One last pier shot

Hi everyone,

Palace Pier, Brighton.

All the best,

Leigh

Three more from Brighton

Hi everyone,

A few more from my visit to Brighton.

“Attack of the giant shellfish”

“Cross my palm with silver”

“Still there!”

After 9 years since I took the shot below.

Kind regards,

Leigh

Huts – Brighton

Hi,

Last one for today πŸ™‚

Best wishes,

Leigh

“Splendour” – Brighton

Hi everyone,

Another of my shots from today’s visit to Brighton taken with my M.Zuiko 14-150mm lens.

Best wishes,

Leigh

Superzoom in Brighton

Hi everyone,

“The End”. Amusements at the end of Palace Pier, Brighton. EM-5 II and M.Zuiko 14-150mm. I forgot how good this lens is. Β Five frame handheld HDR.

Kind regards

Leigh

Adding a rubber lens hood to my M.Zuiko 12-45mm Pro lens.

Fully Retracted

Fully extended

Hi,

I’ve had a couple of these screw on 58mm fit three-stage collapsible rubber lens hoods laying around for ages, so long in fact that I can’t remember what I bought them for. πŸ™‚ I thought I’d try one with my M.Zuiko 12-45mm zoom lens. The advantages over the proprietary lens hood for me are two-fold. First it enables me to easily rotate the attached slim-fit CPL filter with a hood attached and secondly it works very well in conjunction with my camera rain cover which has an elasticated fitting at the lens end. I tested and, importantly, when fully collapsed, it doesn’t vignette at the wide angle end of the zoom range. Purely to save space in my bag whilst travelling I’ve left my Olympus hood attached in the reversed position at least temporarily, to act as a backup hood should I get any issues with the rubber hood. It won’t last forever but, at about Β£3-4 UK it’s cheap to replace when I need to and I already have a spare. I’ve tested it out on a couple of recent outings and it works well.

I paid about Β£17 UK new for this rain cover on Ebay a few years back. They’re made by a UK company that also make all sorts of rain covers for baby buggies etc.. So I thought they’d know more than a bit about keeping things dry and if they can keep someone’s baby dry from the rain then they can keep my “baby” dry πŸ™‚ and it does so. It’s turned out to be the best I ever used, very quick to fit with an elasticated front end which stretches over the hood to fit and can’t slip off and a draw string at the camera body end. Roomy enough to take my longest lenses and very easy to turn a zoom ring through the fabric, sometimes the simplest things work the best. Having a weather-sealed camera and lens isn’t reason enough to get it soaking wet if one has the means to keep it dry. I regard camera weather-sealing a secondary line of defence against water ingress and not a primary one.

By-the-way the camera half-case, stylish as it is, isn’t there purely for cosmetic reasons. It adds a bit more grip and protection to the camera and, having had a broken latch on the hinged battery access cover in the past before I replaced it, the flap with side fastening popper holds the battery snuggly in place should it ever fail again. Lastly, the base of the camera has a push-fit rubber cover which covers the contacts for the optional grip when not fitted. Although not overly prone to doing so it cannot fall off and get lost with the half-case fitted.

Kind regards

Leigh

Four easy cheap tips.

Hi,

I thought I’d post a few of my favourite tips.

  1. I usually find space for one or two of those cheap slide-lock clear freezer bags, These have two uses the first of which is to put wet items such as rain covers in when they go back in my bag. It doesn’t make sense to put wet items back in an otherwise dry bag. With the rain covers inside one can roll the bag so as to squeeze out air inside the bag and compress the space it takes before closing it up. The second use is, when out in the very cold and coming into a warm environment where water condenses on one’s gear. Put the camera and lens in the bag and close it up whilst still in the cold and then the water will condense on the outside of the freezer bag when you come back into the warm and not on one’s camera. Additionally I pop one of those small silica gel sachets inside the bag before closing it up. Size wise this is suited to smaller cameras and lenses which works for me as I don’t use large cameras and/or very long lenses.
  2. I always number my batteries so as to tell them apart using my Dymo label gun and I also put an arrow symbol on them which makes getting the battery the right way round very obvious when changing batteries in a hurry.
  3. Use cheap centre pinch lens caps rather that the costly to replace camera manufacturer’s ones. Another nice thing is that, with a bit of searching around one can find different coloured ones which stand out better if you drop one of them.
  4. Apart from the well know rubber band or filter wrench methods of removing a stuck filter I prefer using a different method. I cut squares from a hard fronted neoprene-backed mouse mat to fit the largest of my filter sizes. One then simply presses the neoprene side flat against the front of the filter and uses an even force whilst unscrewing the filter. This has never let me down. In a pinch one can use the rubber sole of training shoes etc. preferably not after trudging through a muddy field, along a dusty track or sandy beach etc.!!. πŸ™‚

A fifth bonus tip πŸ™‚ sometimes on longer journeys where available I use the USB sockets in public transport buses and trains to charge/top up my mobile phone or camera batteries using one of my USB camera battery chargers, well why not it’s free!. These sockets are vey often located at about ankle height. As I don’t want to put my phone or battery charger on the floor I make sure that I have a 2 Mtr long USB charging cable with me then I can put the device on the seat next to me or a tray table etc.. πŸ™‚ Although I’m pretty standardised on USB type C connectors on my devices one can also get small push on adapters that convert from micro USB to type C and vice-versa to suit whatever type of USB cable your using and thus you have the best of both worlds and, if you have devices with both types of connection, one fewer cable.

I’m always keen to learn new ideas so if anyone has any that they’d like to pass on please let me know in the comments.

Kind regards

Leigh

Carousel

Hi everyone,

Carousel, Worthing beach. Olympus 9mm body cap fisheye lens with a little editing, mostly sharpness and saturation. One can get some nice results from this tiny lens if one plays to its strengths and as it’s a fixed f/8 lens it needs good light and a little work in post but on a bright day it’s surprising what results can be had and it’s a lot of fun to use.

Best wishes,

Leigh

I’m impressed! Β Manfrotto Compact 1 Advanced Shoulder Bag for CSC in use.

Hi everyone,

I’ve now taken my new camera bag and my gear on three local trips to test it out for weight, compactness and convenience. I’m impressed, it fits my needs extremely well. Over the years I’ve owned so many camera bags that I’ve long since lost count. Along with my choice of camera gear my experiences have also informed my choice of camera bag, what works, what doesn’t and why. What I’ve constantly been looking for in a bag is low weight and size, good quality manufacture and ease of access to my gear. This is where having a good number of compartments comes into play but they have to be readily accessible. Some stuff I need quick and ready access to eg. a spare camera battery and rain covers for both the bag and my camera need to be accessible without having to open the main compartment especially in heavy rain and that’s where the top compartment on this bag is really useful to store such items.

Then there’s the main compartment, obviously it has to be large enough to hold my choice of camera gear but having two additional small velcro-fastening pockets on the underside of the “lid” is handy for smaller items such as filters (approx. 58/62mm size or smaller or thereabouts) , lens wipes, microfibre cloth and lens brush. Lastly the back zip-up compartment although shallow is also handy for more smaller items. This compartment is pretty stealthy and I guess you could put a small wallet, purse or loose money/cards in it as it’s not very obvious as it sits close to one’s body. Personally I don’t do this, nor do I habitually put my mobile phone in my camera bag. If there’s one thing worse than your camera gear getting snatched it’s also loosing your wallet and phone especially when travelling. A good idiom when travelling that I’ve always adhered to would be “never put all your eggs in the same basket” πŸ™‚ . Likewise never readily believe anyone saying “there’s no problem with mosquitos here”, eaten alive by vicious, insatiable Tiger Mosquitos in Rome, or “it never rains here at this time of year”, soaked to the skin in Corfu Town in peak season, as the saying goes, “one lives as one learns” or, to put it another way, isn’t hindsight a wonderful thing. πŸ™‚

For more info on the bag see this post: https://leighkempphotoblog.co.uk/2024/04/04/papas-got-a-brand-new-bag/

Kind regards

Leigh

Pier (2024)

Hi everyone,

A new work of Bognor Regis Pier

All the best,

Leigh