Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Gearing Up

So, I'm on my way to New York City in about 12 hours. I always pack last minute, be it for clothes, necessities, and/or photo gear. While packing clothes and sundries is almost a brainless matter, photo gear is a one whole different animal.

What do I bring? I WANT to bring it all! I can't. Won't fit. Too Heavy. Will I need this? This would be fun to have. So many decisions and sacrifices to make. Here's an account as I go through these choices.

(For those of you that don't know, I run a small eBay store. This presents a wide array of photography equipment at my disposal, aside from what I own. While I technically own these, I treat them as my eBay store's property. I think of the store as a separate entity.)

First and foremost, the camera. This is an easy one - it will be my Canon 5D (Mark I). Aside from the 30D that I use for my eBay photos, there is no other choice.

Now for the lenses. Starting with the easy one - for low light, I'm taking my Canon EF 50mm f/1.4. The other lenses that came into consideration were: Canon EF 35mm f/2, Canon EF 85mm f/1.8, and a Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 Mk II from the store. 35 is too wide, and 85 is too long. The 50/1.8 came into consideration for five seconds, only because it was smaller and lighter than the 50/1.4, but not by much.

An automatic selection would be my favorite lens - Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L. I'd love to be able to go on an elevated area and create a time lapse video.

The toughest decision to make was for my walk-around lens. Usually, I use my Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L for this. But it is heavy and bulky. The alternatives available from the store are:
• Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L - Lighter, longer reach but its not a f/2.8. Hmmm.
• Tamron SP 28-75mm f/2.8 - Lighter, pretty darn sharp. The problem is that it has a 67mm filter ring and I don't own any 67mm filters.
• Tokina AT-X Pro SV 28-70mm f/2.8 - This is almost as big and heavy as the Canon 24-70mm. That alone puts it out of contention already.
Hmm .. I think I'll go back to this later.

For an ultra wide lens, I only have the Canon 17-40mm f/4L. The only other alternative would be my Canon EF 15mm f/2.8 Fisheye. This is a no contest. For functionality, its the 17-40mm, hands down. Although, I can still take the Fisheye if there's space.

Ever since I bought my Canon 5D, my most used lens has been my Canon 70-200mm f/2.8L. For work and other local events, this is a staple in my bag. But for this trip, I'm on the fence with it. Same reasons as the 24-70mm, its pretty heavy and bulky. I think I'll decide on this together with the mid-range lens last.

Then there's the flash. I have a really good friend over there who is a fellow strobist enthusiast. So if I needed it, I'll have access to some Alien Bees B800s, Alien Bees Cybersyncs, and more Speedlights. For my own, I'll stick to the lighter and smaller one on this. Its the Canon 430EX (Mk I) over my Canon 550EX.

Other necessities in the bag and are getting packed - batteries, compact flash cards, business cards, printed copy of Photographer's Rights, filters, Canon Off-Camera Shoe Cord 2, and Canon TC-80N3 Timer Remote Controller. Since this is the bag that I'm carrying on the plane with me, the front pocket /sleeve of the bag contains my 15" MacBook Pro. Top pouch will carry earphones, iPhone charger and cord, and MacBook Pro charger. Side pocket will carry my small video camera, the Sony MHS-PM1 Webbie HD.

Now for the tough decision, the mid-range lens. Considering this bag will be on my back for the better part of eight days. I've decided to take the 24-105mm. I lose the 2.8, but if ever I need it, I'll just slap on the 50/1.4.

This doesn't leave me any space for the 70-200mm f/2.8L. I can live without it, but I'd rather not. So, I decided to borrow a Canon EF 80-200mm f/4-5.6 from the store. This lens is also called the Pocket Rocket. It looks like a 28-80mm kit lens from Canon film camera bodies. I'm probably not going to need it, but for its size and weight, it doesn't bother me. The 70-200/2.8L will bother me though if I carried it around and not use it much.

Going with the Pocket Rocket, leaves me with a bit of space, so I've also taken my Canon EF Extender 1.4x Mk II and the Fisheye.

Gearing up for NYC

For in-flight entertainment, I bought VisionMongers by David duChemin. Thank you for interest. I should be having entries soon for my review of the book and a look back into my trip.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

PhotoBlog

I've started a Wordpress photo only blog at http://geraldgonz.wordpress.com. I intend to update it daily on weekdays.

Cheers!

Monday, January 18, 2010

Photographing a Photographer

A few months ago, I assisted for Eugene Biscardi. It was a great learning experience. Most of the knowledge gained from that day was how a fairly large production works. The crew consisted of the photographer, his personal assistant, an assistant, two photo interns (assistants to the assistant?), stand-in model, stylist, and three people for hair and make-up. I've never worked in a crew this big before. That's 10 people to photograph one person!

The shoot encountered some technical problems, and we ended up using my gear. Eugene was very grateful for this and kept saying I saved that shoot. I never saw the end product of this shoot, and I couldn't remember the name of the actress either.

Eugene contacted me last week since he needs a recent photo to be used in a ... I forgot. Somebody else's website. Anyhow, I readily agreed although it was quite intimidating. Photographing a photographer can not be easy. He knows what I'm doing coupled with the fact that I have worked for him before, I did not want him to control the shoot. Upon showing up my fears were confirmed. He already had the shot and location in mind. What I didn't want to do was show up and just press a button. There was a bit of role reversal - I, the photographer, was the stiff one while he, the subject, was relaxed. However, when I started prepping the gear - camera, lens, lights, etc., he eased up on the coaching and let me do my thing. I'm glad he gave me freedom with the lighting, which boosted my confidence.

Since the location required a half a block walk, I decided to use one light. I used the Alien Bees ABR800 Ringflash with the 30" Moon Unit, powered by a Vagabond II. This has been my go-to light as of late. It is compact and light (as opposed to my Calumet Travelites - which ironically, does not travel light) and it gives me two options - use it as a ringflash or as an off-camera flash. Plus, I can use it on a boom. I'm quite fearful about using the Travelite 750 on a boom. The Moon Unit's light has been compared to a beauty dish. I don't use a beauty dish much, so I can't really tell.

Here is the lighting set up:

EB-Setup

It was 4pm and we were chasing light, so I decided to go with a natural light look. I learned a lot throughout this shoot in terms of posing and interacting with the subject. Its a great help as I always thought that was my weak point. This was our end product:

EB-9634 B copy

He was really happy with the photo ... from a crew of one.

The Fly Pelicans

FP-9536

This newly formed group needed a photo for a promo quickly. I agreed to an impromptu shoot at one of the member's home. It was pretty much a quick set-up using a black velour backdrop created for me by My Friend Glen. I love this "backdrop" - its actually two pieces of 4' wide velour fabric seamed together. It will photograph as black as long as the light/s do not reach it.

Lighting set-up:
FP-Setup

The key light was the Calumet Travelite 750 with the medium softbox. The Alien Bees ABR800 Ringflash was the fill light and was set up at a very low power level. The other Travelite 750 with a gridded stripbox provided a little bit of separation from the backdrop.

I shot the members individually as well using almost the same set-up, except that the strip light was moved to camera-left behind the subject/s.

FP-9601PS

FP-9556 copy

FP-9541

FP-9544

Friday, January 8, 2010

Mr. Hal Bergman

IN-9469

Between Christmas Day and New Year's Eve, I had an opportunity to shoot with Hal Bergman. Hal, a fantastic photographer, does a lot of industrial stock photography.

Hal at work:
Hal
Hal was using my Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L, so I had to use another version of a shift camera - camera on a tripod on top of a picnic table.

Hal suggested bracketing, so I did. With three exposures, I dabbled with HDR:
IN-9480

Few other shots from the rest of the night:
Rail Bridge

IN-9483

IN-9477