Thursday, July 26. 2012
Standing in the rain. Caught on an island between the traffic.
For the first 30 minutes of taking photos in the rain I hate it! After that I get over it and have a great time.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 207 - Caught In The Middle'. 1/20 secs f/4.0 ISO-1600 80mm
Tuesday, July 24. 2012
I looked up at the clock and it was just 14 minutes until sunset.
I had not captured any images yet so I grabbed my camera and headed down the to the beach to see how the last rays of light for the day would fall. As I approached I saw the last vestige of sun descend behind and be obscured by cloud. There would be no sunset images made here tonight!
Although I found myself on a cold, windy and drizzly beach, the light was soft and almost warm albeit rapidly fading. I made quite a few images in the receding light and this one was my favorite.
For this image I liked the composition of rock, jetty, seaweed sand, sea and sky but it needed something extra. A little patience paid off as a series of large waves came through right up the beach to where I was positioned and this is the result.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 206 - Henley Beach Twilight'. 4/13/30 secs f/16 ISO-320 19mm hdr
Monday, July 23. 2012
Trying to photograph an object by laser lighting is strange beyond expectations!
You might think that the coherent and precise nature of a laser source might yield better image resolution than natural light sources. Actually red laser light completely destroys it through interference rendering a perceived image acuity more reminiscent of a 640x480 VGA video camera.
It gets even stranger when you try to process the image in Adobe Lightroom. The sharpness and noise reduction sliders have almost no affect on the image at all! Somehow the captured patterns of interference seem to counteract the maths in the image processing.
Anyway, regardless of the curiosity of it all I am a little disappointed that the results were not as dramatic as I had hoped. Here is my image for the day, a single red laser beam incident on a prism in a smokey room.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 205 - Laser Light'. 30 secs f/16 ISO-100 100mm macro
Sunday, July 22. 2012
Tonight while driving along the coast I was struck by how luminous the seascape was.
The sunset had been well hidden by cloud but the contrasts in the sky were amazing. Everything around seemed to the bathed in a soft gentle glow.
The reflected light from a calmed sea created a lovely ambiance juxtaposed to a dramatic sky.
I would have liked to have found a better place to make this image but perhaps the orange glow on the sand from the esplanade streetlights gives a little warmth to an otherwise cold scene.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 204 - After Dark'. 20 secs f/13 ISO-1600 24mm
Saturday, July 21. 2012
As an engineer with a career in manufacturing I'm not ashamed to admit, I love factories.
Some time back we watched the beginning of new creation at the end of Morphett Road near the back of the Adelaide airport. Over several months we observed a building landscape transform into a state of the art industrial premises.
For some months more we guessed what this new facility would be used for. It was clearly a manufacturing premises but while the internal fit-out progressed we just had to guess.
Finally when the signage was put in place we learned that this new building is the new home of Manuele Engineers, a South Australian family business.
The facility is dedicated to complex and high precision steel engineering and fabrication work of which takes up four bays of the facility with one additional bay dedicated to industrial coatings.
I was hoping for this high tech looking building to be some high tech electronics or aerospace type manufacturing facility. Alas its just a paint-shop. A state of the art, high tech paint-shop! Regardless, it is great to see confidence in the future of South Australian manufacturing!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 203 - Factory TruCoat'. 8 secs f/14 ISO-1600 24mm
As an engineer with a career in manufacturing I'm not ashamed to admit, I love factories.
Some time back we watched the beginning of new creation at the end of Morphett Road near the back of the Adelaide airport. Over several months we observed a building landscape transform into a state of the art industrial premises.
For some months more we guessed what this new facility would be used for. It was clearly a manufacturing premises but while the internal fit-out progressed we just had to guess.
Finally when the signage was put in place we learned that this new building is the new home of Manuele Engineers, a South Australian family business.
The facility is dedicated to complex and high precision steel engineering and fabrication work of which takes up four bays of the facility with one additional bay dedicated to industrial coatings.
I was hoping for this high tech looking building to be some high tech electronics or aerospace type manufacturing facility. Alas its just a paint-shop. A state of the art, high tech paint-shop! Regardless, it is great to see confidence in the future of South Australian manufacturing!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 203 - Factory Manuele Engineers'. 8 secs f/14 ISO-1600 24mm
Friday, July 20. 2012
I don't know much about this church. Other than that I pass by it every week.
The problem with many of the interesting photographic subjects in the city is parking close by in order to capture an image. This time I was lucky enough to find a park within a quick walk.
The church had some really difficult lighting on it. Heavily lit from the right with the bright lamp shining directly back into the car park and me. I figured if I was going to get an image I liked it would have to be a hdr composite.
I tried a few positions to take the image from but in the end I liked from ground level.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 202 - St Francis Xavier's Cathedral'. 0.5/2.5/10 sec f/16 ISO-640 32mm hdr
Thursday, July 19. 2012
There's magic a growing in my roadside garden.
This morning I spotted a mushroom growing in the grass verge but the light was all wrong. Passing the same place in the late afternoon I wondered if it would still be there.
Would it have been idly kicked by a passing school child, or perhaps wee'd on by an itinerant dog or maybe even driven over by a badly parked car? Well as they say, 'good fortune follows the ...' (hmm, what is it that they say?). Anyway there it was and the late afternoon light was perfect.
So with image now captured I'll leave it where it is. Perhaps for some culinary thrill seeker to meet an untimely demise...
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 201 - It's Magic'. 1/125 sec f/4.0 ISO-100 100mm
Wednesday, July 18. 2012
I'm experimenting with new ways to show the cliched-to-death sunset!
In this image I have again used 3 images of different exposure to bring the the highlights of the sunset and the shadows tones of the bridge and pathway into visual harmony.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 200 - Beyond Concrete and Steel'. 0.5/2/8 secs f/16 ISO-640 24mm
This is a real out of the camera image!
It might be hard to imagine that this is not some Photoshop creation but here it is. In fact here's how I made it just in case you are curious.
I placed a clear marble (with imperfections in roundness and clarity) on a small pillar of magnetic balls. I then draped my camera in Christmas tree lights, the old fashion kind with lots of different colours. I strategically positioned a small mirror behind the subject to create some additional internal colours and finally I made the shot wide open at f/2.8 to get that glorious bokeh in the now reflected background.
So when it comes to getting creative it is amazing what a little experimentation will provide.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 199 - Bokeh Ball'. 1/2s f/2.8 ISO-640 100mm macro
Tuesday, July 17. 2012
A black and charred landscape made all the more bleak through a black and white perspective.
The fire which closed some of the Deep Creek conservation park back in April is actually good for many plant species which depend on fire for both germination and clearing of ground litter for access to sunlight during early development.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 198 - After the Fire'. 1/800s f/5.6 ISO-640 70mm
Sunday, July 15. 2012
We see moving water every single day but how often do we think about its form?
Photographers regularly take advantage of extremes of the form of water to create striking interpretations. Two of the most common examples around at present would have to be long exposure sea-scapes and super-fast frozen water splash effects. These images fascinate us becuase they show water in a form we can not ordinarily perceive with our own eyes.
Both types of images have their challenges. Long exposures must be made with the camera well protected from and movement for the entire exposure period which could be many minutes and require very heavy light filtering (like welder's goggles) to prevent over exposure. High speed event images which freeze droplets of water in space are so random an unpredictable that many images may need to be taken to get something well composed and visually pleasing.
While photographing this small waterfall I originally wanted to try the long exposure effect but it was too small and I could not create a pleasing composition. So with that I cranked up the ISO and the shutter speed and got this frozen effect instead.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 197 - Frozen Water'. 1/2000s f/4 ISO-1600 200mm
Saturday, July 14. 2012
The original 'Port Adelaide - Commercial Road' train station was built in 1916.
Though reduced in scale and scope it is still in active use today after a long and dynamic history.
Last night I headed out to Port Adelaide for a night-time photowalk, anticipating images of water, vessels, the docks and the surrounding historic town. However I never quite made it there. As I was heading into Port Adelaide on Commercial Road I noticed the old railway station and decided I'd pull over for a quick look. I have passed under the viaduct of this station hundreds of times in my life and often thought how interesting the construction appeared. The verdict, a wonderful photographic site!
I stayed for quite some time taking images and looking around and before long I had become chilled to my core due to the cold. With that I decided to call it an evening and head home. The docks can wait for another time.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 196 - Port Adelaide Railway Station'. 1/(2+8+30)sec f/8 ISO-1600 35mm hdr
Friday, July 13. 2012
I am amazed how often I see shoes, either a pair or one on its own, in the most odd places.
Immediately I wonder, what is the story here? With shoes on power-lines I imagine a kid's prank or maybe a school boy bully. A single stiletto in a gutter conjures more grievous thoughts. A pair of flip-flops by a creek might mean someone walking down a shallow stream and forgetting where they started. To me abandoned shoes alway come with a story and more often than not, a story of my own imagining.
To capture this image I used a small aperture as I wanted the gorgeous details in the clouds to be a dramatic backdrop and found a piece of open sky as the negative space in which to place the shoes.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 195 - Walked Home Barefoot'. 1/320sec f/16 ISO-640 70mm
Thursday, July 12. 2012
Today I struggled for inspiration for something new. In-fact I almost dreaded running out of day without something I could publish in keeping with my expectations of one decent image every day!
Finally I found inspiration. While reading a G+ post from another photographer and how they made a switch from Minolta to Nikon in the early digital days. The post brought back memories for me of the Minolta X-700 which came out around 1983 and would be the SLR camera I used for the best part of 20 years before Canon wooed me away in 2003 with their EOS Rebel.
I pulled the X-700 out of the cupboard, dusted off the cobwebs and gave it the once over. Film! It was loaded! Next I turned it on. It came to life! I pressed the shutter and I took a photograph!
This all felt so strange, so nostalgic and almost surreal. I nearly forgot I needed to wind on the film when I could not work out would it why it would not take a second photo!
So here is my image today of the Minolta X-700 which served me well for 20 years of photography. So what photo did I take with the re-discovered X-700? The Canon of course!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 194 - Reminiscing'. 6sec f/16 ISO-200 105mm
Wednesday, July 11. 2012
'We're Free' started as an experiment to see what happens when you place small similar object onto a loudspeaker cone, in the case rice.
I first tried simply playing random music but the inconsistency of cone movement meant that nothing would happen until quite loud levels and then one decent hit of bass would send rice flying onto the table and the floor.
Next I used a synthesizer to generate controlled low frequency sine waves and this is where the fun really began. I could create all kings of crazy effects with different frequencies and levels but nothing I could easily photograph.
In the end I simply cranked up the level until rice flew everywhere taking this image! I'll clean up the mess in the morning!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 193 - We're Free'. 1/200s f/11 ISO-200 100mm macro + strobe x 2
Tuesday, July 10. 2012
As I looked into the bush, there in the distance under a shining beam of sunlight shone a perfect yacca!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 192 - Yacca'. 1/200s f/2.8 ISO-160 200mm
Monday, July 9. 2012
Winter time is lambing season here down on the Fleurieu Peninsula.
Odd really that an animal would choose to bear young in our coldest time and wettest time. Unless of course you are aware that these new newborns would not survive our 40deg summers!
These two little lambs are oblivious to my approach but mum is not as she gives me a wary eye. 5 seconds later mum is off in the opposite direction with confused lambs in hot pursuit. Lunch will have to wait.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 191 - Lunchtime'. 1/1250s f/2.8 ISO-160 200mm
Saturday, July 7. 2012
Waiting for the moon to rise above the treeline I could not help be captivated by how the leaves were backlit by the clouds filled with moonlight.
The actual moon itself turned out to be a bit disappointing due to the cloud cover but I am happy with the silhouette.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 190 - Moonrise'. 4s f/5.0 ISO-1600 200mm
Visual recursion is something some of us have experienced by pointing a video camera at its own monitor. That seemingly infinite diminishing set of images within images.
I never expected the same thing when I set about to photograph the aperture of my lens using the lens itself. I initially set up with the lens focused on its own nodal point, the aperture blades. It was a compromise between depth of field and a pleasing visual position for the blades to be in. (I have never heard of anyone ever setting the aperture for this reason!). On taking a few test images I noticed the reflection of the camera body off the camera's reflective CMOS sensor. I thought COOL!
Getting the camera body, as reflected off the CMOS sensor, in focus simply came down to trial and error as I simply could not get enough light to preview manual focus.
Here's the end result, 'Recursion', I hope you like it.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 189 - Recursion'. 20s f/6.3 ISO-320 100mm macro
Friday, July 6. 2012
As a child I remember hearing the expression 'to tighten one's belt' when needing to save money, pay for unexpected expenses or to engage in some form of austerity measures.
This puzzled me for many years because elastic did a perfectly good job at keeping my pants up! Fortunately for me I never experienced the idea that austerity could lead to becoming thinner so again the saying simply made no sense.
Well there it is, a saying for austerity that most of us have never and probably will never know. 'Tighten your belt', we're doing it tough in hard economic times. Really?
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 188 - Austerity'. 1/10s f/8.0 ISO-100 100mm macro + strobe
Thursday, July 5. 2012
Plumbing makes our lives wonderful!
Just imagine no running water and no sewerage and think how miserable our lives would be in comparison to the well serviced environment that keeps as so comfortable. So why do we hide something so valuable rather than proudly display our plumping in full view.
Buried away in an underground basement, I am sure this plumbing keeps the building occupants very happy in their plumbing ignorance!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 187 - Hidden Plumbing'. 1/20s f/4.0 ISO-1600 28mm
Wednesday, July 4. 2012
The beach is a wonderful place to make images.
Once you have had your fill of jetties, sun-sets and seagulls you start to notice how visually dynamic a place for images it is. There is a never ending parade of new joggers, dogs, sea-birds, boats, kites, sailboard, weddings, picnics, etc, etc,etc. I'm sure I could make a new image there every day for a year and each would be as fresh as the last.
For this image the light was low, my ISO high and my aperture wide open. As the petrel came into view I new I'd only get one shot thanks to the less than ideal focusing on my camera. Fortunately luck favors the persistent!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 186 - Johnathan Livingston Petrel'. 1/1250s f/2.8 ISO-1600 200mm
Tuesday, July 3. 2012
Once this service station owned by Mick Skorpos was once Adelaide's biggest and busiest.
It was ugly back then and it's even uglier now. Abandoned, left to wind blown leaves, litter and graffiti. Perhaps this is symbol of our transition to electric vehicles. Will the electric car leave a blight of similar abandoned service stations on suburban landscape? I hope not.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 185 - Urban Relics'. 1/25s f/16 ISO-100 17mm
Monday, July 2. 2012
Adelaide has amazing talent!
Driving down East Terrace, Bowden we happened on walls and walls of amazing graffiti art. One particular wall would have needed 10 or 12 stitched images together to do it justice.
I made several images and labored over the one I would use for today. In the end I chose this piece of wall not because it was the most brazen or most colourful or most intricate or most bizarre; this piece of wall stood out simply becuase I liked the composition of art, textures of brick, the old bricked up entrance and the overall feel of it.
Unfortunately I have no idea who the artist is and probably will never find out.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 184 - Watching Paint Dry'. 1/100s f/5.6 ISO-320 45mm
Sunday, July 1. 2012
Salt, what would our lives be like without it?
I first gazed upon these man made salt mountains at Dry Creek in 1984 while studying at the Levels Campus of the South Australian Institute of Technology. There they were off in the distance and one day when I had some time to kill I set out across the industrial wasteland to get a better look. It took much longer than I imagined.
It has taken me 28 years to finally make an image of them I am happy to share.
As an added bonus this is my very first Geo-tagged image!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 183 - Salt Mountain'. 1/1000 f/5.6 ISO-125 105mm
P.S. This image no. 183 is exactly 50% of the way through my '366 Days of 2102' project. Only 183 to go!
Saturday, June 30. 2012
It must be cold, even the hard core skaters are packing it it to head for cosier places.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 182 - Too Cold To Skate'. 1/80s+1/20s+1/5s f/7.1 ISO-2500 17mm hdr
Friday, June 29. 2012
Cold winds sweeps off the sea chilling to the bone. A far cry from the Great Barrier Reef a few days earlier!
Only a lone kite-sailor, a man walking his dog and a few people were out this evening. The sensible; cosy in nice warm cars as they drive home from work or settling into a hearty winter meal.
Who wants to be sensible?
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 181 - Windswept Grange'. 1/30s f/2.8 ISO-50 70mm
Thursday, June 28. 2012
When I looked down on these tracks and followed them through their industrial landscape I was struck by the beauty of four lines merging to a distant turn.
Four parallel lines converging in perspective, curving to a new parallel convergence then curving to a single point marked by a single lit signal light.
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 180 - Tracks'. 1/320s f/14 ISO-400 100mm
Wednesday, June 27. 2012
Water reflects perfectly on a breathless morning.
It was one of those perfect, cold and still mornings doing the morning school run when I saw how beautiful the reflections were. Fortunately it was just as still on the way back.
'Camera, ... never leave home without it!'
Still on that stubborn water theme!
Photo: Robert Rath, '366 Days of 2012, Day 179 - Mirror Image'. 1/6400s at f/4.0 ISO-160 55mm
P.S. If this image does not mess with your head you are not really looking!
|