I did some engagement photos for a friend at work.
Canon EOS 40D, Sigma 10-20mm lens.
Strobist: Canon 430EX II camera left, half power. Triggered with Cactus remote.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
The engagement of Lauren and Jeff
Friday, August 13, 2010
J.C. Slaughter Falls
After all the rain last night and this morning I headed up to Mt Coot Tha (as I have the day off) for some waterfall shooting :)
Canon EOS 40D, sigma 10-20mm lens, el-cheapo polarizer.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Whoooosh!

I had a client shoot on King's Beach today on Queensland's Sunshine Coast so I decided to drive up early for a chance to shoot a sunrise at Dicky Beach.
It was a high-ish tide, though still not coming in over the whole wreck, only the lower half and It's a shame the sunrise didn't put on a better display for me but still, I'm quite happy with the streaky wave action. These streaks are actually from a receding wave and you can see the next wave starting to come in at the tip of the old iron hull. I recently made the leap to Lee filters and am really glad I did. The holder has a great build quality and the filters themselves offer beautiful clarity to your image.
After a good hour here I still had two hours until the client shoot so I trekked off to Buderim Forest Park to grab some shots of Serenity Falls. The overcast sky would be perfect for some waterfall photography. I don't have a neutral density filter to fit my Lee holder yet (or a polarizer ) but I could slide my grad all the way over the lens to give the same effect. When I moved under this rock overhang I slid the grad back out partway and turned it on its side to darken the right side of the frame. A soft grad would have been better but the hard grad has worked well enough :)

I would have liked to spend more time at the falls but it started to rain and I had to get back to the beach for the shoot.
Taken with a Canon EOS 40D, Sigma 10-20mm lens and Lee 0.9 hard grad.
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Monday, June 28, 2010
Firey skies
Very low tide this morning. Taken on a Canon EOS 40D and Sigma 10-20mm. HDR [-2,0,+2]
To answer any post processing questions, here's what I do. I've gathered this workflow after reading what other do and trying some things of my own.
1 - Open one of the three bracketed exposures in Canon DPP and adjust for white balance. I usually bring the contrast right down as well, sharpen and apply the landscape preset.
2 - Copy that 'recipe' then apply it to the other two bracketed images then run a batch process to output three TIFF files.
3 - Open these TIFF files in Dynamic Photo HDR and play around with the settings to get something I like. On this one I used the 'eyecatching' preset and fiddled around with the options a bit there. Be careful to avoid the 'haloing' effect common to HDR (unless you are aiming for that) by being easy on the radius/light strength options. Save to a TIFF file.
4 - Open the new TIFF file in Photohsop. I'm using CS2 at the moment. I apply an s-curve layer set to 'multiply', 'soft' or 'hard' and then I adjust the opacity till I get something I like. Flatten image.
5 - If parts of the image are still not dark or light or saturated enough I open another layer and adjust the levels accordingly then apply a layer mask to reveal the adjusted sections. Flatten image.
6 - Noise Ninja if necessary. Sharpen. Save to JPEG.
I'm no Photoshop expert. There may be redundant steps. This is what works for me at my stage of learning.
Cheers
-Dave-
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Nudgee Pan
Six shot, HDR panorama [-2,0,+2] taken at Nudgee this morning.
Canon EOS 40D, Sigma 10-20mm.
Friday, June 25, 2010
Grill'd
This morning out at Shorncliffe. The clouds looked a lot more promising when I arrived but grew thicker and thicker till the sun rose. I thought that if I waited till the sun had risen high enough then some light would peek through and illuminate these clouds here. The wait paid off :)
Taken with a Canon EOS 40D, Sigma 10-20mm and a 0.9 hard grad.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Point Arkwright
Taken at a mini-meetup with Camocarzi and Adam Randell. There was a chill wind blowing but it was a fun shoot, with a bit of dashing done on my behalf to get the 'good' sky. On either side of this colourful patch were thick grey clouds and a drab emptyness. T'was fun to find a nice comp as colour drained from the sky :P
Canon EOS 40D, Sigma 10-20mm and a 0.9 hard grad that really needs replacing :)