Photography is a ridiculously expensive hobby. Some of it might be required, but some products ($100 UV filters?) definitely employ very large profit margins.
Category Archives: Photography
Bending sunlight
Here’s an interesting photographic idea: obstructing, reflecting, refracting, or scattering sunlight in such a way that it forms distinct shapes. In essence, the light becomes the subject.
Relativism
While walking, I came up with an interesting argument for relativism, which is one of the philosophies I extend in my “Treatise on the Objective Reality of Ideas”: support I take two pictures of a tree, one with a very short exposure time, one with a very long one. Which is the truth? Well, both of them reflect the image of the same real-world tree, and yet one would certainly appear more “tree-like” than the other (ala Plato)… yet if the perspective is changed (extending the exposure time), the very concept of what a tree is can change.
Let’s take the analogy even further. What if we take a photo of a tree and digitally enhance it? (Nothing too complicated that would lose the image of the tree; let’s say we just normalize the image’s histogram). Is the enhanced photo still a tree? What would the distinction be between enhancing the photo in software and changing the capture parameters on the camera? What if the camera could perform normalization directly?
Even better, what if a photo was, say, underexposed, and was digitally corrected to more closely resemble the real-world scene that it was meant to capture? The enhancements are “fake”, but they more closely match reality than the unenhanced photo!
The point I’m trying to drive at is that it’s foolish to say that any single image of the tree is the image of the tree. There is an entire family (technically of infinite size) of images that could pass as a tree.
So what you perceive as a tree depends on you.
Perseids
I’m somewhat disappointed. All that time waiting and only one photo with a faint meteor trail to show for it.
I might be getting very good at conventional photography, but I’m still a complete n00b at astrophotography. I spent over an hour out there, seeing nearly nothing in the sky and capturing even less. Eventually, I was forced in, as it was becoming cloudy. I believe I was looking in the right place (I saw Mars), but there may have been too much light, even in NJ. I needed a rural area for this one.
The day certainly wasn’t a complete loss, though; among other photos, I took this while it was still light out:
http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/62169122/
If I cared at all about getting views/favorites/recognition, I would submit this at a time other than 2 AM, but I don’t. I’ve done my part in making my art and ideas available to the world. If the world wants to reap the benefits, it’s up to the world to use them. If not, so be it; the consequences of a lost idea naturally follow.
Infrared + Color photography
Infrared photography reveals more of an intensity map than a full spectrum. Therefore, why not take two photos of the same scene, using the infrared image as an intensity map for the RGB image? What if we match intensity to color using a k-nearest-neighbor approach?
This should generate a “bloom” effect in a photograph, similar to the effect that is all the rage in games right now. I intend to test this hypothesis as soon as my IR filter arrives. The results will be on Myopic Photography.
I'm an idiot
I brought an SD card for my camera. It only takes CF cards. Whoops.
Got my camera!
I received the DSLR I ordered, a Canon Digital Rebel XT with a Sigma 18-200 mm lens (all the way from super wide to telephoto with apertures from f/3.5 – f/6.3, IIRC), today. Coupled with my existing knowledge of digital image processing, this should become quite the fruitful art for me once my photography skills are up to par. I’ve been told I have talent at photography; let’s see how it turns out!
Interestingly, dictionary.com’s word of the day is polymath!