Tag Archive for 'photography'

Wildlife Near You

Where’s the nearest Rainbow Trout to London? How about the nearest cow to Malaysia? or Everything near Brighton? www.wildlifenearyou.com is a site that allows you to track where you’ve seen wildlife all over the planet, allowing correct classification of the animals, and indexing the locations where they were found. It’s a great example of building a useful service on top of several APIs (inlcuding Flickr and Google Maps) and utilising social tagging to glue the data together.

Simon tells me there will be an API for WLNY soon, so you can write an app to find out, for instance, where the nearest Komodo Dragon to Basingstoke is, or perhaps you just want to go somewhere interesting at the weekend and find out what you can see and where. I could definitely see myself using the site for that.

Check out my profile – several of my favourite photos are linked from there. For now, here’s a photo of a European Robin from Pulborough Brooks:

Robin

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Snow in Sussex

Sussex is currently lying under a blanket of snow, with the councils thoughtfully neglecting to grit the footpaths, which have now become dangerous sheets of ice. Brilliant.

As I’ve recently moved closer to the South Downs, this snowfall was a great opportunity to wander over the downs with a thermos flask of freshly ground Monmouth Coffee beans from Coffee@33, and to take some photos of this rather picturesque area.

Here’s a photo of the area before the snow:
The Adur and South Downs

Here’s one with several inches of snow:
DSC_5943

At the top of the downs there were drifts everywhere, some of which were several feet deep. You can see the surface snow being blown around in this video:

Of course, not all drivers know how to drive in this weather, such as the refuse truck driver who thought it was a great idea to speed along a one-track icy road, almost hitting me and another car. The driver than managed to get the truck stuck, and blocked the road for several hours:
The driver of the refuse truck almost hit me and the car in front of it

Another driver thought it would be a good idea to speed along the road too, and unsurprisingly ended up in the ditch:
Car in ditch

Anyway, nobody was hurt, and I thoroughly enjoyed exploring the area. The rest of my photos can be found on Flickr, or have a look at the slideshow here (hit the button in the bottom-right for full-screen):

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iPhone camera – 3GS vs 3G

Here’s a quick comparison of the iPhone 3GS camera versus the old 3G camera. The 3GS has a macro function, so it’s not a fair test by any means :)

New iPhone 3GS:

Photo with new iPhone 3GS using Macro

…and here’s a shot from the old 3G:

Photo with old iPhone 3G

That’s quite a difference!

However, it’s nowhere near as good as the camera on the N95, and there are some great photos taken with that phone. Still, it’s a vast, welcome improvement.

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North Wales Photos

Rachel and I spent a long weekend with my parents in North Wales, staying at my uncle’s house. Once again I was stunned by the natural beauty of the landscape.

Cwm Bychan was as spectacular as usual, and I visited Dinas Oleu for the first time, which is definitely worth visiting if you’re in the area.

As usual, I took a number of photos. Here’s some to bore you ;) I recommend going full-screen.

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Anish Kapoor’s C-Curve – Brighton

An excellent photo by Brighton’s Rob Orchard! I absolutely love this photo. I’ve got to go try something like this myself now :)

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Where I’m happiest

Perhaps it’s due to all the childhood holidays I used to have in Wales, but I’m never happier than when I’m in Wales. Perhaps it’s something in the psyche; being away from civilisation, high in the mountains, with the plains spread out around you. Or maybe on a deserted beach with huge peaks in the distance. I love Wales, and in particular North Wales.

This feeling has something to do with the blog’s description: “the concrete world is starting to get ya” – which is also lyrics from the Flight of The Conchords’ song “Inner City Pressure” (which is hilarious).

Snowdonia

Here’s some photos from 2007:

d200_DSC_7793-2 Snowdonia d200_DSC_7813-2 d200_DSC_7832 d200_DSC_7785 Cwm Bychan Cwm Bychan

They’re probably best viewed here, as a slideshow.

[update]: Ah, I didnt know you could embed a set, nice one Flickr!

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Wildlife photography

It’s been a while since I posted any of my photographs here, so here’s a few shots from WWT Arundel and Pulborough Brooks RSPB reserve. Both are excellent places for a day out. 

More photos are on Flickr.

Robin

Robin

 

Great Tit

Great Tit

 

Chaffinch

Chaffinch

 

Jackdaw

Jackdaw

 

Pheasant

Pheasant

 

Robin

Robin


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Spider

Spider

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105mm of awesome

Rachel’s given me an early birthday present. The incredible Nikon 105mm VR Macro lens! :) I’ve been after this lens for over a year, as it’s pretty much the best macro lens you can get. I’ve tried using my 50mm and 18-200mm lenses for close-up shots, but they’re no substitute for a dedicated macro lens.

I’ve been using it for a few days now, and I can honestly say it’s absolutely incredible! Not only are the optics excellent and the images incredibly crisp, but it can give a whole new insight into the world around you.

One of the first photos I took was of dew on an unopened orchid bud. When I viewed this later, I saw there were a number of ants underneath the bud. Me and my dad went back to take a few more photos, and saw they were ‘farming’ a number of aphids on the bud:
DSC_3655

Later on, walking on the ridgeway, Rachel spotted an absolutely enormous bumblebee:
Bumblebee with mites

It was seriously the biggest i’ve ever seen. However, it was dead. And.. it looked a little odd. After taking a shot I zoomed in – to see a number of white mites sticking out of its fur. Eww.

Lichen were next. Through a macro lens they portay quite an alien landscape:
DSC_3579

DSC_3582

Lichen

In the house, a rusty bar revealed delicate crytalline patterns:
DSC_3482

A cauliflower up-close looks rather spikey:
Cauliflower

The workmanship on this pocket watch is superb:
DSC_3514

…and the minute spattering of dust and grease on my great-uncle’s pocket watch tells its own story:
DSC_3496

Check out the rest of my 105mm shots on Flickr!

Buy your own from ebay.

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Dust? Anyone? No?

I take a lot of photos with my D200. I have over 3,800 photos on Flickr, and over 26,000 on my PC.  Some of these are good, but many are bad! Regardless, I really enjoy photography.

Since I change lenses quite frequently, it was only going to be a matter of time until I got dust on the CCD. Somehow, while taking photos last weekend, I managed to get a huge particle stuck on my CCD which was so large it was visible in almost every photo I took! Nightmare!

White Horse Hill

Although I could spend time cloning it out on every photo, I don’t like to alter my photos other than tweaking them in Lightroom. It was clearly time to get my CCD cleaned.

There’s two options: Send it off for repair, or buy a product and clean it myself. Well, there’s obviously no fun in getting someone else to do it, so after a bit of research I bought a SensorKlear kit by LensPen. I didn’t fancy messing around with swabs and cleaning solution, so a dry solution like SensorKlear seemed ideal. Besides, their LensPens are excellent.

Before starting on cleaning the CCD, I decide it might be a rather good idea to see how other people fared when cleaning their sensor. I don’t want to go into this blind, and end up scratching the CCD or anything like that.
So, after reading a few anecdotes about the shutter breaking when randomly closing on the brush, and hence ending up with a very expensive paperweight, I’m wondering if this is a particularly bad decision. Well, I might as well see how bad my CCD is first. Perhaps I can live with it! So I take a photo:

sensor dust

Argh! It’s absolutely covered in dust and random bits of debris and bellybutton fluff!

There’s no way I can leave it like this, especially since I’m going to a friend’s wedding this evening, where I’m bound to take a few hundred photos of drunken people.. so I decide to throw caution to the wind and clean it. After all what could possibly go wrong? :)

After locking up the mirror, I start with the blower, with pretty good results. It removes the larger particles, but not all of the dust. It’s time to actually touch the CCD with the sensor cleaning pen. This is the scary bit.

With visions of the shutter closing on the pen and shattering the CCD into a thousand expensive pieces, I gingerly touch the CCD with the tip of the pen. Nothing breaks. Motivated by trepidation, I quickly move the pen over the CCD with the most gentle movement, before connecting the lens and taking another test shot.

It’s worse! Unbelievable! Somehow I’ve managed to get more crap all over the CCD. Unless I’ve damaged it..? Panicking I remove the lens, lock up the mirror and clean it with the pen again.  Ah. I had forgotten to use the blower after using the pen last time, which would explain why there was even more rubbish present.
Since using the blower means there’s no physical contact with the CCD, I give it a prolonged blasting. Another test shot reveals that the CCD is now almost clean:

Clean CCD

Well, that’ll do for me. There’s a few spots that the pen might clear, but I think that’s enough for now.

My advice is, if you want to clean your CCD, try using a blower on it first. They’re pretty cheap, but make sure you get one that’s designed for use inside the camera. This means they have a filter, sometimes a rubberised tip, and don’t have any traces of oils inside that can be blown out and onto the CCD. Whatever you do DO NOT USE A CAN OF COMPRESSED AIR. If you’re brave enough, actually cleaning the CCD with a SensorKlear pen isn’t too scary.

Remember though – you may well be voiding your warranty if you try this. You could end up with an extremely expensive, unpractical, and unwanted paperweight!

I bought mine from eBay.

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