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The merits of carrying my 500D and a fast 50mm f1.4 everywhere. These portraits took about 5 minutes to snatch from an otherwise non-photographic day.



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The merits of carrying my 500D and a fast 50mm f1.4 everywhere. These portraits took about 5 minutes to snatch from an otherwise non-photographic day.

I took this on a whim while visiting some truly amazing people at Edinburgh University this week. The building is called St John’s Land and something about the interplay of the building’s symmetry juxtaposed against the offset drainpipes appealed to me. As you know architecture is not my specialism, but variety is good for a photoblogger I suspect. I will resume normal portraiture sevice soon 🙂
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Who is this devastatingly handsome Canadian I hear you ask? Well it’s none other than my colleague and friend Jim Craigen. I posted a picture of jim in a candid moment a few postings ago and joked that he looked like a TV detective. Well Jim has been in Scotland since then and on the night before his return to Toronto I had the great pleasure of spending some time with him again. We drove around the greater Glasgow area exloring various areas such as Renfrew where I grew up, ( his lovely wife also grew up in Renfrew, but in Canada!), and finally knowing Jim’s fondness for a stroll we ended up at Queens View (Auchineden Hill) looking down on Dumgoyne and Earls Seat on the Campsies (1st picture) and Loch Lomond with Ben lomond to the right. This may not be a hillwalk in the true sense but 15 minute stroll into a fairly wild area; it cannot be common to see people with a handkerchief in pocket taking the hills and the dreaded midgies in their stride. That’s a man of style!
This one required fill in flash to prevent Jim being a silhouette. Sadly I only had onboard flash so it’s a little straight on, but it shows Jim nicely against the ever striking background of the Loch Lomond hills and the loch’s many islands.
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And finally a close up of Ben Lomond (Scotland’s southernmost 3000ft mountain) for Jim’s benefit. Hurry back Jim, you will be missed.
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The untold part of this story is that I fully intended to take Jim out for dinner, but was beguiled by the bright Scottish evening into thinking it was earlier than it actually was. When we returned to the car and headed for dinner I realised that we were already near 10pm which was the standard retaurant closing time on a Thursday evening. The long and short of it is that I ended up to my embarrassment taking him to a chip shop and us eating dinner in my car at 11.00 pm with pizza for my vegetarian self and a scotch pie for Jim. Argh, the shame (he was typically good humoured about this)…..
Final note: I have beeen playing with my new EOS 500D recently and so this was my first session with my trusty 40D for a few weeks. It fit my hand like a glove. No-one should be deceived into thinking that the 00 series 400, 450, 500D feel anything like the 0 series 20, 30 40, 50D in the hand. They don’t. The 40D feels like a really professional and sturdy tool. It felt like coming home in camera terms.
This was my 2nd favourite shot from Jess’s session during my 100 portraits project. It was done in the cloisters at Glasgow University and provided my firstreal taste of deeply interesting light. I seek out side sources of light now if I can find them, but I was still learning then. This was at ISO 640 to get a handholdable speedof 1/30th of a second.By this point my addiction to the 28mm prime lens was becoming complete. Anyone who says a good portrait lens should be aboout 100mm is crazy! Where’s the close interaction that makes a great portrait when you are too far away?

You know how you can either get lucky or horribly unlucky with who you get placed next to on a flight. Well this wonderful person happened to be billeted next to me on the otherwise tedious transatlantic hop from Toronto to London. Caroline is a seriously good singer and a world class conversationalist with a Yorkshire accent to die for.
Caroline has a whole You Tube channel to herself with thousands of people checking out her easy charm and great voice on her many singing videos. Caroline was kind enough to let me nab a quick shot as we parted company at the baggage carousels. There aren’t many girls who would be relaxed about that after a 7 hour flight overnight, but that’s Caroline!
Thanks for some great conversations Caroline!
Check her out on http://www.youtube.com/user/feathersgirl
Great shots, Newhaven Lighthouse?
The very same Dick! I presume you know it well.
I’m both a bit of a lighthouse anorak and I was brought up about 500 yards from it for the first 10 years or so.
These are lovely Matthew…I especially like the second and third from the top images, very enigmatic, but they are all very beautiful.
I love these shots – especially 2 and 3. I love lighthouses too.
Matthew, just trying to catch up on your postings. For some reason my RSS reader is not picking up new postings of yours. Don’t know if you remember, but I followed you during your 100 Portraits project and found that very entertaining AND informative. I love your displaying the side head shots of Annie in the three different styles. It really makes one realize that an otherwise very similar pose can have quite a different effect even if all are posed the same way (and these, obviously, are not actually) but rendered in color, b&w, or sepia. I have gotten away from experimenting with b&w and have never really done anything in sepia, but your images are making me rethink that!
Thanks, as always!
Bill Booz
Charlottesville, VA USA