None the Wiser

This week I popped along to watch local cover-band None the Wiser rehearse in Ardrishaig. My real reason for being there of course was to take some photographs from the session and as ever I was delighted at the prospect. The band do a nice line in rock-covers and I had a great time being (very loudly) entertained for an hour or so while wrestling with the light.

Actually I should say with the lack-of-light as the rehearsal was lit by one striplight and a single weak spotlight in a fully curtained-off stage area. For the technical among you, that meant ISO 6400 and still only 1/60th of a second at best. As for autofocus on a moving subject….well even the beloved 5D mark  2 is bound by the laws of physics; it was slower than I needed it to be and for about 1/3d of the images I switched it off and used optimism while attempting manual focus.

In short 270 exposures come down here to only 32 favourites. Hope you like them.

https://www.facebook.com/NoneTheWiserLochgilphead?fref=ts

A few of the band:

Here’s bassist Paul. Note a lot of monochrome in this post as my offboard flash on stand, flourescent strip and probable tungsten spotlight made for a mad white balance which never looked normal whatever I tried in processing.

And sticks-man Pete. Check the state of those by the way:

This is a a very technical outfit, here they can be seen checking mission-control before launching the next classic.

And guitarist Dave, who actually relaxes for the camera. Yes fellow photographers, these mythical creatures do exist and you are looking at one; thank you Dave!

Now that they have been introduced I’ll let you just see the images…

Here is the band’s loud and sassy frontwoman, Jo:

Did I happen to mention that I would like to have a Stratocaster? Just in case Santa reads this blog…

Check out their Facebook page and if you are near Mid-Argyll soon, maybe have a pint and take in a gig. These guys are good!

 

 

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Hannah at Westport Beach

Yesterday Hannah had her first ever visit to the beach. Julie insisted that this auspicious occasion had to take place at her favourite beach from her Kintyre days, the surfers paradise that is Westport. One of our party marked the occasion with this temporary vandalism; to find out who, look for a culprit playing with the fork!

Needless to say, Her-Nibs was very taken with the warm sand underfoot. Just walking around had her delighted enough…

Although the plastic watering can that came with the bucket and spade set bought in Campbeltown took the biscuit. She would have filled it endlessly if she wasn’t so wary of the sea lapping her lower paws…

So I can confidently caption this one as “Mum, fill my watering can from that dodgy-looking sea-stuff again, peeeeeaaaaaaasssee”…

However, she just lost herself in the vast beachverse…

Eventually Mum introduced her to the sheer delight of what Nanci Griffith termed “unnecessary plastic objects” in her introduction to “Love at the five and dime” when describing her fetish for old Woolworths stores…

You will of course note that faithful friend, Monkey was included in the party. I have to tell you, he was suspiciously fond of the plastic toys…

It turns out that the actual height of satisfaction for a wee beach novice, is putting stones in a bucket. A crab’s leg found its way in there too. Pure beach collecting bliss…

Only with the satisfaction of a hard day stone-gathering behind you, can you truly sit and contemplate the existential mysteries revealed by the eternal metaphor of the sea lapping at the border of the land…

Photographically, this one was an accidental overexposure, as my hand had switched my cameras selector knob from Aperture Priority to Manual. It was about 3-stops overexposed, but Lightroom did a good job of rescuing some detail from the snowscape that I actually downloaded; I kind of liked the effect anyway.

Julie for some reason had recently taught Hannah the Glaswegian description “boggin”. (As in “pure boggin”) Hannah finally had a chance to apply it…

But thankfully, like a little Makka Pakka (Cbeebies ref for adults unencumbered with Tombliboos, oops, I did it again (and apparently I’ve gone a bit Britney Spears – you should be impressed I know who she is), sorry), it turns out that she is all about cleaning stuff, spades first of course…

Eventually the sun dictated that even well sun-creamed little girls had to go. I think she might like beaches!

And as for her sneaky simian chum, he loved it too.

 

All taken with my Canon 7D. 17-85IS, Sigma 10-20 and my Canon 70-300.

 

Thats all folks!

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Karen

My friend Karen is getting married this summer. I will be doing the photography for the event and I am really looking forward to it. Karen works in Inveraray and as it happens, so do I, so it seemed a great idea to get together for a while last week and take some pictures just to get the wedding “ball rolling”. Karen and her sister met me for an hour and we had a great time in the all too rare West Highland sunshine.

Photographically the real challenge was the high overhead sun with harsh shadows. As usual, I fought it off with off board fill flash through an umbrella. Lower sunlight is less of a challenge as you can always shoot into it, with fill-flash for a romantic effect, but high overhead sun, is just tough; that said, the quality of the modern flashguns with ETTL wireless linking is amazing. The results speak for themselves here.

Here is Karen with the now derelict Inveraray pier in the background:

This one didn’t have any fill flash, but I love the playful expression and so a little grain and an old cross-processed treatment style has emphasised the bucketload of cute that Karen possesses:

I always like curves forming leading lines to the subject. The sea-wall here provides a nice one to Karen.

Here are two of Laura, Karen’s sister:

The final one here is my favourite. I really love Karen’s confident expression. Again, the “Vital Spark” provides a leading line to Karen’s face. The real challenge here for the unwary photographer was avoiding “mast-out-of-the-head-syndrome”:

Hope you like these Karen!

 

 

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Margaret Ker

I have had a long gap since my last portrait session, largely due to work pressures and the hassles of having a tiny girl around at the learning to walk stage. It was a great pleasure therefore this weekend to meet with Argyll artist Margaret Ker for a proper, no distraction portrait session. Margaret and her husband were really great hosts, and I had one of the most pleasant Saturday afternoons I have had in ages, drinking Earl Grey, talking art and photography and taking pictures. Margaret was so great to work with, with such a genuine interest in the process of people photography, that I pretty much forgot to be nervous. It never ceases to surprise me, that a body of portraiture behind me indicating that I can get a decent portrait from a session, seems in no way to prevent thoughts like, “I have no idea how this is going to work” , or “what if I can’t make this work today”. I think the long gap in time had made me even more vulnerable to these thoughts than usual.

The first two portraits show Margaret in front of one of her tree paintings. She loves painting trees in particular!

 

Margaret has recently retired as an art lecturer from a Glasgow college, and she has picked up a few different media and techniques over the years. The work behind her is one of many featuring natural slate, skilfully assembled on board. From a photographic viewpoint, Margaret’s house has a lot of colour in it, and different rooms seem to have different coloured walls. The wall here was very complementary to Margaret’s really lovely eyes.

Another room, another colour! I had a seat in this monarch of sofas, and I have to tell you it was almost “end of session”. I could have read a book curled up in this for some happy hours; talk about comfort. I digress however, Margaret feels the same about it, and so I thought a few showing Margaret in this very happy habitat would be fun, and give some variety to the shots. There is an old-fashioned feel to this scene which I can’t quite explain, but I really love. Placing Margaret so centrally in this picture, while having her leaning toward the viewer accentuates her confidence and presence in that she can so easily dominate the image while being a small central part of it. Margaret is a strong and confident artist/woman, and this picture reflects that.

This one was more about Margaret in her favourite spot on the sofa and less about constructing an image. It has captured Margaret beautifully anyway.

Margaret is really interesting to talk to about artistic technique, and she uses some amazing approaches to her painting to combine a “flow state”, capturing the “gestalt” outline and form, before working on the finer detail later. Margaret holds long dowels to constrain herself to that big-shaping of the work early on in a piece. Margaret also feels she has to be in the scene to catch that early outline, sometimes returning a few times to get it right. This piece is from Kilmory woods near Lochgilphead, and bowled me over with its technique ond sense of flow. You really could be drawn into the tunnel of trees. Margaret still dominates this image though, as she should, aided by the leading lines of the white mount card and the natural window light illuminating her face more than the olive background. That mix of loveliness and confidence is very apparent again here.

This one was a bit of a technical challenge for me, as the strong backlighting rendered Margaret too dark for my 5D’s autofocus to lock with ease. As a result there were a few wasted shots. I had remote flash and umbrella diffuser to my left filling-in Margaret’s face and it has created a strong and quirky image using the window frame and the rim-light as framing devices. The table has a lovely story as Margaret rescued it and used it for some pyrography using old irons from her and her husbands mothers’ as the shapes in the very celtic looking design. I thought it was a lovely way of making an old and tired object important and  fresh again.

I would like to try the new and inexpensive LED panel lights some time for pictures like this, as the permanent light source would aid the autofocus to work. I might buy a cheap one sometime soon to experiment.

Finally one snatched as an afterthought. We had finished and Margaret was making more tea and some snacks, when some demon made me try one outdoor shot just in case. On Saturday afternoon, the sun was high, and although there was some cloud, it was harsh and facial shadows would have been brutal. A a result I preferred to enjoy the natural window light and varied backgrounds offered by the house. The sun, while still “highish”, was nothing like so harsh by this time. Margaret is an outdoor person at heart and so perhaps my demon was guilt at casting her in an indoor role! Anyway, I love the slightly windswept, natural look and enjoyed the only outing for my 70-200 f2.8 for this session.

 

I plan to photograph Margaret again at her favourite local outdoor location when the light is more suitable so watch this space. Thanks Margaret for a really great afternoon talking art and photography.

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Castle Dounie Circuit 2

I had a lovely, (and tiring) walk this weekend to the stunning viewpont of Castle Dounie,an old iron age hill fort with one of the best views for sure that Argyll offers anywhere. My dear friends Gerry and Elisabeth joined us and they were kind enough to let me indulge in a few frames at the viewpoint. I had my 7D and only the Canon 17-85 IS with me. Not normally a lens for people pictures, but a decent landscape lens. A little fill flash from the onboard pop-up was needed to combat the backlit setting. Paps of Jura across the water of course! f5.6 (wide open for this lens at this zoom), 1/250th sec.

I have commented before on the 7D’s party piece of handheld HDR work. with the camera set on auto bracketing and rapid exposures, a press of the shutter takes 3 exposures in approximately 1/3 second. This is fast enough for any movement between frames to be minimal indeed. Photomatix pro software can automatically correct for tiny movements between anyway.  This was f9 handheld at 1/200th second.

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