All posts tagged in Photography

I love photography, I don't pretend to call myself a photographer. I leave that to artists, and professionals who do it for a living. I however do love taking pictures, modern day 'developing' (vs film development when I was kid) and presentation. I'm also a gear head, and have a particular love of my Micro Four Thirds camera gear.

Clik Compact Sport Review - The perfect adventure / mountain biking camera bag

10 November, 2011

If a photographer and a mountain biker mated, they would have produced this

This is damn near perfect. This is a hydration pack, mixed with a great camera bag. Designed to protect your gear, whilst giving it in whatever outdoor adventure sport that provides your adrenalin. It's the Clik Elite Compact Sport and I give it a full review here with some good pics and compare it to my trusty and well worn Camelbak Hawg

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GH2 - The ultimate travel camera

04 November, 2011

The real test of a travelling with a camera, 7 days clattering in a CamelBak

I spent 7 days on a Mountain Bike in Peru, with my GH2, and usually my favourite lens the 7-14mm, nestled in the top of my CamelBak Mule. When I say nestled, I really mean 'just enough room to put an elongated grapefruit'. Even at altitude, and when I was dog tired, it still didn't weigh enough to be an issue - I just packed it away every single day. The results were amazing photo essay on Peru here The telling fact, was someone else on the trip, did have a DSLR, with a Clik backpack, specially made to mtb with, took his camera one day, and then that was it - it stayed behind.

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The Inca Trail - All Mountain Adventure

22 September, 2011

Exposure. Peruvians have built their country on it. Big scary one slip and you're screwed type stuff. Concentrate and don't stuff up. There's a sat phone, but you really don't want that number called.

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GH1 - Micro Four Thirds the ultimate travel camera ?

03 January, 2011

My experiences with the Panasonic GH1 on a 18 day trip to Uganda, Tanzania

Elephant in Queen Elizabeth National Park. Olympus 70-300mm, F5.4, 1/800. Colours messed with in Aperture

As soon as we started travelling I started realising the huge advantage over traditional DSLRs. I had the equivalent focal range of 28-600mm in one bag for not a heck of a lot of money. To put that into perspective, to buy one lens capable of 600mm you're looking at 5k plus on a single lens and they are HUGE! (eg ... weighing 5kg). Even going back to 500mm, we're still generally talking 1-2kg for a lens.  When you're bumping around in tiny planes, safari vehicles, have ridiculous weight limits (15kg for 3 weeks), every few hundred grams counts, and if one lens cost that much money well the paranoia factor would be off the charts. I get pro photographers who do it for a living need that gear, but when 99.99% of everyones photos land up on the web, the law of diminishing returns kicks in. My bag with everything in bar the monopod and mic, would fit under an economy airline seat, and I could get my feet in as well !

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The reality of digital photography & video

26 December, 2010

You need lots and lots of storage

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Imagine if everything in the world were this intense

21 June, 2010

Taken at a friends moms garden at their cottage. All sorts of vibrant colours, shallow depth of field lens. Intense colours, a little too much as I used the vibrant setting to push it a little further (hey film buffs use different film stock to the same effect!). Taken on a Panasonic GH1 with the 20mm F1.7 pancake lens.

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