear and charge the batteries. Jamaica is a chance to see my parents for my birthday and Christmas, as well as to spend a week in the water learning about underwater photography and working the bugs out of the wierdness of shooting with a water housing.

I trust you have an amazing holiday. I’ll check in between now and then, but while I have a moment I want to thank you, on behalf of myself and the whole team at Craft & Vision, for your friendship and support this year. May the holidays and the coming year bring you peace, beauty, and time with the ones you love. However you celebrate, I wish you the very best.

New eBook – Light & Land

December 15th, 2010

One of the ideas I had when I wrote Vision & Voice was to release an ebook version where people took some of the ideas and presented their own spin, sort of a “Your Voice, Your Vision.” kind of thing. Michael Frye’s new Craft & Vision title, released today, does this and much, much more. A photographer based on Yosemite’s doorstep, Michael Frye knows his stuff and I’m embarrassed to say that having just written a book on post-processing in Lightroom, Michael took me to school a couple times in this new book. It’s written specifically for people with an interest in Landscapes because landscape work, like other specific genres, has its own challenges, but it’s way more than that.

We try really hard at Craft & Vision to create books that are equal parts inspiring and instructional, to give you ten dollars – or more – of substance – for the five dollars – or less – that you pay. Light & Land does this in spades. Michael discusses some principles and landscape-specific considerations, then walks you through the Lightroom-based development of 5 different images, discussing the hows and whys of each one. Michael’s discussions apply equally for Lightroom users as well as Aperture or Photoshop fans, you just have to do the translation from one slider name to another; the principles are all the same.

Light & Land stands on its own as a substantial class in digital development of landscape images but will be of use to anyone wanting to take their post-processing to the next level. This one’s 36 spreads, which is 72 pages by the old pagination. Now we just force the spread and call a duck a duck. But there’s 72 pages worth of content in here and it’s all gold, baby.

Add to CartView Cart

For the first four days only, if you use the promotional code LAND4 when you checkout, you can have the PDF version of Light & Land for only $4 OR use the code LAND20 to get 20% off when you buy 5 or more PDF ebooks from the Craft & Vision collection. These codes expire at 11:59pm PST December 19, 2010.

Special $20 Gift Coupon Now Available
Do you want to share the gift of Craft & Vision this holiday season? It’s simple to do and it is a great gift or stocking stuffer! When you buy the $20 Craft & Vision Gift Coupon you will be issued one 6-digit code which you can simply forward to your gift recipient, or write the code in a greeting card, etc. To redeem the gift the recipient visits www.craftandvision.com, adds 4 or more PDF ebooks to their shopping cart, enters their code in the Discount Code section of the shopping cart screen, then updates the cart to redeem their Gift Coupon discount. Order your gift coupon here.

Postcard From New Zealand – Doubtful Sound

December 15th, 2010

Doubtful Sound, South Island, New Zealand

A quick one tonight to say hello before heading to bed. We spent the last two days kayaking Doubtful Sound and had a spectacular time. Doubtful Sound is a fjord, not an actual sound, and is full of all the corresponding majesty and drama. Simply spectacular. I strapped my 5D and Aquatech housing to the top of the kayak and spent a little time playing in the water (the really, really cold water!), and learning. Shooting in the water is a  whole other ballgame, but I can see much more of this in my future. So much fun. Can’t wait to get in the water in Jamaica. A couple more days to go in NZ, hoping to make some photographs at Morekai boulders, then homeward bound.

Michael Frye is the next author to be published by Craft & Vision, and his book Light & Land, Landscapes in the Digital Darkroom will be out in about 24 hours from now. Michael’s a good teacher and knows his stuff and even if you’ve got no desire to shoot landscapes, the Lightroom stuff is worth a read. I just wrote a book on the whole Lightroom thing and Michael taught me a thing or two. And the photographs are gorgeous. Stay tuned.

Year-End Learning Gift Cards & Discounts

December 13th, 2010

Milford Sound, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand, 2010

Tomorrow morning the Legendary H and I are exploring Doubtful Sound by Kayak for a couple days, so I’ll be off the grid for a bit, figured now’s as good a time as any to do this.

I’ve resisted the urge to fall in line with every other photography blogger on the planet this year and won’t be publishing a list of Hot Gifts or any of the usual stuff. Fact is, it just isn’t me. As a family we’re spending time together, will probably exchange a few books, and put the money other places. There’s some great stuff out there, I’m just not sure I’m the best person to point you to it. I might, at some point, do a list about my favourite bits and pieces of gear, but it won’t be Christmas related. I do want to point you to two resources, both undeniably self-promotional to some degree, so I’ll only do it once then go back to being quiet-ish on the matter.

Craft & Vision $20 Holiday Gift Coupons.
Want to give the favourite photographer in your life the gift of inspiration and education? Need to spend $20 on a Secret Santa gift but can’t bring yourself to buy a knick knack that’ll end up in a landfill site? Craft & Vision eBooks are a great deal (if I don’t say so myself, though I do…) Last year we had a lot of requests for an easier Gift Card. Here’s the easiest we could make it:

Buyers of the $20 Craft & Vision Gift Coupon will be issued one 6-digit code. The buyer can then forward that code to their chosen gift recipient, or write the code in a greeting card, etc. To redeem the gift the recipient visits CRAFT & VISION , adds 4+ PDF ebooks to their shopping cart, then enters their code in the Discount Code section of the shopping cart screen to redeem their Gift Coupon discount.

The gift coupon can be ordered HERE.

NOTE: Gift Coupons cannot retain any unspent value for future use; e.g., if someone redeems a $20 Gift Coupon on a $15 order total, the remaining $5 would be forfeit (this is why they are not call them “Gift Certificates”).

CreativeLive Year End Sale.
In August I spent 3 days in Seattle with the CreativeLive crew and together with the live and world-wide audience attending online we created a 3-day class in Vision-Driven Photography. I talked a lot. Was exhausted when it ended and then ran away to Iceland. I haven’t plugged it much, but like the other CreativeLive classes, it’s really amazing value, even more so when you consider all the classes aired free for everyone several times. Well now you can get them all for an amazing deal – that’s Vincent Laforet, Jasmine Star, Zack Arias, Tamara Lackey, and Jeremy Cowart, and myself – hundreds of hours of instruction, now over 55% off. Killer deal, and for a limited time only. More info, and to order, go HERE.

Postcard from New Zealand – Milford Sound

December 12th, 2010

Milford Sound, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand, 2010
(Click the thumbnail to make it larger)

A quick postcard to say hello. I suspect this might be the last one as internet’s getting harder and harder to come by conventiently. I’m sitting in a rained-out Milford Sound after a fantastic evening on a boat. Can’t even tell you how amazing this place is. You know, tourists come and go by the boatload to places like this, but the natural beauty, especially here where they protect it fiercely, is undiminished. I’m always a little excited when I show up in places like this and the weather looks inclement. My way of knowing it’s time to get the rainjacket out, pull the cameras from the bag and grab a couple extra lens cloths. Saw dolphins and seals this evening as the wind and waves pushed our boat around. Fantastic. Blackflies (Sand flies to the Kiwis, I think?) are out of control, but a good wind makes them someone else’s problem.)

Tomorrow a little more of Fiordland, then further south as we push our way around this lovely island. Hope y’all are having a great weekend. Can’t believe it’s almost Christmas. Summer here now and winter – even a rainy Vancouver one – seems so far away.

Postcard From New Zealand – Glenorchy

December 11th, 2010

The Legendary H on the wharf at Glenorchy.

A quick hello on the way out of Queenstown. Spent last night at Glenorchy at the end of what the Lonely Planet calls an “achingly beautiful” road and what Trey Ratcliff calls “the most beautiful road in the world.”  Now on to Milford Sound and Fjordland. Yesterday was Bungy jumping – way more fun than should be legal.

See you soon!

Postcard From Cape Foulwind

December 8th, 2010

Sitting in the RV after what was close to the perfect evening. Fantastic pasta dinner overlooking what might now be my favourite beach in the world, with a bottle of Pepperjack Shiraz, and waiting for the sun to drop. Then two perfect hours with cameras, lenses, tripod, and hopping from rock to rock, exploring caves and arches, and (though there are no witnesses) giggling like a little kid. Can’t even tell you how good for the soul this evening was. These are the magic times for the creative, when we go and play for the sheer love of playing, and we’re rewarded in turn with something beautiful. Even if I’d shot all evening without a CF card in the camera, I’d have come back happy. Way too much fun.

Cape Foulwind on the west coast of the South Island. Make a note. Amazing. Can’t wait for morning to go back out.

Wish y’all were here.

PS – The image above will embiggen if you click it. I don’t always do this but I’ve had requests that are fresh in my mind. Truth is, I am dangerously close to crashing my servers with traffic and until I get things changed I’m doing what I can to keep the bandwidth down. And mostly I just forget to make bigger images. Want the big ones? Buy the books :-)

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