Single-Serving Photo

Archive for June, 2011

High-speed Aperture Video

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Continuing down this path we’re on, looking into the inner workings of our photographic equipment, here is yet another fabulous video from the folks at Camera Technica showing you what the Canon 18-55mm aperture looks like when it opens and closes in slow motion. Well, somewhat slow motion. The aperture actually opens and closes so quickly that even in this high-speed video it’s still a very brief movement.

Check out Camera Technica for more about photographic technology.

Incredible Video of Canon IS

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

That’s “image stabilization” for those of you not paying attention. Or “VR” for the Nikon folks out there. I believe Canon and Nikon use very similar electronic systems. Either way, this is fascinating. This is what the inside of a Canon EF 28-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM lens looks like when the image stabilization is operating.

Image Stabilization Revealed from Camera Technica on Vimeo.

Web Browser Color Management

Friday, June 17th, 2011

I’ve written articles in the past about color management—you know, ICC profiles, calibration, metamerism, blah blah blah—but the world keeps changing around us. In general, things change for the better, which is great, but as a photographer looking to display images on the web, there are always things to watch out for.

I found a great article on the burgeoning “Gear Oracle” site about web browser color management, which breaks down the effects of displaying images with different color spaces in different browsers.

It’s not all great news, but it’s important to know how things work so that you can mitigate any potential problems. Color management is basically a briar patch no matter how attentive and diligent you are, and trust me, I know this from close personal experience printing photographic reproductions for five years.

Read Web browser color management guide via Gear Oracle

Fabulous Depression-Era Color Photos

Friday, June 10th, 2011

The goal of photography is to capture a moment, an idea, a thought, or an event and suspend it in time. Whether it is journalistic, editorial, representational, abstract, or artistic is not important in reaching that goal. Occasionally, as a photographer is striving toward their singular goal, they unwittingly meet another one.

Such is the case with these amazing depression-era color photographs published by the International Business Times; though they were taken at the time as recordings of events (though demonstrating the aesthetic sense of the accomplished photographer), the social and cultural distance between the depression and today has vaulted these images into pure artistry. They are truly breathtaking; scenes from a past world, a past America.

View the entire set of photographs on International Business Times: Rare Color Photos from Depression Era.