Microphone/Camera stand/tripod adapters

Hi,

These are really useful to adapt microphone holders to fit on camera tripod threaded accessories and also vice-versa to enable a microphone stand to accept cameras and to attach microphones to camera tripods. brackets etc.. I have used these to attach microphones to camera flash brackets and also to attach a camera to an otherwise surplus to requirements small but sturdy metal tabletop microphone tripod stand as shown below.

Search Amazon for – Prasacco 8 Pieces Mic Stand Adapter, 5/8 Female to 3/8 Male 3/8 Female to 5/8 Male 5/8 Female to 1/4 Male 1/4 Female to 5/8 Male Screw Thread Adapter for Microphone Stand Mount to Camera Tripod

Kind regards

Leigh

Long time, no see.

Hi everyone, hope you’re keeping well,

Well, it’s been quite a while since my last post. I just haven’t been able to get out and get any shots. Firstly my health hasn’t been that good, then there’s the weather which, with relatively few exceptions, seems like its been raining every day for months. We’ve also had and are still repeatedly having very high winds and we’ve had local flooding. I’m also reliant on public transport which is few and far between in this part of the World and financially it’s been a tough time. So, putting it all together, there have been very few days when I’m feeling up to it, the weather’s been sufficiently favourable and I’ve had the funds, usually one, the other, but rarely all at the same time. Notwithstanding all of this, we’ve booked a much-needed short holiday return visit to the beautiful Greek island of Corfu which we’re both very much looking forward to after last year’s disastrous week-long trip to Malaga Spain which saw me confined to our hotel room for days on end with a nasty bout of food poisoning resulting in very few opportunities to get any shots or, for that matter, do pretty much anything else.

Pontikonisi, CorfuOlympus OM-D E-M1 I and M.Zuiko 12-40mm f/2.8 lens.

Naturally my thoughts have recently turned to which gear to pack. I considered taking my smallest, lightest camera, my PEN E-PL8 but decided that, for a few extra ounces I’ll take my much-loved, much-travelled and much-trusted OM-D E-M5 II camera principally for it’s weather-sealing, faster maximum shutter speed (particularly useful in very bright conditions and when shooting HDR) and electronic shutter. The large eyepiece I fitted some years ago after my laser ops in both eyes that resulted in halos in bright light. Regarding lenses, I’m typically going to travel light with only two lenses, my Lumix 12-60mm f/3.5-f/5.6 (24mm to 120mm equivalent) weather-sealed lens for general shooting and my Lumix 20mm f/1.7 for low light/interior and evening use. Both of these lenses have great image quality and have travelled with me on several previous trips abroad as well as in the UK particularly my Lumix 12-60mm which has the useful bonus of extra telephoto reach, punches well above it’s cost and weight and is significantly lighter when compared to my other “standard” zooms. All of this along with a few small accessories: spare battery/s, rain cover, lens wipes and CPL filter in one of my very small Manfrotto camera bags, another of my best buys at Β£8.00 UK each. πŸ™‚

I’ve only splashed out on one new item a new camera strap by Tarion (https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0194X71JQ?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details) for which I paid the less than princely sum of Β£9.00 UK πŸ™‚ seen here attached to my E-M5 II. The strap is pretty wide at approx. 1 3/4 inches, nicely made, it’s classic styling is esthetically pleasing and, most importantly of all, it should spread the weight and prove comfortable in usage. I’ve fitted my Peak Design type connectors and buckles to the strap enabling quick release. Worth noting that the strap does come with triangle rings which is a nice touch if one requires them. It’s funny how one’s tastes/needs in straps change over the years as one’s age, gear and physical condition changes, think neck and back pain 😦 . I did notice that they show a less secure method of attaching the strap than I’ve been using for years. For anyone wanting to adopt a more secure strap fastening method, if they don’t already, I suggest looking at this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_paXysiGsxs&ab_channel=ShotKit I did contact their support and, to their credit, they responded quickly and positively,

I have so many different types of straps and for that matter camera bags, which have worked well for me at one time or another but not so now. I’m thinking I should have a stall in the local market selling used camera straps and bags. πŸ™‚

Olympus OM-D E-M5 II camera, bottom-opening leather-like half case, Tarion strap, Panasonic Lumix 12-60mm and 20mm lenses. The 20mm has a 46mm to 58mm step up ring fitted to act as a lens hood and also allow my 58mm CPL filter to be fitted without adding very much bulk to a very small, compact, pancake design lens.

Take care, best wises,

Leigh

Some close up shots with my Olympus M.Zuiko 12-45mm f/4 lens.

Hi everyone,

This morning I thought I’d fit one of my small Godox LED36 lights and take some closeup shots using my M.Zuiko 12-45mm f/4 constant aperture lens. One really nice feature to this lens is its close focussing feature which I’ve used a few times. Not strictly a macro lens at 0.25x magnification (0.5x 35mm equivalent) across the entire zoom range. The closest focusing distance is 12 cm at the wide-angle end, and 23 cm at the telephoto end which is useful and a lot of fun. Mostly taken at f/4, at circa 10th second (got to love the Olympus IBIS) πŸ™‚ and at ISO 200, all handheld. The lens well built, weather sealed and extremely compact for a lens of its type.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Kind regards

Leigh

Trying out a sort of DIY off-camera flash grip and bracket. [Updated – “A shot in the dark”]

Hi everyone,

In advance of the Christmas holidays I’ve been trying out an off-camera flash setup using whatever bits and pieces that I had rattling around in a drawer. I dug out a flash bracket, and my JJC pistol grip. I unscrewed the cold shoe from the bracket and screwed it to the top of the pistol grip and, as the grip has a tripod bush in the base I was then able to screw it onto the bracket. The grip also has a trigger which, when connected to the camera’s remote port by cable allows the camera to be fired from the grip. The Godox TT350o flash is fired by the Godox X1To radio flash trigger mounted on the camera so as to keep the cabling to a minimum. I could also dispense with the flash gear and fit one of my small Godox LED36 video lights to the grip instead.

I tried this arrangement out by taking some portrait shots of my wife and I’m very pleased with the results and the way the gear handles in use. She absolutely detests having her picture taken but she reluctantly agreed so as I could test out the gear as she wants some new shots of the grandkids in particular and she would hang, draw and quarter me or possibly worse πŸ™‚ if I posted them online. In fact I never publish private family shots online anywhere especially so of the grandkids. Somewhat of a sad commentary on the world we live in perhaps, too many unsavoury characters out there in my opinion. But many years ago I used to do quite a bit of portraiture and model photography before my photographic interests changed from photographing people to mostly landscapes.

I’ve since added a small quick release plate arrangement mounted between the bottom of the grip and the bracket so that I can quickly attach and detach the grip and use the flash handheld.

PS. I awoke this morning very early whilst it was still dark and couldn’t get back to sleep so I made myself a nice cup of tea and thought I’d take a few test “shots in the dark” inside the house to try something out so I additionally fitted one of my small dimmable Godox LED36 video lights to my flash bounce grip arrangement. It worked very well as a focus assist light source. Dimmed down to a setting of my choice the light from the LED unit was overwhelmed by my choice of flash output it was really just there to see what I was doing stumbling around in the darkness and to stop me from tripping over and breaking my neck however when on full brightness it is pretty bright and the light source temperatures didn’t clash. I think that it would also make a nice modelling light, catch light, fill light etc. or just an alternative light source to throw in the mix and its very small and light so I can accommodate it in my choice of bag. Like the flash and trigger units it also runs on 2 AA batteries which is convenient.

Kind regards

Leigh

Small portable flash diffuser for my Godox Lux Junior flash.

Hi everyone,

I’ve been busying myself recently by posting mostly about photographic gear whilst the main road has remained closed to public transport for more than a week due to the flooding following Storm Ciaran and I’ve been unable to get out and get any new shots or pretty much anything else for that matter, I’m going a bit stir-crazy but should be able to get out somewhere soon.

I got one of these small flash soft box diffusers with an elasticated fitting and part silvered inside specifically for my Godox Lux Junior flash. As the Lux Junior is a direct manual flash it can be a bit too stark with harsh shadows when mounted directly on the camera unless that’s the look one’s looking for. With the diffuser fitted I think that one would probably need to compensate for the loss of light by increasing the output power by one or two stops equivalent or, if not possible, by increasing the ISO setting by the same degree. The diffuser would also fit my Godox TT350 flash or I guess pretty much any other flash gun, but the 350 unit has a bounce head, bounce card and attachable diffuser so it’s probably not required so much as with the smaller unit. You can get these diffusers “as cheap as chips” at circa Β£5 UK on E-bay etc. and they don’t take up much space as you can see in the pictures below, side by side with and fitted to the Lux Junior. I’ve tried out other types of diffuser in the past which have all proven to be either too flimsy and/or too bulky so this one looks like a better bet. I suppose if all else fails I could always draw a nose and two eyes on it and use it as a glove puppet to keep our youngest baby granddaughter amused for a while. πŸ™‚

All the best,

Leigh

Horses for Courses.

Hi everyone,

I like to organise my camera gear into kits to suit my different needs. When thinking about a choice of the camera and lenses to take with me size and particularly the weight has ever increasingly become of paramount importance to me. The longer and more frequently that I have to carry the gear the lighter I want the load to be. Another factor that determines my choice is of course the type of subject. Generally, with the possible exception of travelling, I know pretty much what to expect and what I will need with me to give a good all round balance of focal lengths. They say “always expect the unexpected” but I do not want to carry the kitchen sink around with me all day on the vague off chance that I might require a certain bit of gear so, based on experience I pretty much know that my choice of gear for a day out or short stay will differ compared to a lengthier trip. Whether I’m going to shoot lots of landscape shots or maybe a selection of different subjects or a few family portraits shots. With all of this in mind I’ve put together four kit choices. There is a certain amount of overlap between the kits but I know which focal lengths I want with me and I’ve aimed to keep things down to a minimum whilst retaining a good degree of flexibility for shooting in different light conditions.

  1. This kit is the lightest and most compact and contains my Olympus E-PL8 camera + EVF-4 electronic viewfinder and 12-32mm Lumix, 20mm f/1.7 Lumix (in the pouch) and 45mm f/1.8 Olympus lenses. So a small zoom and a couple of fast prime lenses. Great for a day out or a short trip, family shots etc..

2. This kit contain my Olympus PEN-F camera, Lumix 14-42mm II and Olympus 17mm f/1.8 (in a soft pouch) and my new Godox Lux Junior flash. Again good for a short trip or day out with the addition of a flash gun. This time one zoom lens and a fast prime lens.

3. A weather-sealed kit for travelling comprising of my Olympus E-M5 II camera and Lumix 12-60mm lens with small Olympus on-camera bounce capable flash . I used this combination several times in the past when travelling abroad and it provides me with the focal length range I require whilst keeping the weight manageable. The thing in the red pouch is a camera rain cover.

4. Another weather-sealed camera/lens combination, my Olympus E-M1 I and Olympus 12-45mm f/4 lens and Godox TT350 flash gun in the red pouch. The small Olympus on camera flash could optically trigger the larger flash if so wished. The heaviest, but still manageable, of the kits, The “Full Monty” πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

Flash ah ah, saviour of my sanity! :)

Hi everyone,

After days of searching off and on I finally found my Godox TT-350o flash gun. as I mentioned in a previous post it was, as I knew that it would be, in the last place that I looked for it πŸ™‚ . I now have two flash guns at my disposal should I feel so inclined as to use them and I thought I’d throw my Godox X1T-o radio flash trigger into the mix. I originally bought the TT-350 and the X1T during the seemingly endless months of COVID lockdown so that I could dabble with a bit of indoor macro photography to help keep me amused and occupied. Both the TT-350 and X1-T connect by 2.4GHz radio and the trigger has a manual hot shoe pass through as seen below with my Godox Lux Junior manual flash gun attached. Alternatively I could dispense with the X1T and use the flashes as optical master and slave or use my off camera TTL flash cable with the TT350. “Flash Godox is Alive!!”. I simply couldn’t resist the play on words references to one of my all-time favourite Sci-Fi movies. πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

Heroclip

Hi everyone,

These things are great, I bought one to use on my camera bags quite a while back. It can be used on any bag or anything where you have something to clip it on to. I’ve used it to hang my bag from a table, under a tripod to weigh it down, on the back of a seat on the train , on a hook on the back of a hotel door and from a tree branch to keep the bag from resting on wet ground. An ingenious bit of design www.heroclip.co.uk

Kind regards

Leigh

Godox Lux Junior – Retro Camera Flash.

Hi everyone,

I don’t particularly like nor do I take many pictures using flash as portraiture isn’t my chosen genre and I much prefer natural light, only the occasional family portrait but as I’ve mislaid my Godox TT-350 flash I thought I’d get something to replace it, especially with the holiday season fast approaching, visiting family, kids, grandkids etc.. I’ve turned the place upside down looking for my TT-350 to no avail, as is usually the case it’ll no doubt turn up in the last place that I look for it πŸ™‚ or, probably more likely, long after I’ve given up looking for it!.

I stumbled upon this very small (74Γ—50Γ—72mm), lightweight (130g), retro-styled flash. It’s not got any bells and whistles and if one was in the market for a state of the art flash with bounce/swivel head, diffusers, more power, TTL and faster recycling then I’d say “this isn’t the flash you are looking for” πŸ™‚ . It has manual and auto modes like one of my flash units from the 70s or 80s, two remote trigger modes marked S1 and S2, comes with a short off-camera flash sync cable, small soft pouch, ridiculously small print manual (PDF on their website) and takes two AAA NiMH rechargeable (of which I fortunately have plenty) or Alkaline batteries. With a guide number of 12  (ISO 100, metres) it’s not going to light up the Royal Albert Hall but should be just fine for portraits and suchlike uses.

Because it’s not dedicated to any make/model of camera it will work with most film cameras and digital cameras alike with center contact hot shoe connection or off-camera with the supplied sync cable, both of which are nice bonuses. As far as flash guns go it doesn’t get much more basic than this. The inner dial is purely for reference, one adjusts by setting the flash-to subject distance against the chosen ISO. You then read off the top section of the dial which indicates which flash power to select for a particular lens aperture to obtain a “correct” exposure.

As anyone familiar with the exposure triangle will instantly recognise half as much light intensity illuminating the subject (in this case flash output power better expressed as output duration) requires twice the size of the lens aperture opening (+1 stop) and vice versa to obtain a correct exposure given a certain ISO setting and subject distance as the light will drop of as the distance increases, thus it doesn’t communicate with the camera in any way, no TTL here. Of course you have to keep the camera’s shutter speed at or below the camera’s fastest flash synch speed which for me would generally be 1/250th sec.. All intuitive stuff for any “old school” photographers, with the emphasis, at least in my case on old. πŸ™‚ You have full manual control of light output by rotating the knurled top dial which has 7 click stop settings (1/1-1/64 power). They state light distribution 24mm-105mm lenses (12mm-50mm MFT lenses) so it should be a good match for my 12-45mm f/4 M.Zuiko PRO zoom lens and my range of f/1.8 MFT prime lenses such as my M.Zuiko 17mm f/1.8 shown fitted below.

For my occasional usage it would seem to tick the boxes, unlike my larger Godox unit it fits neatly inside one of my very small camera bags and doesn’t take up much room and, importantly, add very much weight which means that I’m more inclined to take it with me on my travels and thus potentially use a flash more often than I have previously. As the saying goes “the best camera is the one that you’ve got with you” the same could be said of flash guns not that I can ever remember feeling particularly disadvantaged by not having one with me given my photographic interests. However I think it would make a nice compact flash to accompany one when travelling light. I’ve never made any secret of my love of retro-styled things so it handsomely ticks that box πŸ™‚ , seen here, of course! πŸ™‚ ,on my equally retro-looking, beloved, Olympus PEN-F digital camera which styling-wise is a nice match right down to the faux leather covering which is firmly the look that Godox and myself πŸ™‚ were aiming for.

Kind regards

Leigh

Bognor with body caps.

Hi,

I took my PEN E-PL8 and my tiny 9mm and 15mm OIympus body cap lenses for a short stroll along the seafront in Bognor. This whole setup goes in my pocket. Two shots, one taken with the 9mm f/8 fisheye body cap lens and the second taken with the 15mm f/8 body cap lens. With minimum processing to taste. Given good light these two little lenses are capable of performing very well. It’s a miracle that I got anything as I forgot to fit my electronic viewfinder and, in bright sunlight I couldn’t see a darned thing on the LCD screen, that’s why I detest them so.

Beyond the sea wall.
Flags and fishing gear.

Kind regards

Leigh