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Shutter speed assignment

Taken with BlackBird Fly TLR

An image for my apertures and f-stops blog article, part of the August 2008 Camera Works series of articles at my blog.

 

Read an audio interview with me (September 2008) about this camera, conducted by John Meadows of the "On the Log" podcast.

me and my friend hands shadow !

Based on the Cameradactyl design and code

For my third project in photo 1, we're doing shutter speeds. I'm playing around with photographing fire with my film camera vs the usual with my digital.

This is a photo of a sparkler with a slow shutter speed of 8 seconds. The ISO was 100 and f-stop 4.5. This was obviously taken at night. I thought the twirling motion would look when captured slowly.

As seen on many a shutter, including the Pronto, Prontor, Vero and Vario brands.

Image copyright © Al Donnelly / houdi

 

Contact: thisisadp@gmail.com

 

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www.netsounds.co.uk

In contrast to the other side of the farmhouse (see next photo) it looks like corrugated iron is the "in" method to keep out the bad weather!

An old weather beaten pallet leaning against a roller shutter door. Straight out of camera with no post processing. One of the images that I shot for Practical Photography Magazine Camera School Module 5 Black and white.

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The one shot that I felt was salvageable from a Pre-christmas meetup of the SG Flickr Meetup Group (Yes, I am that far behind)

 

B&W conversion done using the Gorman technique. Tri-X 400 style grain applied using a Photoshop plugin.

Shutter speed is 1/500 and aperture is f/5.6.

I bought a couple of these for remote shutter release. They are very handy for taking slow shutter speed photos (camera on a tripod) and for people photos, especially if I want to include myself in a group.

 

I had a couple of the Sony RMT-P1BT controllers, but lost one of them. I have also run into these suddenly stop working because the battery ran out. Which means I have to carry an inventory of spare batteries, and always carry an extra battery with me. The Sony controller is expensive (USD 78), and the batteries are expensive too.

 

These Chinese bluetooth controllers are much cheaper, less of a financial hit if you lose them, far easier to link to the camera (better user interface), and very importantly, have a rechargeable battery inside them and a fast USB-C charger, as well as a battery level indicator. So I never need to worry about running out of battery power, and I can recharge them anywhere, even in my car.

 

I bought this brand the first time about 3 years ago, and that model did not use a rechargeable internal battery. Also, it stopped working after about 3 years of use, so I had to throw it away. The new model looks improved and has the rechargeable internal battery. Hopefully this will last longer! So far so good…

 

Having a dedicated remote controller like this is better than a smart phone app. You have to pull out your phone, then run the app, then wait for it to connect with the camera, then look into your phone to push a button. You look really silly doing that if you are in a group photo! A remote controller is much easier to operate: it gives you both the focus and the shutter release button, and you can also keep it in your hand and then keep your hand in your pocket very naturally to take a photo, without looking like a geek!

 

Hope this is useful info – I can recommend this device.

A shutter I saw on my way to Kloof street. Since Neilen suggested that we all join project 365, I've been noticing the subtle changes between weekday-Long-Street and weekend-Long-Street.

"He had closed his store permanently and was at home all day now. He and Miss Rosa lived in the back of the house, with the front door locked and the front shutters closed and fastened, and where, so the neighbors said, he spent the day behind one of the slightly opened blinds like a picquet on post, armed not with a musket but with the big family bible ... until a detachment of troops would pass: whereupon he would open the bible and declaim in a harsh loud voice even above the sound of tramping feet, the passages of the old violent vindictive mysticism which he had already marked as the actual picquet would have ranged his row of cartridges along the window sill."

 

-- William Faulkner

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A Slow shutter Try @ night in my terrace. With the aeroplane on its flight, it gave a beautiful pic

 

More for the shutter collection

Handheld, with a very slow shutter.

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