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dybydy-phtgrphy

by alex irmscher
  • blog
  • glimpse
    • humans
    • townscapes
    • bodenseewelten
    • alterity
    • organic
  • desk
 
blog
waves in the breaking
about a year ago
two pairs
about a year ago
rainbow to darkness
about 2 years ago

between devils - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO1600 | 1/60 | fill-flash to ceiling

horrorween

November 04, 2013

my recipe for decent halloween party pics:

- dress ostentatious and in this particular case you won't attract any attention,

- don't pre-announce your presence, which makes all the guys act naturally and (almost) artless,

- take your widest option, use the lens wide open at largest aperture,

- always bounce the flash to the ceiling, work in shutter priority or manual mode (despite the short focal length you should try to keep the shutter speed faster than 1/60th of a second for indoor party pics),

- select mid-balanced exposure metering mode, exposure compensation -0.3 to -0.7ev,

- deactivate the autofocus and set the focal distance to minimum,

- tilt the screen for a pov from far above; always use this angle for a special, scary look,

- focus and shoot the most interesting guys just by varying the distance to the subject,

- show the subjects the (first) results on the camera screen,

- whet the appetite for the final results by shortly (!!!) describing the possibilities of an appropriate pp,

- don't forget to share the contact information... for your amusement in 2014! 

btw: absolutely great costumes, folks! we had a lot of fun last night! cu all in 2014!

 
View fullsize    emily de corpse bride   - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO1600 | 1/40
View fullsize   devilmania  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO1600 | 1/60
View fullsize   emily de corpse bride II  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO1600 | 1/10
View fullsize   slaughtermen  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO800 | 1/60
View fullsize   emily de corpse bride III  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO1600 | 1/20
View fullsize   one-eyed  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO800 | 1/60
View fullsize   emily de corpse bride IV  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO1600 | 1/15
View fullsize   zip  - sony nex 7 | walimex 8 f2.8 | f2.8 | ISO800 | 1/60
 

stalagmitic columns - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO100 | 1/400

hafencity

November 03, 2013

hafencity is a completely newly constructed quarter in the heart of hamburg, located directly next to the riverside and hosting a lot of futuristic workplaces and modern homes. since i've missed its erection during the last years, an extensive walk across the flagship of the contemporary hamburg was mandatory for me.

you might have already heard of the elbe philharmonic hall, which is the lighthouse within the whole, basically very expensive and critically reviewed urban development project.

 
View fullsize   coloured station  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO400 | 1/60
View fullsize   elbphilharmonie info center  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f4.0 | ISO100 | 1/320
View fullsize   under the baakenhafenbruecke  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO100 | 1//125
 

hamburg hipster - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO320 | 1/60

hamburg hipster

November 02, 2013

german hipsters usually socialise in berlin, but apparently every now and then one of them becomes lost and strands in a trendy bar in hamburg...

peak-to-peak - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO100 | 1/100

peak-to-peak

November 01, 2013

in the meantime the buildings, that surround hamburg's new, "dancing towers", are completed, too. although the geometries do not coincide to a perfect symmetry, the reflections invited me to extend my image section and get a wider angle of view here.

the difference - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO1600 | 1/500

light survey

October 30, 2013

so here we are now again, back in our former and highly likely future home town, hamburg. we are going to have some days of city exploration and want to use the time to get used to the current influences, too. first of all hamburg's people are in the center of my attention: how have they changed since the last couple of years and did they change at all? today i had optimal conditions for an undetected observation of this type - hurricane christian was approaching and distracted the already busy humans with its wind speeds up to 160 km/h, even 193 km/h were measured by the seaside. i thought about different appropriate possibilities to document the various kinds of citizens, while tina was extensively looking for new books in a huge store in the heart of the city shortly before closing time. in the end i decided to take an approach with respect to the privacy of each of them, photographing the people in front of an illuminated shop window of a decadent hamburgish brand. the backlight and proper exposure should make for graphic outlines here, i wanted to get calm surfaces and keep the persons' anonymity.

besides that i wanted to lead the attention exclusively to the actors, so that I chose an equal point of view for each of the shots, photographing from the hip with a tilted screen. i set the camera to f5.6, ISO1600 and 1/500th of a second (except for the photos with blurred motion, which were shot with f11 and 1/8th of a second) and froze the exposure to obtain exactly similar looking results. so i stood there leaning at a cycle stand for round about one hour and fired and fired.

i think the results are pretty interesting: although i wasn't able to capture all the scenes i initially had in my mind, i got a decent, significant assortment of characters on their way to wherever. the four film strips below include the expressions and gestures of various kinds of humans, that all have passed my line of view within one hour at this particular, stormy evening. well, i have to admit, that the assortment is not significant in terms of quantity: i took exactly 300 pictures, and at least the half of the people i photographed were smoking or fiddling with their mobile devices...

btw: the new automatic upright function of lightroom 5 made the post-processing of this many samples a lot easier for me. good feature, adobe! click on the images below for a better view and let me know, what you think about my fast attempt to portrait hamburg's people.

View fullsize the headdress
View fullsize the coffee
View fullsize the reluctance
View fullsize the derelict
View fullsize the contemplation
View fullsize the seniority
View fullsize the hurry
View fullsize the businessmen
View fullsize the music lover
View fullsize the bike cruise
View fullsize the daily shopping
View fullsize the lighting
View fullsize the chip
View fullsize the armless
View fullsize the hood
View fullsize the giant
View fullsize the samurai
View fullsize the thirst
View fullsize the run
View fullsize the step
View fullsize the sms
View fullsize the trail
View fullsize the brochure
View fullsize the hand posture
View fullsize the traveller
View fullsize the umbrella
View fullsize the cartoon character
View fullsize the hat
View fullsize the suit
View fullsize the japanese
View fullsize the bonbon
View fullsize the single file
View fullsize the belly
View fullsize the handbag
View fullsize the plucking
View fullsize the evasion
View fullsize 2013-10-25-2.png
View fullsize 2013-10-25-1.png

analogue impressions

October 29, 2013

today i can quote myself and show you two primitive collage-like scans of some funny festival shots from my diana mini with iso 400 up to 3200 films:

i finally got my prints of rockamring and rocknheim photos! i'm so happy, documentation of damn good moments :) pic.twitter.com/fPPd48hWn6

— t.r.s.h.p.t.r (@trashpater) October 16, 2013

last sunday i visited an exhibition about steve mccurry, title "overwhelmed from life": he's a well-known american photojournalist; his most famous photograph, which is moreover the most recognised photograph in the history of national geographic magazine at all, is afghan girl. mccurry's works focus on his exceptional ability to reproduce the consequences of war, not only showing what war impresses on the environment, but rather on the human face. i have to admit, that i have rarely seen such great photos yet!

i strongly recommend anyone who stops by an exhibition venue to invest some hours to go into the displayed material. trust me, it'll be a great inspiration for your photographic mind.

Tags: lomography, diana mini

zen master - sony nex 7 | sel50 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO800 | 1/30

mobile image optimisation machine

October 28, 2013

after round about seven years of almost daily usage the time had come for my good old fujitsu-siemens laptop to honourably retire and for me to look for new, thrilling computer hardware. as part of that i started from the scratch and first of all defined several, actually to me well-known use cases: besides its application for my further educational study, which makes up approximately 50 to 60 percent of the total usage and requires highly powerful hardware (cae-related topic), and fairly minor standard pc operations like internet browsing, conversation and so on, the new computer has to stand its ground in terms of photographic aspects primarily. a considerably plain requirements specification resulted from that:

  • maximum performance from a package as thin and lightweight as possible
  • focus on a brillant display, 13 inch is preferred
  • solid built quality

my decision for the asus zenbook infinity ux301la didn't take a long time, but got necessary only after the unavailability of the samsung ativ book 9 plus series (which had been my first option for a while) and the lack of any information about configuration possibilities. imo samsung did a bad job here. however, i chose an even more appealing competitor, finally ordered the top modell of asus's zenbook ultrabook series at the beginning of october and use it since almost three weeks now. the ultrabook comes with the following key features:

  • intel core i7-4558u 2.8 ghz (no dedicated ultrabook processor w/ 17 watt technology, but an optimised, fancy version with 28 watt tdp)
  • 8192 mb ddr3-1600
  • intel iris graphics 5100
  • 13.3 inch 16:9 glossy ips panel, 2560x1440 pixel, capacitive 10 finger multitouch
  • 2x sandisk x110 solid state drives (raid-0 system for a maximum of performance)
  • 1.4 kg 
  • microsoft windows 8.1 64 bit

apart from the special processor i was enthusiastic about the performance of the raid-0 system of two already damn fast solid state drives in particular: working with a terribly slow harddisk all the days and hence being accustomed to latencies i expected nothing less than a quantum leap of the new machine. so how shall i word it? it indeed is a quantum leap in technical evolution, considered in retrospect i should have upgraded my equipment much earlier:

  • windows cold-starts in 8 seconds to full operational capability, the wake-up from sleep works within 2 seconds.
  • almost all applications are available and usable immediately after their start. no annoying loading times anymore...
  • command and execution of any tasks finally go instantaneous again.
  • as an example: the processing of raw photos to jpgs lasts not more than a fraction of the time, it usually took on my old laptop. lightroom 5.2 on my zenbook compiled my almost 200, partly heavily corrected and processed raw images from vacations into jpg in not even twenty minutes!

i could continue this list with several other facts, but i think, you got what i'd like to convey. so the first point from my requirements is halfway fulfilled, but how about built quality and the compactness of the package? both the display and the lid are covered with corning gorilla glass from the 3rd generation. the base of the ultrabook is made of aluminium, the surfaces next to (the very, very good, backlit) keyboard and to the left and right of the touchpad are coated with ceramic. despite the lightweight design, which makes for almost boundless mobility, everything feels solid and causes this typical willing to touch it. the two fans are almost never sensible; a fact, i highly appreciate. to sum up, i can say, that in terms of built quality the asus prime ultrabook is definitely on a level with the macbook air. 

when it comes to usability, the manufacturer of the hardware is not solely accountable, since in this case microsoft develops the operating system windows and is consequently responsible for the best possible linkage between user, hardware and application programmes. whilst i'd used windows xp, vista and 7 on several environments in the course of the last years, windows 8 is state of the art currently. i'll skip the details about windows 8 here, the internet provides a lot of possibilities to get information about microsoft's current main product. since the 18th of october the company provides a bigger update for windows 8, which upgrades the version number to windows 8.1 and introduces some new interesting features, including the comeback of a (pseudo) start button (to be honest, i for one don't necessarily need that thing any longer), renewed system settings and more options for the system-wide search, which is still placed in the so called charm menu. btw: the gesture control as well as the overall control concept are marvellous. i love the fast changes between screens and applications and use the touchscreen more often than i'd thought beforehand. imho the most useful innovation in windows 8.1 is the introduction of the possibility to place up to 4 applications side by side. due to the fact, that "desktop", where the standard applications run as usual, is an application here, too, i very often use this multitasking feature to work on different tasks in different software. well, the applications from the windows store do not reach the level of the best ios or android apps yet, but the foundation for an appropriate future is laid by microsoft and the current environment actually provides great opportunities for any developers. needless to say, that there are still some quirks in windows 8.1, such as the lack of the possibility to select the scaling factor for multiple displays independently. this issue doesn't annoy in my case, since my second screen is placed a couple of centimetres behind and above the zenbook itself. not every usability point is basically software-related: for me the zenbook's battery life is completely satisfying, i get 3 to 6 hours of mobile operation depending on the intensity of usage. according to some other reviews you can drain the battery within a bit more than one hour, if you mutate into a relentless battery eater; in contrary more than 8 hours of hd video playback with limited screen brightness are possible, too. 

after both performance and mobility requirement are fulfilled and traceable now, i'll finally come to my experiences with the overall system in terms of photography: it cannot be questioned, that lightroom 5.2 is a pleasing upgrade to lightroom 4.3. today i'm not able to judge over the whole software package yet, because i didn't even try one of the new features, but for the great, maybe even further improved results alone the purchase of the upgrade package was worth the money. what you might be even more interested in is my view on the 2560x1440 pixel panel: this immense resolution in such a small panel makes for a pixel density of 221 dpi, which is theoretically enough for a working distance of 25 cm between eyes and screen without the ability to recognise single pixels. of course this isn't practicable in the length of time, but it shows, how detailed the rendering indeed is. you can work in the already mentioned split-screen mode completely unproblematic while laying on the couch with the ultrabook placed on your ribs and you won't be able to determine any single dot, what is fantastic! conclusively an initial display calibration with my spyder4pro corrected tones, blacks and whites (actually colour temperature, gamma curve, brightness and so on), so that the system seems to be ready for operation now.

although it's still too early to return a final verdict, i for one can at least judge my decision making: the way the market stands at the moment, i got one of the fastest dual core notebooks in the market, packed into an attractively small and sexy body. the system response times are simply fabulous. since i wasn't able to compare the zenbook directly to a competitor, i'll not rank it or rate it as a must-buy here. there for the product is way too specific and expensive as well. another reviewer wrote, that the zenbook infinity is the macbook in the windows segment. i wouldn't deny that, although i usually don't care about brands and the apple empire in particular. in conclusion, my expectations were high, up to now i was not disappointed by the zenbook infinity yet and this will scarcely to be expected in the foreseeable future.

if you are interested in a much more detailed report, please follow this external link to an english translation of notebookcheck's test review.

Tags: review, asus zenbook infinity, ux301, ultrabook

on the black side - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO100 | 1/200

savages

October 27, 2013

with my last posting about portugal so far i'd like to show you (and especially my female followers aka my sisters in particular) lisbon's savage beasts, that beset the whole city and make for unhygienic conditions, a disgusting atmosphere and so on... um, well, not really, the reality might well be quite the opposite: although living mostly under poor circumstances, they highly successful manage to live on and enhance the cityscape just with their attendance. each of the photographs here retells a story we experienced firsthand, what makes them even more precious for us.

good by, portugal; good bye, lisbon; good bye, brownish dog at the window... see you next time, maybe you will be there at the window again, as already two years ago, too.

 
 
View fullsize   blue-eyed  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO100 | 1/200
View fullsize   lazy sunday  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f4.0 | ISO100 | 1/250
View fullsize   be a cat above  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO100 | 1/1000
View fullsize   cattern  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO250 | 1/60
View fullsize   leaving the building  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f4.0 | ISO100 | 1/500
View fullsize   white and pregnant  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO100 | 1/1600
View fullsize   calico  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO200 | 1/60
View fullsize   on the edge  - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO100 | 1/500
 
 
Tags: lisbon, portugal

the general - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f5.6 | ISO100 | 1/1250

the general

October 26, 2013

flea market, national pantheon, lisbon. the biggest and busiest market of this type, i've ever seen; but despite that, you were able to find unagitated places, sections of calm. btw: take your pick!

Tags: lisbon, portugal

no fish - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO500 | 1/60

no fish

October 25, 2013

..., just for once. otherwise seafood was our first choice for lunch as well as dinner. the reason is perfectly obvious: the transport route can't be shorter than here in portugal, directly at the seaside, which is a fact, that should affect the quality of the food directly.

 
 

opened 24/7 - sony nex 7 | sel35 f1.8 | f2.8 | ISO640 | 1/60

 
 
Tags: lisbon, portugal
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