A Two Hour Smile.

8/11 Waves.

It was a good dream.   Vague and mostly forgotten, not at all unsettling, a slight smile in my sleep.  I seemed very young, maybe seven, still free with innocence, unencumbered by later life.  It was a hot day, summertime, and we were, or had been, at the beach, where I had spent the entire day engulfed in waves.  Diving under, jumping up, turning so that the back of your head had the wave break over it while you looked through to shore, maneuvering for the next one, on and on.  Bodysurfing.  Giggling underwater all the way to the sand when you got caught.

Then came the post stoke relaxation and good sleep.  Warm breezes, full moon, abundance of life and living.  The August cicadas were singing away, celebrating the season.  Something then turned, the timing too early.  Soundwaves getting louder and louder, threatening my sleep and dream state.  The dream faded, like youth, or a good summer on the first day of school.  My alarm was blaring, no longer a cicada’s song.  I hit snooze.  Ahhh, crickets….

This new silence was not feeling like more real sleep,  so I grabbed my camera bag and water housing and headed down to the beach.  There was a slight North wind, which is always good, but heavy stratus cloud cover prevented any sunrise light.  Scanning the ocean for whales and dolphin, I waited, enjoying my 7-11 large, dark coffee.  Didn’t see any, but noticed the waves were actually curling a bit, first time in a while.

When I opened my bag to grab my 16-35mm, the lens was missing.  In its place was my 24-120mm.  Wasn’t sure if it would fit in the housing and with no collar on the lens there would be no zoom, but I gave it a shot and got lucky.   24mm, not bad for leaving the house half asleep. (EDIT:  looking at exif data, the zoom slowly shifted towards the longer end.)

Patches of blue started peaking through the grey.  I headed down toward the Fire Island Lighthouse.  Bare feet in sand, coffee in hand.  The next two hours brought changing light, one long smile, a few giggles, and the focused, alert, wake-full-ness of salt therapy.  Living in a dream.  It comes in waves.

_DSC4246

_DSC4025

_DSC4018-Edit

_DSC4046-2

_DSC4273

_DSC4012

_DSC4360-Edit

_DSC4244

_DSC4045

LHWave-Edit

 

Spitting into the Weather.

 

I was overheated, lethargic.  The world looked gray and dull for photography.  Yet there was that something in the air – subtle signs of weather change.  I figured I’d try to cool off swimming in a local cove for relief. The high temps and humidity had me feeling pretty lazy, so I figured I’d leave the camera home.  Realizing this was dumb, and anticipating rain, I left the heavy lenses home, but put my camera into a surf housing.  

Hemlock Cove was refreshing.  The god awful record-breaking brown tide was all but gone.  All was calm, but storm clouds were moving in, looking good. Had a swim, took a few shots and the wind shifted North.  White caps within three minutes inside the cove!

A North wind smooths the surface of the ocean, countering the usual onshore breeze here on the south shore of Long Island.  I ran across the parkway, and jumped in.  A nice storm, and being in the ocean are two things that re-energize me.  Can ya relate? Yep.

Photo tips:   I use a Nikon 16-35mm lens with an Aquatech base model housing. The base model has no real controls, so I set the F-stop to where I want it, and shoot in Aperture priority.  I then set the ISO to auto.  This way the camera has a chance to give me a good exposure. In the menu, you can set the lowest shutter speed and the highest ISO that you are comfortable with.  (If the amount of available light means your shutter would get too slow at your chosen F-stop, the ISO will automatically increase, allowing the camera to keep your shutter speed fast.)  

aquat
(Aquatech base with flat port)

The wide angle requires a dome port. To prevent water droplets from blurring a pic, they need to go.  First, make sure you have no oily greasy fingerprints on the port.  (dish soap, but rinse well.)   Then, spit.  And spit.  And lick.  The dome port actually has a lot of surface area.  Spit a lot.  Lick a lot.  You may get funny looks.  Keep the housing under water until right before you shoot.  The water will fall off, leaving a thin film of water with no drops.  Keep spitting, keep licking, keep shooting. 

_DSC0502

_DSC0554-2

_DSC0590-8

_DSC0585-2

_DSC0566

_DSC0611

Questions or comments?  – feel free to hit the comments.  Thanks for looking!

Equipment / Gear

…some of our favorite things!

Everyone has heard everyone say that equipment doesn’t matter.  Yet everyone drools over every new camera that is announced.  The drool is only part pavlovian response to enticing key marketing terms.  Another reason to drool is the frustration of having a camera or lens that finally starts to limit what you are trying to accomplish.   I’m a Nikon guy.  For close to 10 years, I shot with a 12 mp D300.   It took great photos, and I learned a lot from it.   I’ve sold many prints of its output.   But….
A ways back, someone wanted a 4 x 6 foot print of a cropped image of mine.  I spent a month’s worth of beer money on the print, she looked at it from 6 inches away, and said – nah.  We all know that looking at a print from 6 inches away is kind of stupid, but it is what it was.   Modern software has made it much easier to up-res, but at some point you will be limited by your camera’s ability to capture enough megapixels.  (If you are just shooting for web images or small prints, 12mp is all you need, and today’s entry cameras are superb.)   I’m not rich, I opted for a refurbished Nikon D810.   No problems whatsoever with the refurb.  I love this camera and its 36mp for land and seascapes.
Modern Nikons have also come a long way in their ability to capture dynamic range (DR).   No cameras can match the human eye’s DR.  Your pupil continually adjusts to expose for what you are looking at.  Add in an optic nerve with attached brain, and the ability to squint, and things are literally looking good for us.  We can take in visual information over a large range of light intensity.  For example, when it is very bright outside, we can not only see the stuff thats nice and bright, we can also see useful information in the shadows.   Cameras have a hard time capturing that wide range of light intensity within one image. Cameras have only been evolving for a short time, they have a lot of catching up to do. But they are indeed catching up.   The D810 is pretty amazing compared to the old D300.  By the way, always shoot RAW.  Period.  Don’t argue.  Modern software like Lightroom and Photoshop can pull amazing detail out of the shadows of a RAW file.
Another area where newer cameras have come a long way is high ISO performance.   ISO is basically a way to make your camera more sensitive to light.   At higher ISO’s you don’t need as much light to get a good exposure.  This enables you to use faster shutter speeds and smaller apertures (larger Fstops) when there is not a lot of light.   Think shooting fast-moving sports in dim light.  (The downside of this is that images start to get noisy, and you lose some DR.)   While the D810 is pretty damn good at high ISO, there are better cameras out there when it comes to high ISO performance.   Seems every new camera body that comes out these days has better and better ISO.   So, yeah, I’m drooling for a second body, just for high ISO and higher frames per sec.
Advice:   Camera bodies keep getting better and better.  If you are just starting, or on a budget, they are all good.   Camera lenses, on the other hand, are a better investment.  You’ll hold on to a good quality lens forever, as the camera bodies come and go.
What I am currently shooting with:
  • Main camera – Nikon D810
  • Lenses –  Nikon 16-35,  Nikon 50 1.4,  Nikon 105 macro,  Nikon 70-200,  Tamron 150-600.
  • GoPro 4 Silver
  • Tripod – Giottos with Markins ballhead.
aquat
Aquatech housing, image from catalogue
I’ve recently acquired an Aquatech splash housing, (pic from catalogue).  Taking your camera in waves is very fun and a great excuse to get back in the ocean!   To do that when the water is cold, I use a Hyperflex Voodoo 5/4 wetsuit, with 5mil gloves and boots.  I really do stay warm.