“The most wonderful time of the year”

Hi everyone,

Another work of Chichester Ship Canal.

https://500px.com/photo/1103230601/the-most-wonderful-time-of-the-year-by-leigh-kemp-%F0%9F%93%B7%F0%9F%8E%A8%E2%9C%88

All the best,

Leigh

“The Canal in Autumn”

Hi everyone,

“The Canal in Autumn”, Chichester Ship Canal, first try with a 1/4 strength black diffusion filter and apricot LUT. PEN E-PL8 and M.Zuiko 25mm f/1.8. I forgot how good this lens is, the good old “nifty fifty” equivalent. It was the first MFT lens that I bought and it’s an absolute joy to travel ultra light with just a prime lens like this, I fully intend to use it more often that I have been doing. Framing-wise it works great, maybe because I was so used to this focal length in my film days I find that I can pretty much visualise a scene in my mind’s eye without even looking through the viewfinder. Not only was this focal length my first MFT lens it was also my very first lens as it came with my first Olympus OM1 35mm film camera as was the way in those days. I must have taken a great many shots with this lens before I had saved up my money to start buying other lenses so no small wonder that it feels as natural as it does even after all these years.

https://500px.com/photo/1103198412/the-canal-in-autumn-by-leigh-kemp-%F0%9F%93%B7%F0%9F%8E%A8%E2%9C%88

Kind regards

Leigh

Something new to try out

Hi everyone,

I don’t usually get overly excited about filters. I own quite a few, mostly ND and CPL filters but they don’t get very much usage but I’m expecting delivery today of a 1/4 strength black mist diffusion filter. I’ve chosen the 1/4 strength to start with, if I like the effect I might invest in other strengths, possibly a 1/2 strength one.

Probably because I’m not a filter aficionado and not into cinematography or portraiture I hadn’t heard about this type of filter which I believe is well known about and used in these genres but I think that it might work well with my landscape shots. I very often use diffusion and/or glow in post and I do really like softer, warmer, filmic looks and I frequently use Look-Up-Tables or LUTs to help achieve the look that I’m after. I’ll post some shots taken with this filter ASAP and I’ll almost certainly be taking it on my next overseas trip which is coming around very quickly now which includes a family wedding.

Kind regards

Leigh

“Shoreham”

Hi everyone,

Shoreham by Sea, W.Sussex, UK. PEN-F and Lumix 20mm f/1.7

Best wishes,

Leigh

“The tree by the sea”

Hi everyone,

Best wishes,

Leigh

“Over the moat”

Hi everyone,

Cowdrey Castle, Midhurst, W.Sussex, UK.

Best wishes,

Leigh

We’ve forgotten about the art of photography

Hi everyone,

I watched an interesting You-Tube video by my friend Jimmy Cheng which reinforced points made in an earlier video by Peter Forsgard. The title of Jimmy’s video being “We’ve forgotten about the art of photography“. In the videos they both made what I think are very good points which have my full agreement. The points made regard the increasing number of sites that simply review camera gear, produce test shots, test charts and pixel-peeping etc. and don’t discuss photography itself either techniques and/or by way of real world shots.

I’ve always tried to make my blog a mixture of my work, my techniques and sometimes hands-on reviews of the gear that I use especially related to my love of photography, travel and travel/landscape photography in particular and not about all the technical mumbo-jumbo which, personally, I couldn’t care less about. I’ve NEVER been asked what camera and/or lens that I used for a particular shot as folks don’t generally care about such things and why should they?.

All the gear that I use has been paid for entirely out of my own pocket and I’m not trying to sell anything. I like to share my experiences especially so when I find a technique or bit of gear that I find useful and that I think will be of interest and useful to others. In an ideal world the balance of my posts would always favour sharing my work but it’s not an ideal world and, when I cannot get out, I like to take time to share my experiences and thoughts about the gear that I’m using in the hope that it might be of benefit to someone.

Kind regards

Leigh

These are a few of my favourite (travel) things :) UPDATED.

Hi everyone,

Don’t worry I’m not about to break into a medley of songs from The Sound of Music but I could be tempted for a suitable remuneration in which case I can also supply the free loan of a pair of noise-cancelling headphones which make excellent ear defenders. πŸ™‚ Here’s some of my favourite and most useful things that I pack in my travel gear, some general and some photography-specific.

Anker 5-port USB charging hub. Travelled with me extensively and the backbone of my USB charging. Compact, metal-cased and takes an interchangeable figure of eight mains lead and has a 100-240 input voltage so will work just about anywhere in the world with a suitable cable. They do newer versions but this one has served me very well over the years and I don’t have any immediate need to change it.

Another Anker product, my newly acquired Anker Nano USB power bank which I recently posted about. I’ve always travelled with a USB power bank of some sorts and this is very small and light, with a second output port. It attaches directly to the phone so no cable required and is more or less dedicated to topping up my phone battery on the move. It doesn’t have the capacity to fully charge the phone but it does top it up quite a bit until one can get to somewhere where one can charge it normally.

I found a nice dedicated fast charging solution for my Motorola G30 mobile phone the Motorola Turbopower 50W Duo USB-C + USB-A Charger, As my travels are mostly in Europe I wanted a charger with a 2 pin European plug connection, input voltage  100-240V AC, 50/60Hz. Not only is this charger less bulky and doesn’t require a UK to EU plug adapter it also has both USB-C fast charge and USB A sockets so can act as an additional or backup charger to my Anker charger should I require it. It has therefore replaced both my Motorola UK plug phone fast charger and my travel plug adapter/ 2 port USB backup charger. A significant weight and particularly space saving in my travelling tech bag. It has USB-PD Power Delivery and Quick Charge 3.0 technologies.

Another nice thing about this charger is that it could theoretically be used to simultaneously charge my Anker Nano USB power bank and the attached phone using the power bank’s passthrough charging feature and still have an extra USB-A port to charge another device. Not something that I’ve tried out as yet but I will be doing so as it could be really useful in the event of anything happening to my main Anker USB charging hub.

JJC USB dual camera battery charger, I have two of these to suit different types of camera batteries. It has a short 15cm hard-wired built in USB Type A cable which folds away neatly and stores on the back, it’s small, light and works well. It also comes with a short 40cm USB extension cable which could be useful.

My chosen memory card and battery case. This one holds two batteries and has compartments for 5 SDHC cards as well as several micro SD cards and 2 Compact Flash cards of which I have no need so I keep a couple of lens wipe sachets in these yellow-coloured hinged compartments instead. Both battery types (BLN-1 and BLS-5/50) as fit my various Olympus OM-D and PEN series cameras fit in comfortably. It’s not overly heavy, it’s water-resistant, well constructed and gives a good degree of protection to the contents which is just about all I can ask of it. A slight cautionary note, I’ve added some prominent “This way up” labelling to the outside of the hinged lid as if, in an absent-minded moment, one inadvertently opens it upside down then everything is going to fall out!, I speak from experience . πŸ™‚ What would be nice is some form of latching bar mechanism over the batteries and cards which would prevent this from happening.

Subject of another recent post, my matchbox-sized Holux RCV-3000 USB/Bluetooth GPS data logger which is so useful for recording and subsequently geotagging the location of my shots.

Lastly another non electrical item which has come in handy on more than one occasion, my humble multitool. Everything from occasionally using the pliers or screwdriver to possibly, most importantly, opening a bottle of beer. πŸ™‚

When one only has one mains socket and not even a table to charge things on. At least the mains socket didn’t alarmingly come away from the wall when unplugging which has happened to me a couple of times on my travels, a good reason to take a USB power bank πŸ™‚ and I suppose that, looking on the bright side of life, at least I had a chair πŸ™‚

Kind regards

Leigh

Update: I’ve now had a chance to try out passthrough charging the Anker Nano power bank (USB Type-C) and my phone and also simultaneously charging two camera batteries using my JJC USB dual camera battery charger (USB Type-A) from my Motorola 50w USB wall charger. All seem to work well, so these are going in my camera bag hand luggage. πŸ™‚ These are the things that I most frequently need to charge and serving as a backup to the charging gear in the tech bag in my hold luggage should my case go missing.

The dark side of your Mom :)

Hi everyone,

Spotted on my travels πŸ™‚

PEN-F and Lumix 20mm f/1.7

Kind regards

Leigh

“Bandstand and the Train”

Hi everyone,

Bognor Regis seafront.

Kind regards

Leigh