Thursday, April 30, 2009

Signs.

I went out shooting this evening at Lake Underhill which is right by my house. The image on this post is probably one of my favorites. You will notice many aspects in this image that I love within a photograph, which includes color, contrast and shadow detail and composition.

The color is that nice golden-hour type golden light that is visible twice daily, during sunrise and sunset. The way that the top road sign effects the light to shape it around the bottom road sign is beautiful. It looks realistic and believable that this picture was taken during sunset. On top of both of those, I admire the nice blue sky in the background.

-Ken

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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Light and Shadows.



I believe what makes photography unique is the balance between light and shadows. The balance between the two shows detail in the picture and makes it look realistic. In lighting for shows and concerts, the goal is to obtain adequate light on the subjects on stage.

Photography is an art form to where you can manipulate those two things in order to show emotion or aid in the storytelling process. Attached to this post are two pictures that I captured in which I believe has excellent shadow detail in them. The picture with the trees was taken in the early evening and the shadows fall very beautifully underneath.


The second image uses very nice shadow details during the sun setting. I did, however manipulate the saturation on this image as well as adjust the black levels to make the shadow details more prominent. Hope you enjoy looking at the images.

-Ken

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Saturday, April 25, 2009

Night Photography.

As you have probably gathered by my previous posts, I absolutely adore photography. I have a mighty fine lens collection in the Nikon Digital end just aquired a Pentax K1000 film camera and I am slowly collecting unique lenses for that body.

The last couple of weeks, I have been on a real photography kick. One of my favorite types of photography would have to be long exposure night photography. I went out with both camera bodies, grabbed a few exposures with my Nikon then with the Pentax. Last night around 10pm, I went down to Lake Eola in Downtown Orlando.

The picture above was not edited, aside from the cropping. The lighting and saturation is all true in regards to how the image was captured. The camera was set on fully-manual mode with the following settings: White Balance: Fluorescent, f/4, 8 second exposure, ISO: 100

-Ken

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Knowledge to Application.

The last day we had lecture...we had a lecture explaining DMX. How it works...what it does...everything behind it.

When I went back home to Atlanta on my spring break, I had the opportunity to go back to the youth group in which I used to manage the audio / video / lighting systems. I put into practice the things I had learned in school when I was refocusing the stage lights. Granted, do to money reasons, this ministry does not have much to apply toward their lighting systems, which is fine...don't get me wrong.

I went through the little DMX system and for once it made sense of what it was doing. That was impressive. I understood what the controller units were sending through the signal cable and was able to understand better the configuration behind it.

The lights were arranged the same way that I had originally set them up...probably about three or so years ago. I decided that it was time to change out the gels and "fix" the focusing of the lamps. Hopefully, the changes that I made will help to accent the services a little.

-Ken

Friday, April 17, 2009

The Tungsten Effect.


I was browsing through my friend's (Derek O.) Flickr page and I came across this image, and it was very appealing to me. He took this picture outside but had his camera on the "tungsten" white balance setting and the exposure came out blue looking. This is one of my absolute favorite pictures ever, I adore the coloring of it. It works well with the mood for the picture.

Our eyes are amazing, in that they can instantly "white balance" for us without any signs of it. Even with a high-end camera, you can see the effects of it shuffling trying to evaluate what is true white. Good job, sir!

Photo Taken by Derek Overstreet: Atlanta, GA

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Night Photography: Downtown Atlanta.

Yesterday, I spent most of the day with my good friend, Derek who lives in Atlanta, GA. We started off the day taking pictures at Piedmont Park in Downtown. From there we went and had dinner and went to the spot pictured above for some long exposure night pictures.

The panoramic photo above is one my my most favorite images captured yesterday. The photo is shown just as captured by the camera, no manipulations in post. It was a 20 second exposure. My favorite parts of the photograph are the colors in the sky and basic lighting within the picture. I love the streaks going through the streets given by the automobiles traveling on the interstate.

The street lamps are giving a very nice warm light in the scene. That mixes well with the ambient light in the city and coming from where the sun is setting.

Until next time,
-Ken

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Making Due in Times of Trouble.


About two weeks ago on a Saturday, we...the Broadcast Team at First Baptist Church of Orlando was preparing for the Saturday evening service. As a surprise to all of us, suddenly, the lighting system failed, just minutes before the services were scheduled to begin. After the lighting designer fiddled with the 15-year old system and realized that he was limited on his options, he quickly began brainstorming on what he could do in order to get light into the auditorium.

Minutes before the service began, they had redone the trusses about the stage which allowed for light to be on the stage from the intelligent lights. Luckily, this brought enough light to the stage in order for the service to work and allowed for adequate camera usage. During the night, a select group of people worked diligently and re-hung some rented instruments from our rental house. Those instruments and the ones that we had on stage allowed for adequate light to be on stage for broadcast the next Sunday morning.

In the live event business, you never know when something is going to malfunction or fail. You constantly have to be thinking and always have a back up plan in the case that something fails or breaks on you...mid show or even moments before. Always remember the little things...such as putting a backup battery on consoles and interfaces. This is one of the simplest solutions that could solve very minor problems.

-Ken


Photos Taken by Scott Link: Orlando, FL