Category: Gear


Elinchrom Ringflash 1500

I get asked a lot about the Elinchrom lighting equipment that I use. In fact, it’s probably one of the most popular things on my blog so I thought it would be valuable adding this post on my first experience using the Elinchrom 1500 Ringflash in conjunction with my Elinchrom Ranger RX Speed AS battery pack.

I have been such a huge fan and preacher of soft light with most of my photography especially when it comes to people/portraits. That is… using larger light modifiers such as the Elinchrom 135cm Octabox and the Elinchrom 100cm Deep Octa to name a couple.  I have never got around to using a ringflash and I wasn’t really shooting anything that warranted it, until now.  Sure it may have come in handy for a lot of things, perhaps as a fill light for some of my work, but I have never considered using it as a main light source.

I always knew what a ringlight/ringflash was capable of though. It’s a very popular choice among fashion photographers, but it’s also been working its way into glamour, not to mention all kinds of other genres of photography.  So thanks to my friends at Camera Electronic I managed to get my hands on one for a week to try out.

Read on to see how I went!

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5DMKIII Review

The Canon 5DMKIII is the talk of the town at the moment and everyone is dying to know how it performs and what it can do. Mark Wallace from Adorama TV has uploaded a 20minute video review of the camera which is probably well worth a watch if you are looking to buy one of these 5DMKIII cameras.

Mark explains all the new features and talks about how it is a completely new camera with new technology, not just a 5DMKII with extra features. He shows some samples, some of which show the incredible low light performance of the camera which impressed me.

Anyway, take a look and make your own decision on the 5DMKIII.

 

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Right angle eye peice viewfinder

Right angle view finder

This little sucker is way overdue for me. I first saw the right angle viewfinder a couple years ago and I thought it was a good idea but it just never made its way to the top of the gear priority list. The genuine ones are rather expensive too which didn’t help the case.

Well with the increase in the amount of cars I’ve been shooting and the low angle shots I love to get, I finally decided to get one. The low angle shots I shoot usually involve me lying on the ground, which for some weird reason I have never really had a problem with. Now though, I dont have to lie on the ground anymore, and I tell you what I like that a whole lot more!  I can just sit down and look through my right angle viewfinder.

Canon right angle viewfinderCanon offer one known as the Canon Angle Finder C, but they are priced rather high. I like to buy genuine gear whenever I can but for something like this I resorted to the internet and picked myself up a cheap version to see if I actually like the idea and would actually use it. Turns out, I do like it, and I will definitely use it more.

I had to shoot a car for a magazine yesterday, and I almost did the entire shoot with the angle viewfinder on the camera. I just got used to it, and couldnt be bothered switching back and forth.

So anyway, if you find yourself always shooting very low angles, or shooting in tight spaces or up against walls a viewfinder is an awesome little goodie to have in the bag. It has a focus ring n it so you can adjust it for your own eyes, and most of them have a magnification adjustment to switch between 1x – 2x magnification. Very cool.

If you are in Perth then Camera Electronic will be able to sort you out.

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canon 5dmkiii

If you have been living under a rock the past week or so you may have missed Canons announcement of the 5DMKIII. The very much anticipated camera has finally put all the rumours to rest and it looks like it will ship in just a few weeks.

This camera really appeals to me. They seem to have addressed a lot of things that I have been missing from the 5DMKII, both for stills and video. As a still photographer, this camera still appeals to me better than any other camera, but thats based on a number of factors we won’t go into, and not even taking into account the video side of things. I’m probably most excited about the 61 point autofocus which hasn’t really been updated since the original 5D, and the fact it accepts the same battery as the 5DMKII is a bonus because I already own a lot of them! On the video side of things though the ability to now shoot 50/60fps at 1280×720 is a big plus for me as I don’t currently own a camera that has it.  Having a 5DMKII in the bag is a perfect backup to support the MKIII too. I don’t care about anyone’s opinions on this camera, it fits me and my needs better than any other on the market and it’s impossible for you to argue that fact.

There’s plenty of other upgrades, check them all out below.

-22.3 Megapixel Full Frame CMOS sensor
-DiG!c 5+ Image Processor
-ISO 100-25600 (expandable to L:50 H151200, H2:102400)
-61-point high density recticular AF (up to 41 cross type points)
-6.0 fps for high continuous shooting.
-High Dynamic Range (HDR) Mode
-50/60p Video at 1280×720 (HD)

See the full  Canon EOS 5D Mark III Specification Brochure here

The Canon Australia website have the camera listed also with all features: http://www.canon.com.au/For-You/EOS-Digital-SLR-Cameras/EOS-5D-Mark-III

 

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Wacom Tablet
Last year when I was at Photoshop World in Las Vegas it seemed the number one tool every photoshop guru couldn’t live without was one of these Wacom Intuos4 tablets. I had known about them for some time but I had never considered one, and I have never even seen anyone using them much before back home. I didn’t even recall ever seeing them for sale anywhere but that could have been ignorance on my part.  They are very popular among graphic designers, artists, and now photographers due to the huge adoption of Adobe Photoshop into the post production workflow.

Some people that I spoke to couldn’t even comprehend the fact that I didn’t use one, it was weird. If you were a photoshop user, you used a Wacom and it was as simple as that.  I paid a visit to the Wacom booth after meeting the Wacom team the previous night over a few drinks and they gave me a full demo and I was pretty impressed. I love new gadgets and after a little bit more persuasion from Calvin Hollywood throughout the week I decided to get one.  I had to listen to the guru right?  So I now own a Wacom Intuos4 Medium sized tablet and I’ve been using it for just over a year now.  It fits nicely into my laptop bag, I just slide it in underneath my Laptop, keeping it in its soft cover just to help prevent scratches etc.

I have to say, it was a worthwhile purchase. I love my tablet and I always use it.

Wacom pen settingsI really like the two buttons available to you on the actual pen itself, which can be programmed to perform any function you like, in any application you like. For Photoshop I have set one of them up as the undo function so I can quickly step back any changes I don’t like since I’m always making mistakes.  I do a lot of retouching, and I use the clone stamp, healing brush and brushes in general a lot so I have changed the other button to be a custom modifier. I programmed it to perform a CTRL + OPTION + CLICK. This is a fairly new feature of photoshop, and by moving the pen left or right, I can now change my brush size. By moving the mouse up or down, I can change the hardness of the brush. This is one of the most common actions I need to perform so it speeds up my retouching enormously!   Check this out, you can even invert the pen and use the other end as an eraser! How cool is that!

You can use the tablet in right hand or left hand mode. The buttons on the tablet itself have an LED display which tells you what they each do. You can quickly and easily configure the tablet to display in left hand mode and the LED display flips itself. This was handy for me since I am left handed! I tried to use my right hand since I’m pretty good on the mouse with my right hand, but holding the pen is a whole different story. I had to switch to my left hand. All of these buttons by the way, can be customised to be whatever you want.

Dual Screen user? Me to. Don’t panic, the tablet caters for multiple screens. You can choose to map your tablet to both screens, or just a single screen. It’s really good that way.

There is a new dial on the tablet which is reminiscient of an ipod dial. It works well for zooming in and out and changing your brush sizes but it can be configurable to anything you want. That’s the best part about the tablet, you can make any button do anything you want.

I bought the USB version, but there is also a wireless version available for some extra dollars.

So a year on, I have to say I really love this tablet. I have always used it for my post production work.  I never really understood how much I loved it until I went back to using the mouse. I will use the mouse for all of about 30 seconds and then I will grab my Wacom tablet back out and use that. It really is much more efficient. I often catch myself using it for everything after I have just done some post production work, but I do eventually switch back to the mouse for general tasks as I want my Wacom to last.

How do you have your Wacom tablet setup?

I’m always looking for creative new ways to use my Wacom, so I’d love to hear how you have set your’s up and what custom functions you used! Drop a comment!

So I’m a big tablet fan, you can go out and get yours from Camera Electronic. Give them a ring on +61 8 9328-4405

B.

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GoPro have released their new HD HERO2 camera and I can’t wait to get my hands on one.  The new camera has some much better features than its predecessor but that’s not the reason I want one. I’ve always wanted a GoPro camera but never got around to buying one, and to be honest never quite had the need for one.

However with plenty of action filming on the cards in the near future, and an epic 4 week long pow pow snowboard tour of Japan in February next year, the launch of this new GoPro HD HERO2 was my kick in the butt to finally get my hands on one and wear it, mount i and love it. Thats GoPro’s slogan for those that don’t know.

Check out this amazing video below shot entirely 100% on the new GoPro HD HERO2 camera. This video travels the world with some amazing professional athletes and adventurers and it’s exciting to watch. Big fan of the music too.

 

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At Paramount Studios today in Hollywood, the much anticipated press release took place and Canon have revealed their new EOS C300 cinema video in front of the film industry elite.

The camera can come with either a PL or EF mount but not both unfortunately. It utilises a Super 35mm sensor and allows for timecode, has HD-SDI outputs and two CF card slots. So its a big step up from the 5D and designed to compete with the other digital cinema cameras out there. The general consensus seems across the net at the moment seems to be that Canon have arrived with too little, too late, for too much.

You can read plenty more about the announcements today on the Planet5D blog here: http://blog.planet5d.com/2011/11/canon-announces-new-canon-eos-c300-video-camera/

You will also want to keep an eye on what Jared Abrams is posting on WideOpenCamera: http://wideopencamera.com/blog/

As you all know Vincent Laforet is a full fledged Director of Photography now and very close to Canon, s of course he has been out shooting with the C300 before its announcement to test it in the field. Check out this film Mobius below along with some behind the scenes. I absolutely love the film. The style of the story is exactly the kind of story I love. Check it out.

 

 

Mobius from Vincent Laforet on Vimeo.

 

 

Mobius :: Behind The Scenes from Blake Whitman on Vimeo.

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360 Degree View
Location scouting is an important part of every photographers job, and I’m a firm believer that a good location can make all the difference to your photoshoot. Locations are the biggest source of frustration for me. Being extremely busy week in, week out, it’s very difficult to find the time to get out there and search for places to shoot, and what makes it harder is that the most amazing locations are usually a long distance away, or they are restricted due to being private property. That’s why when you do head out of the office in your everyday journeys, you need to be prepared for any potential locations that you might stumble across!

I blogged about Location scouting with the iPhone just over a year ago now, which basically talked about how I use my iPhone (a tool that’s always with me) to take pictures of locations as I stumble across them. I download the images to my computer and keep them filed away safely in a Locations folder for a rainy day. You can even record your GPS location and all sorts of fancy stuff with the iPhone thee days too.

Well now I’m here to give you an awesome update and add a whole new level to Location scouting with the iPhone.  Photos you take never quite do the location justice. When showing someone else, and even when looking at them yourself you can never quite get a true feel for the location and how big it is etc. Well how cool would it be if you could have a 360 degree panoramic view of the location. Sounds like a pretty tedious and time consuming task and requiring software etc. Well no, you can do it for FREE in a matter of minutes directly on your iPhone!

Let me introduce you to Photosynth. A Microsoft creation, that funnily enough only runs on the iPhone. Photosynth allows you to take multiple photos in a complete 360 direction and it stitches the images together for you in front of your eyes. Only takes a couple minutes from start to finish.

Download Photosynth from the apple store FREE here.

Just download it. Do it. Now.

The image at the top of the post is one I did today while out and about. I’ve been meaning to go to this rooftop for almost 10 years! I’ve been eyeing it off for so many things but just never made it up there. Well today, I made it and I have a 360 panorama to remember it by.  The image looks a bit funny on the computer, but when you browse the image on the iPhone, you can scroll through it and it feels like your still standing there again.

Enjoy.

B.

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This is the coolest thing I have seen for a while, with some smart engineering! This ball is full of little cameras which will take a 360 panoramic picture for you. The best part though is the shutter is triggered automatically when it reaches it highest point after being thrown into the air! This could be handy in so many different application if you could review the image instantly somehow.

Watch the video!

B.

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Experiencing corrupt images on a memory card is every photographers worst nightmare, and after almost 8 years of shooting it has finally happened to me. It was only a little while ago I posted on my blog about which memory cards you should use and I talked about photographers reporting troubles with different brands of cards. I also mentioned that I have been lucky enough to never experience a corrupted card in all my years of shooting, but obviously I didn’t touch wood hard enough after I typed that!

So after a lengthy shoot out on location today, and a few hundred frames all stored on one of my Sandisk Extreme 32gig cards, we were wrapped and had some amazing images. I put the card away safely like usual and then I grabbed it out when I got home to load it onto the computer and start browsing. I plugged it into my card reader, cranked up Lightroom 3 and tried to import them. However, none of the previews were displaying and it wouldn’t import them. Uh-oh.  I opened up a Finder window (mac)  only to see that none of the .CR2 RAW files were viewable! Usually you can preview RAW files on a mac, but not these ones. So I was a little worried.

Sandisk Rescue ProStraight away I remembered that with every Sandisk compact flash card I’ve bought I have received a serial number for RescuePro. So I jumped onto the website as per the instructions that shipped with my memory card, downloaded the software, and plugged in my serial number that was also provided to me.

I ran the program and used it to scan the memory card that was still connected to the computer. It took about 15 minutes or so to scan it all and that was the longest 15 minutes of my life.

Anyway, once it finished scanning, it automatically started saving .cr2 files to a directory on my hard drive. Turns out, it was saving every file it found on the memory card. So I managed to recover all the RAW files from todays shoot, plus a bunch of other images that were on the card previously. They obviously hadn’t been overwritten yet. It was a 32gig card so I rarely fill it to capacity.

So that was a very lucky finish.  Will I change memory card brands? No. All memory card brands are prone to this kind of thing. I have had such an amazing run with Sandisk, they make an awesome memory card, and their rescue software seems to work wonders too.

TIP:

A lot of photographers, especially event photographers that take bucket loads of photos, choose to shoot on smaller cards usually around 4-8 gig depending on whether they are shooting RAW or JPEG. This way all their work is spread across multiple cards so should you happen to have a card failure or lose a card, then you won’t lose everything! It’s a good practice.

Dont forget folks, Backup Backup and Backup again!

B.

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5DMKII HDSLR Car Rig for filming video

I’ve always wanted to strap my 5DMKII camera to a car and record something. Well my new car rig enables me to do exactly that!  I recently put together a rig for taking still images of a car at low walking speeds (more on that later), but I wanted to step things up a bit and build a rig that was more secure and could handle filming while driving around!

So this image above is it! It’s my new 5DMKII Car video rig. I guess it isn’t limited to the 5DMKII of course, that’s just what I happen to use.  It took a while to research it and find all the compatible parts to do what I wanted, but I’m very happy with it. (Filmtools in Los Angeles sell an almost identical version but it was too expensive to buy and ship to Australia.) I can reconfigure the rig to be attached to just about any part of the car. My main goal was to be able to attach it to the bonnet, and the side doors for filming people inside the cabin. This was going to be one of the solutions for filming some car chase sequences in the short film “The Manuscript” that I’m currently shooting.  We may not be using it for that anymore, but I certainly have plenty of uses for it and the ideas are still coming in.

Avenger suction cup with grip head

Sucking on the bonnet are 3 x Avenger Pump cups one of which you can see above. I have the ones with a baby swivel pin so I have more flexibility.

Then to hold the arms, I use an Avenger D200B black grip head on each pump cup. The arms/rods they hold are 20″ Matthews arm. They are thinner and lighter than the typical C-Stand arms but they still fit into the grip head.

Avenger Grip Heads

Then at the far end of each arm/rod shown above, there is another grip head, so thats 6 all up. Then into the grip head goes my cheese plate below.

Cam Caddie Scorpion EX Cheese Plate

This Cam Caddie Scorpion EX Cheese Plate has twenty-one 1/4-20 mounting holes and nine 3/8 mounting holes.  I have mounted 3 Avenger 5/8″ studs to it underneath which will drop into the grip heads on top of the rig and just about make it complete.

322RC2 Grip action head

On top of the cheese plate I just grabbed one of my tripod ball heads to hold the camera. This one is the Manfrotto 322RC2 grip action ball head.  A ball head was important so I can level the camera. Trying to get the car rig itself perfectly level would take a lot of fiddling.

5DMKII Car video rig

You will notice another suction cup product sitting on the bonnet in this photo above and the first photo. I was playing around with this on the day and I actually placed it there for a bit of extra support incase. It was a Fat Gecko mount. I don’t normally use it though.

So anyway, here’s a quick little video of me testing the rig. I strapped my 5DMKII with a 24-70mm 2.8L lens onto an adjustable 322RC2 ball head. I placed a circular polariser on the lens to help me see through the windscreen without any glare, and I also placed a variable neutral density filter over the top so I could open the cameras aperture right up to 3.5! I did this to send the background out of focus and make it a bit more visually interesting and appealing.

Check it out…

P.S. I didn’t really pull the handbrake, thats just me being stupid. Get used to it.

So hopefully you will be seeing some really cool on-board camera footage soon from brodiebutler.com!

B.

 

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This could be very interesting! As a HDSLR video shooter you will know it’s impossible to smoothly change your exposure while filming since we can only adjust it in 1/3 stops and it gives a horrible flicker to the resulting video. Well apparently Canon have filed a patent for a “diaphragm driving unit” and shows a third ring on the lens in addition to the zoom and focus rings which is what a lot of professional video cameras have. More information and photos HERE on Photography Bay

This might be something to look out for in Canons big announcement scheduled for November 3rd!

 

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Brodie Butler Photography - Sharing The Passion © 2010