June, 2011

Lytro Camera

 

The internet is abuzz right now with news of this “Light Field camera.”

It lets you focus on any plane of the photo after you take the picture.  Very much worth checking out even if you have a passing interest in photography.

http://www.lytro.com/

For those more technically inclined, you can view the tech behind it here:

http://graphics.stanford.edu/papers/lfcamera/

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Theatre Portfolio Edit

I recently took part in Theatre Bay Area‘s annual Vendor Conference in San Francisco where I had an opportunity to show my best work to the Theatre community. This facilitated a heavy edit of my current portfolio of theatrical images where I made selects and post-processed from scratch every show I’ve shot, from the beginning. It was a long process but the results were worth it, and it made me realized how much my taste, and ability to post-process an image, has changed. I used an X-Rite Eye-One Display 2 (tip: Pantone, GretagMacbeth, and X-Rite versions of this product are all the same thing) to calibrate my monitor so I could make sure that the colors displayed on my monitor, and eventually printed, were accurate, taking the guesswork out of the equation.

Having to edit many thousands of images down to about 100 to show at my table, and down to six to print large on my display, is not easy, and better left to professional editors, but just not feasibly in the budget for me so I had to fire up the coffeemaker and hunker down for about a week. As always, I used Photo Mechanic for it’s speed to make selects and add ratings, and then Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3 to adjust exposure, tone, and color.

I added Photo Mechanic to my workflow about a year ago because it’s just plain fast. I use it only for selection and rating–basically editing down a take to the best photos to then process and deliver. It is a huge time saver for me, because a single show will, on average, yield about 1000 – 1200 photos. Of those, only 40-60 will be delivered, and they need to be delivered fast. I’ve made it a policy to deliver selects within 24 hours; the clients need the photos to publicize the production on their website, Facebook, and send photos to news outlets.

Take a look at the newly edited (and ever-changing) portfolio here.

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“Firstborn” – Original Play by Tiffany Golden

“Firstborn” was originally a concept for a feature film that was adapted into a play, which premiered at the Black Repertory Group in Berkeley. It’s also where I discovered that focal lengths made for crop sensor cameras such as 17-50mm don’t work quote well for my style, even though I am shooting on a crop sensor camera – a Canon EOS 7D . I’m almost never at the wide end , and sometimes I found myself wanting to be able to zoom in a little more for some tighter crops, even after using my legs to bring me as close as possible to the action.

Speaking of moving around, I always, always, shoot these productions during a dress rehearsal. I never shoot while a crowd is present. I believe that a theatre-goer’s experience is one that shouldn’t be marred by the clicking of a shutter, or a figure running around in the dark and jumping over seats. Usually, it’s the final dress rehearsal before the show opens or previews, because that’s when the set, wardrobe, and makeup is in place, and this naturally makes for the best photographs.

Notably, this play had some stage combat that I was somewhat prepared for; even though I had never seen a run-through, I did read the script, so I knew when an important bit of action was coming up. I always prefer to see a run through, but that’s actually a rare privilege, so in this case I just had to make sure to be a the ready.

See the whole set here.

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