Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Fisheye Pictures for Today

Just some random fisheye lens pictures I took over the last month.

Click on picture to expand
Sierra Nevada Mountains
Winding road on the Nevada side
Some guy who was fishing here got mad at me.
I love winding roads. Too bad I only have a Civic to enjoy them.
Love the clouds that day.
Copyright 2011 Cram, Kmuzu - All Rights Reserved.

I used a Lomography Fisheye 35mm Camera. It's a cheap, fun little camera. I take it everywhere.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Foto Friday

No, there still is no logo.

I am not the creator nor do I own the copyright to these photos. Presented here under a loose interpretation of "Fair Use".











  
Not much of theme going this time .. other than something about signs and graphs.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Sunflower

A sunflower appeared in my backyard. It has some nerve squatting here without my permission, but I have agreed to let it stay.

Copyright 2011 Cram / Kmuzu. All rights reserved.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Friday Foto - Okay

It's another Friday Foto and once again I've failed to create a logo. I do NOT own the copyright to any of these pictures. All presented to you under "fair use". I'm sure with a little Google help you can find them for yourselves. Until then .. enjoy.


I'm not sure what the theme is for this Friday Foto, but this is it.
Awesome advertising .. poor drivers
Very creative
Using the Dark Side
Never has a dirty car looked so good.
T-Shirt Truth
Now I know what the theme is - Truth in Advertising.


Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Tomato Heart and other Treasures

I hope y'all survived Independence Day. I guess if you live outside the United States it was a little less dramatic.

Yesterday, I pulled from the Ace Tomato plant a tomato that was almost perfectly shaped like a little heart. I forced my poor daughter to hold the tomato in different positions while I snapped photo after photo. But she's got to learn that such is the life, living under the oppressive boot of a determined photographer.

Copyright 2011 Cram / Kmuzu - all rights reserved
Copyright 2011 Cram / Kmuzu - all rights reserved
 If you like these pictures you can purchase them at ViewBug.

That's how it seems to her - because I made her miss half of Wizards of Waverly Place.

It seems like every bill has hit the your great leader this month and now I sit here completely broke. So, I am trying to come up with some revenue generating activities. Here's how you can help.

If you don't want to spend any money and I don't blame you because none of us have any money - you can simply click on one the advertisers. Next, if you got some cash and you like some product that I mention here just click on it - most often I link it back to Amazon. If you purchase said product through Amazon - through my link - Amazon kicks back some cash love. Also there is a little Amazon widget on the right hand side.

For the millionaires and billionaires out there and I know that this blog attracts a fair share of the super-elite-wealthy. There are two donation buttons in the upper-right-hand corner one from Google and one from PayPal. I suggest the magically, lucky number of $7.77.

Last, I'm going to open a couple of e-shops to sell some of my photography and other creative crap.

Shop #1 - Kmuzu's ViewBug - Selling photography in all kinds of formats.
Shop #2 - Photofinger Red Bubble - This has a lot creative crap. It's kind of old and I need to revamp.
Shop #3 - Kmuzu Treasure on Etsy - Currently adding items to this shop.

I will sign most anything you purchase from one of these stores for free, as long as you throw in a stamp or little money for returned mail.

One last thing, if you purchase or donate, please drop send me an email. Most importantly, I want to send you a great big "thank you" and also I want to make sure that the company doesn't rip me or you off.

All pictures are copyright 2011 Cram / Kmuzu - all rights reserved. If you wish to use any photograph or artwork on this site just drop me an email. I am very accommodating.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Red Pop - Sums up everything I hate about living in age of the Intenet

I want you to watch the video below before you read my post. After, I will explain why everything I hate about the culture we live in today is embodied in this product. Please view the video now:


Red Pop from Beep Industries on Vimeo.

I hate the saying the, "The best camera is the one you have with you." The saying should be. "The best camera is the one you have with you - so you better bring a good camera. Cause if all you have is your iPhone then you're screwed."

I'm not exactly sure how to approach this. Everyone these days wants to be a hipster photographer. They want to capture those magical moments. And yet, I bet that almost no one is capturing those pictures, because they're trying to use their cell phone.


My main camera is a Canon EOS T2i. It's a mid-range DLSR . DSLR means it's digital and I can change the lenses. All this device was designed to do is take pictures (and video). Every menu, button and switch is about how to take a picture. The whole history of the Canon is about photography and optics.

When Brendan Dawes, owner of Red Pop tries to tell you that you can capture the same photos his dad did by adding Red Pop to your iPhone, he's lying. It's as big a lie as that red button.

I have to admit that I'm kind of a camera freak. Below is my baby. It's an Olympus OM-1. Made in the late 60's and probably very similar to the one Brendan's dad used. His Dad probably used a Canon or Nikon or possibly a Leica. But the mechanics are almost identical.


The OM-1 even had a built-in light meter.
See all those buttons and dials on the camera? Believe it or not they actually have functions. They allow the photographer to manipulate how much light comes in, how long the shutter stays open and other really cool stuff. And even back in the groovy days of the late 60's, photographers didn't rely on magically capturing the "moment". Their old mechanical cameras took one or two pictures a second and then the photographer chose which of those photos were the magic ones.

Look at the diameter of the lens in the picture below. See how big it is - size matters. That puny, little pin-hole on your iPhone ain't gonna cut it. It's just not .. okay, maybe it does alright taking a picture of a static object in full daylight. But then if you're taking a picture of a statue (minus the birds) what's the point of Red Pop?



Okay, so you don't want to spend the money on professional DSLR, nor do you want to take the time to learn all the functions of a mechanical camera. And both are too big to lug around. What's the answer? I'm glad you asked .. hold it .. put the iPhone down.

When I don't want to lug around my Canon, I have a little Panasonic Lumix DMC-FH5 . Great little camera. It's 16mp and has 4x optical zoom and pretty good image stabilization. It small, thin and solidly built. Takes fine pictures .. Much better than your iPhone, even with the Red Pop button.


Oh, but you want to be a hipster photographer .. then I recommend a Lomography Diana F+  


It's what every hipster photographer dreams about. It has unpredictable light leaks, forced perspective from the plastic lens and that great feel of spinning your own film.You can even change out the lens in the newer Dianas.

It's not the worst thing in the world to have a Red Pop hooked onto your iPhone. I really don't see the purpose, other than strangers asking you what the red button does, because everyone wants to know what a big red button does.

Here's what I'm saying. Brendan Dawes is trying to sell you this bullshit dream that by adding Red Pop (which I think the concept is pretty cool)  you're going to be able to take these incredible pictures, because now you have easy access to the camera on your Iphone.

I'm telling you - it just ain't so Joe. Sure, in full daylight with a non-moving object that is five to ten feet away that little iPhone can probably take just as good a picture as my Canon. But I would just hate for one of my loyal EiMB citizen to purchase a Red Pop and then try to take a picture of  say a mountain. Because through your eye that mountain may look huge, majestic, glorious - but to the iPhone it's a little green bump. Or you go to the ice skating rink and what you see is your daughter doing wonderful twirls but to the iPhone its just one blurry smudge.

Cameras got all those button and dials for a reason. It was an evolutionary process from a simple pin-hole camera. Photographers quickly learned that controlling how the light enters the camera and how light hits the sensor or film was critical to a good picture. And I can't discount the importance of lenses. Quality glass and mechanics are also key. As a matter of fact, my Canon camera body is actually one of the least expensive parts of the camera. The lenses can cost two to three times more. And it's worth it.

Photography is more than just investing in a button.

My many cameras - it is an addiction.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Garden Pictures with Lumix DMC-FH5

Well my new camera from Amazon arrive this morning. It shipped much quicker than I expected. So, I charged the battery and took some garden porn. The camera is a Panasonic Lumix DMC-FH5 16.1 MP and so far so good. Very easy to use and the picture quality if fantastic. The auto-focus is quick if not just a little bit noisy. The menu system is bit confusing, not as intuitive as the Canon or the Pentax. As you can see the macro function is excellent and focuses quickly.The only problem that I've run into so far is that the SD card must be formatted a special way to record video. The size is incredible .. very thin with a solid frame.

I will but a link to Amazon if you're interested in purchasing the camera. For the money I think it's the best on the market. If you purchase through this link - yours truly get a little cash-love back through Amazon.



Click on picture for larger view


Even in Vegas flowers like this will grow
Ladybugs love artichokes.
Artichoke bloom
Baby Tomatoes
Zucchini on the way
Marigolds are as tough as nails
Can anyone say salsa?

Copyright 2011 Cram/Kmuzu - All rights reserved. No reproduction, publication or modification without prior written permission from me. If to want to repost or use in publication just drop me a message - I am very accommodating.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Vegas Sky


Some pictures of the beautiful Vegas sky just before sunset. I took these with my Pentax K-x DLSR. I love Vegas at night, although our lights blind ever observatory in a three hundred mile radius and all of us suffer from neon exposure. There is no other skyline like it.

Las Vegas skyline
Southwest Mountains
Looking southwest
Henderson Executive Airport