I’m too sexy for my camera!. :)

If your preference is for big heavy DSLR kit and lenses then you are probably reading the wrong post. πŸ™‚ If, one the other hand, you have an interest in small, lightweight, cameras and lenses then please read on…….

Hi folks,

Sadly, at my advanced age, I have to concede that the opposite is much nearer the truth, my camera is probably too sexy for me. πŸ™‚ . Rain, rain and more rain and the forecast for the next few days, yes, you guessed it, even more rain, you just gotta love the UK weather. So, frustratingly, after weeks of lockdown,Β  I haven’t been able to put my new camera through its paces yet except for setting it up to my preference and taking some indoor test shots.

I think I’m going to have a lot of fun with my new Olympus PEN-F which I bought “preloved” in near mint condition for a very good price. I’m really looking forward to testing it out and it has some very interesting features and, it IS a very sexy camera, especially in the silver finish and thus puts a huge tick in my “I like retro looks” box πŸ™‚ . It also fits hand-in-glove with my preference for lightweight kit, especially when combined with a few of my fast and lightweight M.Zuiko primes like my 12,17,25 and 45mm lenses and/or small compact zooms like my M.Zuiko 9-18Β  mm and Lumix 35-100 mm. I can carry this camera and three lenses, plus the obligatory spare batteries and memory cards and my M-CON macro converter, in one of my very compact Manfrotto bags.

Another small, but financially important, plus for me is that the camera uses the same BLN-1 batteries and thus my USB chargers as my OM-D cameras. Don’t be fooled by it’s retro styling though, this camera has a 20 MP sensor, a 50 MP JPEG/80 MP RAW hi-res shot mode, silent electronic shutter modes and just about every other feature that one could expect to find in a modern digital camera as well as Olympus’ great solid build quality. I really like the dedicated exposure compensation dial on the top as well as the highlight/shadow control wheel which puts these controls right where you want them and of course thatΒ  very interesting dial on the front.

I'M TOO SEXY FOR MY CAMERA

pen and lenses

Can’t wait to try it out properly a post some shots taken with it.

Kind regards,

Leigh

All things come to he who waits

Hi folks,

I’m very excited by my new camera, more news when I upload some shots taken with it. It’s a camera I’ve been hankering after for ages.

newcamera

Can you guess what it is yet? πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

I wish that I’d had one of these before!

Hi folks,

I’ve been looking for one of these LCD hoods for a while. The problem is that all the one’s I’ve found require sticking parts to the camera, something that I didn’t want to do. Enter the Movo LH30 Deluxe LCD Hood Shade for Flip-Out DSLR Camera and Camcorder LCD’s (for 3″ Screens).Β , catchy name huh?!. It’s cheap and cheerful and it does the job, it’s not made well enough to last a lifetime and it perfectly fits my OM-D E-M5 Mk II articulated screen.Β  I think that they are also available for 2.75, 3.25 and 3.5 inch screens under the MOVO and NEEWER brand names.

I don’t usually use the LCD screen very much out and about even though they have their uses, partly because I’m so used to using viewfinders for all these years, partly to conserve battery consumption and partly because in strong sunlight and in hot countries etc., they’re absolutely flipping useless, you can’t see a darned thing. This lightweight unobtrusive little bit of kit works like a charm. Always nice when one finds something that one’s been looking for for ages and it works as expected. πŸ™‚

Does what it says on the tin for blog

Best wishes.

Leigh

Refining my macro setup

Hi folks,

As my experience grows I’ve made a few changes to my macro setup. Recently I added the focus rail to make life easier working in a very confined space. I’ve removed the Godox XT1 flash trigger and the Ring Flash controller from the camera’s hotshoe and connected the X1T using a sync cable to the camera’s PC sync socket to remove some weight which frees up the hotshoe enabling me to attach one of my spirit bubble levels, which I prefer to the camera’s own level display. The trick with the X1T is to hold down the CH/OK button and change the F3 option to in from the default setting of out. This switches the sync socket on the X1T from firing a flash connected to it by a sync cable to being triggered by a camera sync cable connection.

My after market AC adapter for the camera finally turned up and thus no more endless battery charging. πŸ™‚ Lastly there’s a handy setting in the OM-D cameras’ menu named “reset lens” which I’ve turned off. I’ve never changed this setting as it resets the lens to infinity every time the camera powers on, something that, for my landscape work, isn’t important, it’s a boon, but for the macro work it speeds things up as the lens is left at the last set focusing distance.

Oh, and one other vital piece of kit, the old After Eight mint chocolates tin which helps me raise the height of close up objects!. As the saying goes “necessity is the mother of invention”Β  πŸ™‚

macro new for blog

Kind regard

Leigh

You can’t swing a cat in here!

Hi folks,

I’ve given up doing videos as they’re time consuming to do and nobody much looks at them so I’m doing a normal blog post instead.

My home macro “studio” (far too pretentious a word) πŸ™‚Β  is so confined, or to put it another way, as the old saying goes, “you can’t swing a cat in here”. So I’ve been choosing my recent investments in macro gear with this firmly in mind.Β  I’ve also done this strictly on a budget.

My first addition was the small light tent. I quickly discovered that the backdrops supplied with it are made of a sort of felt/lint material which attracts dust like it’s going out of fashion and shows every blemish and scuff mark, not great and especially so when I’m doing green or blue screening so I bought some very cheap non-shiny, fine grain, sheets of thin A4 coloured card and I also used an old box file to raise the “stage” up a bit. As many of you know I’m not a lover of tripods or flash in my regular work, but for this kind of work it’s essential to have a steady platform and indoor lighting options. Another very cheap addition that I bought is one of those small “helping hands” things to hold flower stems, other objects or some white card to act as a reflector and/or for setting manual white balance.

A while back I bought a small Godox TT350o flash gun which hasn’t seen much use just in case I ever needed one for family shots of the grandkids etc. and I added a Godox X1T radio flash trigger which is the unit connected directly to the camera’s hotshoe. This unit also has a pass-through hotshoe on top to which I added a cheap manual LED ring flash. This unit, seen mounted on top of the X1T, is quite versatile. It has 7 brightness settings as well as the facility to turn on the lights continuously and set their brightness as well as switching off either the left or right bank of LEDs so their light isn’t so flat. It’s also supplied with four diffusers, an opaque one, a translucent one as well as yellow and blue ones to change the colour temperature of the light source and includes adapter rings to fit most filter threads but I had to buy 46 mm to 49 mm step up ring.

So I can run just the TT350 triggered by the X1T or the LED ring flash (in flash or light mode) or both together as required. You set a common radio channel and group to both Godox units and the trigger controls the flash as a slave unit. As a personal preference I’ve been using manual focus and manual flash settings, the camera’s focus peeking and magnification features are great focusing aids. The X1T trigger sets the power for the TT350 flash gun.

As I mentioned space is very tight so I’ve just added a cheap focus rail, not generally to be used for it’s common usage but rather to allow me to quickly and easily move the camera in two additional axes, left/right and, most importantly,Β  forward/backwards. If IΒ  had the space I’d move the tripod but, as I haven’t, this is a really handy way of achieving the same. The rail should also prove very useful for when I use non-macro lenses with my Olympus MCON-P01 macro lens attachment.

I’m waiting to take delivery of the last two bits of kit, a mains adapter for my E-M1 Mk1 and power grip which will make life a lot easier as I’m running through camera batteries very quickly and also a PC sync cable so that I can remove the X1T and the ring flash from the camera’s hotshoe mount and connect the X1T to the camera’s PC socket and thus reduce weight and, particularly, height.Β  I’m also very pleased that I chose to buy secondhand a 30 mm macro lens and not their 60 mm model as it provides a wider angle of view which is very useful in this confined space. Their 60 mm does have focus limiting, D.O.F scale and weather-sealing but I’m not outside photographing insects or flowers etc. so it’s not important to me and it is very sharp andΒ  focuses down to a smidgen under 1 cm!.

And lastly I said that I’ve been trying to do this on a budget :

Ring Flash – Β£21.50
Godox X1T Radio flash trigger – Β£37.00
Step up ring Β£3.99
Light Tent and four mains powered LED lights – Β£44.99
DC Mains Adapter for OM-D E-M1 Mk 1 camera – Β£19.97
Helping Hand – Β£6.72
Coloured card (25 sheets each of blue and green) – Β£5.98
PC Synch Cable – Β£5.89
Focusing Rail – Β£22.99

Total expenditure = Β£170, helping to keep my sanity during lockdown, “priceless” πŸ™‚

macro setup with focusing rail for blog small

And on the subject of cats, a shot of my wife Valerie’s broach.

broach

Stay safe, kind regards,

Leigh

“All that glitters”

… most certainly isn’t gold, unfortunately! πŸ™‚ Abstract macro of some old costume jewellery.

49948841197_7868c5f819_c

https://www.flickr.com/photos/leighkemp/49948841197/in/dateposted-public/lightbox/

Best wishes,

Leigh

Macro lighting, greenscreen and post processing video (1 Hour long) !

Hi folks,

A mammoth video today, πŸ™‚

An hour long video, a quick run-through including my macro lighting setup, Olympus Capture and Workspace,Β  Green Screen Wizard Studio Pro, DXO Photolab 3, Luminar 4, Topaz Sharpen A.I and NIK Viveza 2 Software. I’ve not attempted to detail all the many powerful features of the software but rather to describe a few of the features that I frequently use and find the most useful.

Kind regards

Leigh

Let there be light

Hi folks,

I have a new addition to my macro lighting, a battery/DC adapter powered RGB LED light with Android control App.Β  The unit has power output setting from 0-100% in +/- 5% adjustments and one can adjust the colour temperature, saturation, hue etc..

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

gvm light

I have also upgraded my Green Screen Wizard software to the Pro Studio version which includes a very useful and well-featured editor.

f3Gqj4LnFo

Bus on the shore

Kind regards

Leigh

Macro shooting with Olympus tethering software.

Hi folks,

I’m no Spielberg and I’m not much interested in video but I put together a short video.

Kind regards

Leigh

Macro shooting indoors during lockdown is helping me to stay sane.

Hi folks,

Thank heavens that I’ve been able to get into macro photography as it means that I can try experimenting with this whilst confined to home. I’m itching to get out and about and pursue my main interest in landscape photography again but it’s proven to be quite absorbing.

My small macro setup, light tent, OM-D E-M5 II, M.Zuiko 30 mm macro lens, Godox TT350O flash and X-1 radio flash trigger and LED ring light. This has proven to be a very flexible lighting arrangement.Β  The ring light can be operated either stand alone in manual flash mode or as a continuous light source and/or used in conjunction with the X-1 and TT350O. I also have four mains powered LED lights that came with the light tentΒ  The TG-5 is there to take the closeup picture below of the EM-5 II. I’ve also been experimenting further with the TG-5’s amazing microscope mode which allows focus as close as 1cmΒ  and both cameras have focus stacking and/or focus bracketing.

picture in picture finished smallcamera closeup finished small

I’m using Olympus’ Capture tethering software and their Workspace software with the camera connected by USB. I found some interesting PC and Android software called Spacedesk which has enabled me to add my 10 inch Android tablet as a fourth monitor connected by USB which is much faster and more reliable than WIFI, the software also has a touch screen mode. This allows me to display the two Olympus programs across the four monitors. The Capture software on the two larger displays and the Worskpace software on the two smaller displays.

Top left: live view display and Capture tether controls, top right: Capture output full screen, bottom left: Workspace main window and bottom right closeup of a captured file. By moving the Android tablet near to the camera and displaying the Live view window output from Olympus Capture software on it I can extend the battery life on the EM-5 by turning off the LCD screenΒ  and also have a larger live view display which, along with focus peaking makes fine focus adjustments even easier. As soon as the camera has finished writing to the PC the Workspace software will display the files and one can examine them in more detail as I’m doing here on the bottom right display.

Olympus Capture and Olympus Workspaces 4 monitors finished small

Some colourful batteries and green background that I chose for this post.

batteries finished small

The same after using Green Screen Wizard software to change the background to one of my choosing.

batteries green screen finished small

An interesting learning curve and something that I can see myself doing more of in the future.

Stay safe, stay at home my friends and kind regards,

Leigh

PS. I discovered another nice thing about the Spacedesk software, one can connect more than one Android device by USB or WIFI so it’s possible to extend one’s Windows desktop to even more displays. πŸ™‚ I did so by adding my smaller 7 inch tablet as a 5th display.