A bag inside a bag

Hi everyone,

My National Geographic backpack is great for packing everything in whilst travelling. It has a large compartment at the back which can take a 17 inch laptop which got me thinking so I started to look around for a small bag solution that would fold flat and go in the compartment so that I could decant my gear into a smaller, lighter carry around solution for every day use and I found this the Tenba Packlite Travel bag and BYOB padded insert, perfect for my needs, available in four sizes. Also useful as an everyday lightweight bag. Given my advancing years anything with the word weight involved gets my attention. πŸ™‚ .

When going on a longer more distant trip where I don’t want to carry all my gear around every day then this will do the job. I have a couple of cheap lightweight inserts so I already know how much lighter they are compared to normal camera bags. With my camera gear being chosen in part for its light weight then it somewhat defeats the object carrying it in a heavy bag.

Kind regards

leigh sig 2

The outlook for today – Showers with sunny intervals

Hi everyone,

A work of Hampton Court Palace, loving the Skylum Software,Β  fits in very well with my workflow.

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Kind regards

leigh sig 2

“All the fun of the fair”

Hi everyone,

Memories of my youth πŸ™‚

 

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Best wishes,

leigh sig 2

“Soft light” – Alternative version

Hi everyone,

I don’t usually do this but here’s a more β€œphotographic” version and I lost the annoying lorry on the bridge πŸ™‚

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Best wishes,

leigh sig 2

 

 

“Soft light”

Hi everyone,

Sorry, yet another river work πŸ™‚

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Kind regards

leigh sig 2

“Dripping in Drama”

Hi everyone,

Another dramatic painterly river view flight of fancy from my crazed imagination. πŸ™‚

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Kind regards

leigh sig 2

A swift ‘alf at the Packet

Hi everyone,

The Steam Packet Pub, Littlehampton

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Kind regards

leigh sig 2

My tips on perspective correction.

Hi everyone,

I’ve never liked converging verticals when photographing buildings, trees or anything else containing vertical structures, I’d go so far as to say I detest them. If one wants to avoid cutting off the top of such scenes when correcting and cannot afford to spend time setting up a tripod and fiddling around with keystone correction in the camera or justify the cost of a special shift/tilt lens as I can’t then the answer is deceptively simple and straightforward. Do not crop too tightly, this goes against my usual habit of cropping in camera. Here one needs to allow for what I call “wiggle room” as it’ll be needed when using perspective correction software such as DXO Viewpoint (my choice of software) or similar.Β So, leave some space above the building/scene and also, to a lesser extent to the sides of the frame. How much to allow is something that one gets a feel for the more one does it. Allow way too much and one ends up cropping and that’s something that I try and avoid having to do.

If one wants to roughly approximate what happens when correcting perspective using such software then take one’s hands and place them sideways on and horizontally parallel to one another and tilt them inwards towards each other at a slight angle, say 10-15 degrees so that your fingertips point inwards towards each other . Then line the tops of your fingers up with a horizontal surface say the top of one’s computer monitor. The top of the monitor then becomes the top of your image frame. Now, without changing position move your hands so that they are vertically parallelΒ  to one another. Note that the tips of your fingers now extend above the top of the monitor and thus anything in the top of the frame will now be cut off if one chooses to maintain the given aspect ratio. One can choose to make the image un-constrained which can often work in which case you’ll probably end up with a squarer image, not so good when considering framing options though. πŸ™‚

Some examples:

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Note the squarer image, in this shot I almost allowed enough room at the top but the very top of the cross would have been cut off if I’d chosen to maintain the 4×3 aspect ratio. Moving back a fraction or zooming out and that wouldn’t have been the case.

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Plenty of room in the above shot to get everything corrected.

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Same in this shot although I only just made it πŸ™‚

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Plenty of room here too, I’d have hated to have the top of the Colosseum chopped off. In this case it’s the buildings to the extreme left and right of the frame that I chose as my reference when correcting.

Finally, here’s a few more shots which worked well.

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Hope this is of interest,

Kind regards

leigh sig 2

 

 

“Dome Dramatic” – St. Peter’s, Rome

Hi everyone,

A toned monochrome work of St. Peter’s in Rome.

 

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Best wishes,

leigh sig 2

Lighter than light

Hi everyone,

My lightest weight travel gear consisting of my Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mk 2 body plus M.Zuiko 9-18 mm and Panasonic 14 mm, 12-32 mm and 35-100 mm lenses weighs in at an amazingly light combined weight of approximately 900 grams (2 lbs) ! with battery and memory card fitted. Or, to put it another way, less than the weight of a bag of sugar!.

These lenses aren’t my fastest lenses but they are my lightest and cover 99% of my requirements.Β  I don’t frequently require the β€œbuttery smooth” bokeh that is so often raved about nor do I often require a shallow depth of field as most of my travel works are landscapes and I like to stop-down a bit, usually to about F5.6 or so. The exception to this being interiors where the light can and often is poor and I really don’t like flash so I’ll make the most of available light thus I pack my 14 mm Panasonic F2.5 which does the job nicely and serves as a one lens general purpose backup, I can live with the extra 2 ounces in weight πŸ™‚ . Thanks to the Olympus’ amazing IBIS (in body image stabilisation) I rarely have to resort to increasing the ISO which is something I only do when there’s no alternative and only then by a stop or two at the most.

I’m firmly of the opinion that one can pay a fortune for the β€œbest” lenses which are a stop or two faster and arguably sharper but it’s no fun carrying their extra bulk and weight around on foot all day long and the monetary saving is substantial to say the least. As for the difference in image quality between these lenses and their faster more expensive counterparts one has to pay a heck of a lot more money and the difference in image quality is in no way reflected in the price difference.

travelling light gear

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Panasonic LUMIX G 14mm F2.5Β 

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Panasonic 12-32 mm/F 3.5-5.6 LUMIX G VARIO MEGA OIS ASPH

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Olympus M.ZUIKO Digital ED 9-18 mm 1:4.0-5.6Β 

The above shots linked to full size images on my Flickr Page

As for my dream lens it’d be a zoom lens covering the above focal length range, weighing no more than their combined weight, ideally less, with equivalent sharpness and not appreciably larger than the largest of the lenses and of course at an affordable price, bring it on!. πŸ™‚

Kind regards

leigh sig 2