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Entries from September 2006

Since I switched from film to digital, quite a few years ago, I’d been walking in a haze, half asleep. The pictures I was taking were but ghosts of themselves. Letting the camera record a JPEG is like standing next to the Mona Lisa and sketching it on a piece of cardboard with white chalk; most of the original purity and complexity are lost and can never be restored.

I still attempted to enhance my shots on the computer, of course, but it was a messy process and would unavoidably cost me some resolution, definition or range. I’d manage to get decent small final images for the web, but often felt like I had pushed my luck a little far.

Then a few days ago, while doing research on the HDR topic – which was not giving me the results I’d expected – I stumbled upon a site which used slightly different terms and looked at things from a different angle. I read it once, the entire site, missing some of the subtleties, then read it again. And suddenly it struck me in all its simplicity: I’d been approaching digital photography from the wrong angle all along.

The secret it seems, lies in recognizing that just as traditional photographers have been incorporating darkroom work into their final output, so must digital photographers! And in order to do so, one must absolutely shoot initially in RAW format. The RAW format is the digital equivalent to an exposed but undeveloped roll of film. All the scene’s information is there, intact, untreated and uncompressed, as opposed to the JPEG format where information is interpreted and compressed by the camera, with a serious quality loss and no way back.

And so that web site spoke of « undeveloped » digital pictures, and of developing them, and it suddenly all made sense. The RAW file had become the « digital negative », my favorite photo editing program would be the darkroom and only skill and patience would allow me to reveal the digital photograph’s secrets and make it come to life.

So after years of resisting the temptation, mostly because it meant sitting on twice the capacity my memory cards would have yielded, I have finally switched from shooting JPEGs to RAWs. Nothing about the move has been easy, nor fast. I’ve effectively dropped my in-camera storage space by half. I now have images that load slowly, which nobody can view as is and on which I’ll have to spend more time to get them to exist.

But I have also gained a new playground, a mysterious Cave of Ali Baba. I’ve opened my own digital darkroom.

And what’s even more promising is that I now have the option of incorporating High Dynamic Range blending techniques into the early development process, effectively gaining an HDR negative to start with.

It will take time. I have to learn photography all over again. But I can now look at scenes with a more daring eye. I am one step closer to the creative landscape photography I’ve always dreamed of accomplishing.

The sleeper has awakened.

[The first attempts at digital developping, shot on the Seawall, will be posted in a day or two...]

 

 Posted at 2:28 PM in Bits and pieces: & Photoblogs: 2 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

3 short hours ago, I was going to bed after staying up very late into the night at Waves on Richards, working on new features for the blog. But there was a forecast of fog banks for this morning and I set the alarm for 6:30 am. Now that I am comfortably sitting on the bus headed downtown I could probably drift back to a much needed sleep.

It seems the fog hasn’t happened after all, at least not in the area. It’ll be a gorgeous day, though, and the camera is itching to come out of the bag. Film crews are setting up here and there, they probably haven’t slept more than me.

I’ll stop at the tower to take a panorama of the city and tickle the morning crew. Then I might hop on the Seabus, cross the Burrard Inlet and head up to Grouse Mountain. Or l might catch a bus southbound and get lost in Whiterock. There will be water near or far. There’s also coffee in my not so distant future, and probably some more later.

I’ve got the whole day ahead of me. I’ve got all life to get there. I’ll take the long way home.

 

 Posted at 10:41 AM in Schtroumpfissime: 3 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

This is only part of an ongoing series of experiments on High Dynamic Range photography with Vancouver at its core. I will never substitute HDR to normal photography and only post HDR pictures if they are more interesting then their regular counterpart(s). There are still a lot of artifacts, halos and imperfections. But I have to admit that even though my photos adjusted through HDR software are often a little surreal, I see them as a mix between painting and photography and as such, they fascinate me. Now eventually, I hope to become good enough at it that the HDR shots will be undetectable, if not for their amazing color range.

 

 Posted at 7:40 PM in Photoblogs: & Vancouver: No comments yet »  Post one!

From looking at my feet while I walked on Southern France beaches as a kid to find coins in the sand, I’ve gone full circle and now seem to look up around me most of the time. It might be because I’m taller now and the ground has moved away from me. Or it might just be because I have been up there and there I’ll always long to return. In any case, looking up in Vancouver reveals a mesmerizing array of architectural fantasies and contrasts. Glass dominates the environment and lines are stretched in the vertical dimension. Here are a few photos taken just before fall fell on us...

 

 Posted at 2:45 PM in Photoblogs: & Vancouver: 1 Comment » Toggle display  Reply

Well since these are geeky days, I’m temporarily experimenting with streaming music directly on the blog. You will have noticed the simple controls at the top just below the main menu. I’ve set the music to begin playing automatically for now, to attract attention to it and cause your feedback, but it probably will become an option, no more. You can stop the music or skip tracks with the controls on the left, and change the volume by dragging the scale on the right. Limited music selection for now. The XSPF player is a great Flash-based application created by Fabricio Zuardi; I simply adapted the colors a little. Comments welcome; does it work well, or slow down page load, or bug you to death?

Update: 6:30 am the following day. Ok, it was already bugging me, so I killed the autostart. If you’d like nice music to have a nice time while you read this nice blog, just click the nice play button. ;-)

 

 Posted at 3:45 AM in Bits and pieces: 8 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

Thick convoluted clouds were drawing menacing shapes in a meaningless sky. In a song an eagle soared away, along with hopes and promises. Nothing in the early morning seemed to make sense. The scene outside the window was an abstraction. A few tables to the left, a math student was transferring long strings of numbers from loose sheets to a computer, as if numbers could make sense of our lives.

The night had offered very little sleep and dawn had brought bad dreams. Now coffee was finally infusing some soothing warmth into icy waters. But with a newfound peace, the questions as always came in focus.

How does one leave glory behind to settle into an anonymous existence? Will the dreams of furious seas and raging storms ever stop recurring, so fantastic now that they are free of substance but terrible when they were a reality? Can skin ever forget the fierce assault of a tropical sun, the burning caress of bright sandy beaches and the friendly sting of salt water? Will the call of the deep ever fade away or will it forever haunt me, enticing me to find dark and cold places to jump into, and be weightless, and be alone, and be free?

Those depths where life hangs on a thread, intense and full of purpose, how I miss them now that my whole life revolves around down-to-Earth realities. Buying groceries. Finding a cheap place to stay downtown. Making ends meet.

There is nothing as melancholic as a battle lost. Except, maybe, a battle won.

 

 Posted at 7:45 PM in Schtroumpfissime: 5 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

Thanks to my amazing powers of observation, I’ve noticed that most visitors to the blog do not care to comment. So I’ve decided to make it easier on them/you by customizing the page with the addition of a simple « View / Hide Comments » button at the bottom of each post. While not essential to the posts, comments become part of the whole experience and add interaction and dialogue to what starts as a very unilateral text. So while I strongly encourage every visitor to comment away, I also wanted anonymous visits to the blog to be as enjoyable as possible, yet complete and informative.

So rather than clicking on the bottom link to add a comment and having to wait for the specific entry’s page to reload, all you now have to do to read comments is click on the button below a post. They will appear instantly without a need for reload, giving you a taste of what people are blabbing about and hopefully encouraging you to do the same, at which point you do need to click on the bottom « Add Comments » link.

How I hate writing manuals. It’s always a challenge to explain simplicity without complicating it.

 

 Posted at 7:30 PM in Bits and pieces: 8 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

Suggested recently by Bee, Pandora has immediately managed to eclipse ShoutCast as my online streaming music player. ShoutCast is great but basically a simple collection of online radio stations, streamed to the users without giving them any control on what they listen to other than by switching stations.

In comes Pandora. Rather than broadcasting set radio stations from different origins, Pandora only relies on itself to provide you with music. And it does that - extremely well - with a twist: you setup your own radio stations based on your tastes. How is that done? Simple. You define a station by choosing a song or a band of your choice. Pandora then automatically creates a station for you that will play music similar to that song.

And that’s where Pandora becomes totally innovative. Rather than basing their music selection simply on bands or genre the way most stations do it, they have actually built a huge database of all contemporary music after having completely analyzed it according to influences, key, beat, instruments, harmonies and many more. Analyzing a song to be included in the Music Genome Project (the 400,000 songs database itself) takes 20-30 minutes and up to 400 attributes of the music are studied in the process.

You will be served a cocktail of songs based on their similarities with your initial selection and can even approve or disapprove of the results to better tune - pardon the pun - the station. You can skip or bookmark songs and even find out more about them. The bottom line is that Pandora aims at helping you discover new music fitting your tastes, and it excels at it.

Add a very slick interface, and you’ve got a superb - and free - product, well worth the two minutes required for registering.

Wanna give it a try? Type in an artist name or song...

 

 Posted at 2:38 AM in Bits and pieces: & Cool: 1 Comment » Toggle display  Reply

With the equinox in less than a week, there remains no doubt that fall is upon us. Even in a region like ours, leafs have started falling and the sky has turned all shades of gray. Temperatures have dropped and wearing a fleece, light jacket or windbreaker is now often a pleasant necessity. The much needed sudden humidity will hopefully put a damper on local forest fires and certainly has sparked a million fragrances, from the wet soil to moss and pine trees. The cranberry harvests are approaching, the Grouse Grind is on its last stretch, summertime attractions are closing, winter hours slowly implemented.

On Sunday, Prince of Whales was operating one last time from Vancouver and invited tourism industry partners on a short last cruise of the season, bound for Bowen Island. The weather was rather bleak - low ceilings and light rain - but as true(?) West-Coasters we got onboard, zipped up our coats and enjoyed the misty scenery and hot coffee. Around Bowen island, the air smelled strongly of pine trees as the forest awoke to the rain.

I was once again reminded of how friendly everybody in the local tourism sphere is, and particularly the Prince of Whales staff. I got to meet the company owner, a cheerful lad with communicative enthusiasm who soon launched into a very interesting chat about the boat’s unique propulsion system. (Continue reading additional note at the bottom if boats are your thing.)

Prince of Whales will continue operating whale watching trips from Victoria all winter, but this was the end of an innovative first season of Vancouver-based trips. Can’t wait until next summer. They were kind enough to mention my own A killer Time with Killer Whalespost on their blog which they update to reflect whale sightings and movements. Cool!

Cloudy day pictures are a little hard to ace but I’ve included a few here that somehow seem to reflect the ambiance adequately. The greyness of the day was somehow welcome. The clouds lingering on the mountains reminded me of the Pyrenees. And the rain washed away a summer’s weariness. Another great afternoon! Thanks Melissa!

Continue reading "Fall is upon Vancouver"

 

 Posted at 8:40 PM in Photoblogs: & Vancouver: 6 Comments » Toggle display  Reply

Here are two more attempts at capturing a different side of everyday scenes through High Dynamic Range photography...

 

 Posted at 2:36 PM in Photoblogs: & Vancouver: 3 Comments » Toggle display  Reply
(Page 1 of 2, totaling 15 entries)