Photo: self portrait

Self Portrait 1.

Many of the photos I take are of buildings or animals or landscapes. Sometimes I take photos of people. I rarely take photos of myself. I was thinking recently “why not?” and couldn’t come up with a good answer.

So I’ve decided to try out some self portrait shots, and make them more interesting than just pointing the camera at my own face. Here is a photo taken with a tripod, zoom lens and bulb, using the not-very-smooth reflective surface of the flower in Buenos Aires.

Today I joined the Norwegian Sun cruise ship. I spent most of the afternoon catching up on sleep. Then I decided to see how much more similar I could make the two photos I posted yesterday. I think this is a fun way to learn about HDR and colour manipulation in software. That the start image is so similar, it lets me see what kind of things Trey Radcliffe has done to his final image. Recreating the same look with my image made me learn much more about Lightroom.

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Photos: copying photos in Buenos Aires

After flying in from Miami, and getting to my hotel, I stayed in most of the day because of rain. Come 3:30pm the rain was clearing, I thought I’d head out on a walk, see if I could meet up with some jugglers at Plaza Francia. There was nobody there, so I continued on taking some photos.

I arrived at the huge robotic flower, the one that follows the sun throughout the day. As I’ve been trying out HDR photography, I thought I’d try to get a good shot. Back when I first read up on HDR, I found many links to Trey Radcliffe’s blog, called Stuck In Customs. The first image of his I remember seeing was of this very same landmark, but it was many months ago, so couldn’t remember the details.

Here’s one shot from today that I like, with the info plaque in the foreground:

Flower and plaque.

Of course I wanted a better shot, so found a better location and angle and style. Click, click, click… and I was done. I went on to take some less obvious photo angles, which I’ll share later.

When I got back to the hotel I worked on the HDR and other processing for the interesting photos from the day, and set them to upload. As I did this, I decided to search for “Buenos Aires” on Trey Radcliffe’s blog, just to see what he’d done.

I was surprised how similar the two photos turned out…

My photo:
My photo.

Trey’s photo:
Trey's photo.

I guess there are two reasons they turned out so similar:

1. I subconsciously copied a photo I’d seen once months before. This might have happened because, as I said, this was an early example of HDR (for me). Maybe it stuck with me.

2. Or, more likely, this is just the best angle and location to take a photo of that huge flower. I’ve been there a few times before, and have walked around it many times, so know the angles already. And today men were setting up tents and Christmas decorations, so my options were limited. I took for this shot, and Trey took his shot, because the foreground is the most interesting, the camera is at the best height, the background has the least building (though we both edited out the same pylon), the angle of the flower is the most interesting… pity I was there just after a rainstorm, and Trey was there in the sun.

And now, a trip down memory lane…

Last year I was in Buenos Aires, I visited the Planetarium. I remembered a photo of some fellow interneteers I’d seen on a forum on the internet, and decided to recreate the photo featuring myself instead, but purely from memory.

Them:

Me:

I got the angle wrong, but the direction and location was pretty much spot on. The similarities between this second set of photos were intentional, but off, while the first set of photos were accidentally similar, and far closer to each other.

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Naive Juggling Revisited

I first posted the following on a previous blog. Today I spotted something very similar, and I thought of this. I’ll head out with my camera later to see if I can get some video captured. Either way, here’s an interesting piece of history from about four years ago…

“Naive Juggling”
January 21st, 2006

There are many kinds of art, and each school has its own name and history. Apart from all these usual schools of painting is “Naive Art”, a painting by someone outside of any art tradition, with no art training, with limited experience of other painting… resulting in pictures that may, at first glance, look good, but take a closer look and things are a bit off; wonky perspective, strange colours, blocky composition, etc.

I have noticed the phenomenon that I call “Naive Juggling”. Most people are taught how to juggle by other jugglers, but there are many people who teach themselves tricks out of order, or use strange techniques that most jugglers find more difficult, or are just plain wrong. The most common examples of naive juggling are those people who know how to juggle the two ball shower, want to learn three balls, so do so using the shower pattern (normally considered much harder than the cascade). Some jugglers learn the reverse cascade before the cascade. I even remember my brother and I trying to work out how to pass clubs; we decided that the right way must be to throw every pass with reverse spin, so it lands in the other person’s hand in the same position as a normal self throw. We were 14.

In each of these cases the skills involved are not that advanced. Maybe some people go on to learn the 4 ball shower, or find the 5 ball reverse cascade easier when they get to that level, but normally these “mistakes” are caught by other jugglers and corrected before the naive juggler starts learning more technical skills.

But a few days ago I met Andreas. He learned to juggle in isolation… and all was normal when learning 3, 4, 5 6 balls. Then 3 clubs, in the cascade. Then 4 clubs, in the triple-single, half shower pattern. Not the most common pattern, but I do know others who only use this pattern for 4 clubs, not bothering with the fountain.

Then he started learning the 5 club cascade. His right hand was so used to throwing triples he didn’t want to learn the pattern on doubles. But then his left hand was so used to throwing singles, so he didn’t want to have to learn left handed triples to match his right hand. So he learned the pattern with his right hand throwing triples and his left throwing doubles! Nobody told him this was really wrong; to him it was just the most natural way to juggle. Even so, his pattern is really solid, all the clubs go to exactly the same height, and he keeps it going for a few hundred catches without much trouble. At first you don’t see anything wrong, but look closer, or have it pointed out, and it just looks wrong!

“And I’m told the easiest 6 club pattern is the triple-double half shower,” says Andreas, “so I’ll have an advantage when I get there…”

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Trip: 20091112 Atlantic Crossing

It’s been a long trip, but a fun trip! See my route here:

My goals for the trip, and if I managed to reach them:

– Do some good shows. Tick!

– Hang out with friends on the Prinsendam. Tick!

– Finish the music track for my video project. Tick! I’m really happy with it, but I might re-record the vocals.

– Get the last few shots and do a final edit on the video project. Tick!

– Visit some new places. Tick! Lanzarote was good fun, as was my two days on Aruba.

– Write the second half of my NaNoWriMo novel. Fail! I was working on other stuff. and, to be honest, sort of got hung up on the three quarters problem, and didn’t push through to the end. And this was three quarter of the second half of the novel, and a short novel at that, so I’ve probably only got 6,000 words to write.

– Take some cool photos, and generally get better at photography. Tick!

– Juggle a lot. Fail! Due to hurting my left thumb really badly during a game of combat before I left, I’ve done very little club juggling. Ring juggling is coming on well though. I think when I get back to Berlin I’m going to sign up for a week’s training with Sergei Ignatov to see if I can get some intensive learning with rings.

– Read a few novels and release some podcasts. Tick! Due to a non-shit connection at 2am on the cruise ships, I’ve even uploaded the podcasts while at sea, something that is normally too much of a pain and too expensive. I didn’t bother with Atlas Shrugged, and reviewed the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy and Makers, the new novel by Cory Doctorow. I also read Shadow Magic by John Lenahan. And The Warrior Prophet by R. Scott Bakker, which I really, really enjoyed. And Exodus.

Highlights from the trip:

– Standing ovations in my shows. Also all the comments from guests and other entertainers about how much they enjoy my show.

– The trip up to the volcano on the island of Lanzarote.

– John Lenahan’s “magic” show. And Diemos’ Draculaphone routine.

– Watching the whole of season 1 of Dexter. Very, very good TV.

– The boat trips and the private island in Aruba. Also taking photos of lizards. Animals that stay still a lot, and look at you a lot, are very easy subjects.

I was planning to drop photos from my trip into this post, but I’ve shared quite a few already, and don’t have time to add them individually before I get on my flight down to Buenos Aires (I’m writing this at my departure gate in Miami International Airport, thanks to Google for the free wifi).

Instead I’ll add all the photos as a slide show, and add a new post in a few days about the second half of this 2 month trip:

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Photo: final lizard portrait

Taking wildlife photos is usually a job for long zoom lenses. For a lot of these shots I’ve used a 70-300mm. But when wildlife isn’t very wild, and actually rather tame, I can use my wide angle lens instead. This shot took a loooong time to get just right, but I’m very happy with the result:

Lizard in luxury

Bonus non-lizard photo. Welcome, Mr. Hermit Crab. This was also a very tricky shot to get, as that crab does one thing when it emerges from its shell: RUN! Thankfully the shell is a handy handle. I simply picked the crab up and placed it back in a good location, over and over, until I finally got a shot properly framed and in focus. I had to do it without looking through the viewfinder or the LCD screen, because the camera was right on the sand to get the right angle. The focus isn’t perfect, but again, I’m happy with the final image.

Hermit Crab

Soooo, the first half of my winter work trip is coming to a close. Last night my two shows went very well. I’ve started adding a “funny” hint about standing ovations in my show, and so far I’ve had at least partial standing ovations in every show since. This makes me feel good, because I like standing ovations, and the more I get the more work I’ll get. It makes me feel bad at the same time though; humans are sooo easy to manipulate! I feel like Kelhus from The Prince of Nothing series.

After my show, instead of packing, I spent a few hours in the officers bar. As I mentioned on twitter, I fell into the roll of DJ and had a lot of fun. The first track I played had everyone cheering and singing and dancing, so I stuck with it. Thankfully people kept cheering at each new song I played, even when I got cheeky and dropped in tracks like All That She Wants by Ace of Base.

I’ll do a bit more of a writeup of my trip so far in another blog post, and set out where I’ll be going and what I’ll be doing over the next four weeks.

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