When I was about 3-4 YO I owned a Ferrari! :)

Hi,

When I was about 3-4 YO I owned a Ferrari!, well two actually but I don’t want to brag πŸ™‚ . This was my all time favourite toy, a 1963 Corgi #154 “Sharknose” Ferrari 156 circa 1961/2 formula one racing car. I had hours and hours of fun with this little toy car. It’s taken me ages but I finally found one with minimal wear and tear at a fair price. πŸ™‚ I even found a replacement driver figure for it. Funny how so many memories can be associated with a small object like this. On a sunny day they used to buy a money back on the glass bottle of R.Whites lemonade from the newsagent down the road and along with some home made sandwiches my grandparents and I would take a sun lounger and chairs round to a local park as we didn’t really have much of a garden and this toy would always go with me. How I ended up with two I don’t remember though. When it turns up I’m heading for the garden in my shorts and T.Shirt with some lemonade and sarnies and a sun lounger if we ever get a dry warm spell. πŸ™‚

Best wishes,

Leigh

Grandad’s front room.

Hi everyone,

I absolutely love this deliciously eclectic fun shop in Bognor. Shots taken with one of my smallest and stealthiest camera lens combinations my Olympus E-PL5 and 15mm body cap lens. One of the signs inside reads “Useless crap that you don’t need at a price you won’t like” πŸ™‚πŸ™‚ A refreshingly honest sales pitch!.

Kind regards

Leigh

Selfie Stick!!! :)

As my wife was quick to remind me I once swore that I’d never buy a selfie stick after getting sick of a sea of people (tourists) brandishing them around like lightsabers and trying their very best to take the top of one’s head off, or one of one’s eye out, I remember standing on the famous Rialto bridge in a hoard of tourist brandishing selfie sticks, it looked like a training session for the Japanese martial art of Kendo, so, with all of this in mind, I’ve just bought a selfie stick!, as Groucho Marx said β€œThose are my principles, and if you don’t like them…well I have others.” πŸ™‚ Further fuelling the Chinese economy, it’s actually quite a nice (cheap) design with a built in bluetooth remote control and it doubles as a phone tripod/hand grip. I though it might be fun to experiment with shooting some footage principally for my blog as on-the-go contextual location info for my photographic postings. However I am NOT a Vlogger, feel free to remind me of this in the future, if my wife doesn’t beat you too it, should things look like taking that direction. πŸ™‚

PS. Got to love “Chinglish” πŸ™‚ the instructions for removing and fitting the remote for my selfie stick read as follows “Unload and load Unloading and loading take out load” πŸ™‚πŸ™‚ . I doubt if this even makes sense in Chinese. Fortunately “a child of five could understand this. Send someone to fetch a child of five”

Nearly 50 years of using Olympus Cameras and lenses.

Hi everyone, Oh where did my youth go?! πŸ™‚

Next year marks the 50th Anniversary of buying my first Olympus film camera, the manual metering OM-1 compete with it’s standard 50mm lens. From the start I fell in love with this lightweight compact designed camera. I subsequently bought a couple of their TTL light metering OM-2 model, the OM-10 plus manual adapter thingy and lastly my favourite of the series the OM-4Ti. At one time I owned quite a range of as was at the time manual focus Olympus Zuiko lenses. To me these stylish iconic cameras were beautifully designed and, although it’s hard to find the right words, they just felt right in one’s hands and psychologically that’s very relevant as if it feels right then one can concentrate on the job in hand. I’ve never liked heavyweight gear and that was one of my first likes about the OM system cameras and lenses. I saw a used silver-bodied Olympus OM-2n and 50mm f/1.8 lens in what looked to be excellent condition in a camera shop window the other day and it brought back so many happy memories, I have to admit that for a split second I wanted to buy it.

Since 2013/14 I’ve been using Olympus digital cameras and the modern day descendants of the OM film cameras in their Micro Four Thirds OM-D digital cameras, their modern classic digital PEN-F camera and M.Zuiko lenses, What I first loved about their film cameras I still love about their digital cameras, they still feel right. I like that they stayed pretty true to the original Olympus design philosophy, well built, lightweight, compact and innovative. In all these years I’ve only ever had one camera malfunction which was swiftly and efficiently rectified by Olympus’ service and support. I don’t know how many thousands of film and digital images I’ve taken over the years but, to me, that’s another reason to stick with a brand that one trusts. Nowadays they’re branded as OM System but they’ll always be Olympus to me. I’m a self-confessed fan of the brand, it’s served me so well over the years so much so that I cannot ever see myself voluntarily changing. I have only one regret and it’s not got anything to do with Olympus, I want the energy and strength that I had fifty years ago back. πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

Gear choice for my next trip.

Hi everyone,

Recently I’ve been experimenting with different lens selections for my next trip as it gets increasingly closer. My E-M5 II camera remains my travel camera of choice but I’ve been giving a lot of thought to my lens requirements. I’m going to take two lenses, for widespread daytime usage my M.Zuiko 14-150mm II (28-300mm equivalent). There have been a few occasions where I’ve wished for a longer lens, one comes to mind where I visited a zoo in Portugal. It’s not overly heavy and it’s compact and weather-sealed with a fantastically useful focal length range.

M.Zuiko 14-150mm II – Lido di Ostia, Italy.

The second lens might come as a bit of a surprise, it’s one of my tiny Lumix 12-32mm (24-64mm equivalent) lenses. My reasoning for taking this lens over a faster fixed focal length prime lens are several-fold. Firstly, apart from my Olympus Body Cap lenses, it’s just about the smallest, lightest lens that I have. After I’ve been out all day, I ache and I’m tired, I want a very small, (at about an inch long), lightweight lens to take with me in the evenings when I’m strolling around and chilling with a meal and a beer (or two) whilst watching the sun setting. πŸ™‚ Secondly it’s wider at the wide angle end so it’ll compliment my 14-150mm and it’s a very useful walkabout focal length range. Lastly it’s a backup lens in case something should happen to my bigger zoom. From my experience both of these lenses are capable of producing very good images. When mounted on the camera this lens fits inside my small Wandrd Tech Pouch along with a spare battery, a couple of lens wipe sachets and my very small adapted table top tripod, all I need. I have in the past happily shot all day with this lens and never felt in any way disadvantaged.

Lumix 12-32mm – Carshalton Ponds, UK.

When I mentioned that I’m taking two lenses, I’m actually taking three. I’m also taking my Olympus 9mm (18mm equivalent) fixed f/8 aperture body cap fisheye lens as it’s such a fun lens to play with, takes up next to no space in my bag and is extremely lightweight. I hardly think of this as a lens as it’s not very much larger than a body cap. but it is capable of producing nice results. I usually select the hyperfocal distance focus setting on this lens for most shots and use focus peeking to check focus when required. Like the 12-32mm it’s also a highly inconspicuous lens.

Olympus 9mm body cap fisheye – Worthing, UK.

I’m not really into interior photography although, when travelling, I’ve visited many beautiful churches and taken interior shots most of which have never subsequently seen the light of day. I guess that I find myself largely at odds and uncomfortable with the contrast between their often ostentatious opulence compared to the relative wealth of the populace. “Buying a stairway to heaven” comes to mind. I am certainly not anti-religious, everyone has a right to peacefully believe whatever they choose but what are far more of personal photographic interest are often unexpected finds, more telling, intimate-scale, humble places of worship, small churches, shrines etc..

Kind regards

Leigh

Cathedral from the garden.

Hi everyone,

“Cathedral from the garden”

Returned to one of my favourite locations the Bishop’s Garden behind Chichester Cathedral.

Full size image – https://flic.kr/p/2pLXzL6

Kind regards

Leigh