Taking a short break from the rain…

Last Saturday we had a short break from the norm (you know… sunny weekdays, rainy weekends… the usual…). The sun came out on Sunday for a few hours (including a brief hailstorm in the middle of the day 😦 ).

Great day to wander the streets and discover new things about the city:

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Who knew…

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Blue skies in Dublin

Also, good chance to go out on a photowalk with like-minded people and just shoot away…

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GPO and spire

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Our main subjects were supposed to be streets and buildings, but you know how these things go…

What else to say… Great people, sun (and hail), and photos… A wonderful day 🙂 .

Happy New Year!!

Last Sunday people gathered to celebrate Chinese New Year’s at the CHQ building.

And Sunday means photowalk! So, what else to say but: HERE COMES THE MONKEY¹!

 

 

¹as in “year of the monkey”, duh!

Looking for snow: Mullaghcleevaun

After hiking during Christmas holidays, I think I came down with the hiking disease once again. And I find quite ironic that I had to come to Ireland to find snow…

My short time home was marked by a remarkably warm weather, therefore you could only find a few small snow patches on the mountains. Which, needless to say, was quite disappointing…

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See what I mean? Almost no snow! 1730m above sea level in December!!

Compare that with this…

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This is Lough Cleevaun. 700m above sea level… THIS IS IRELAND!!

There was snow from around 550m and up! In some place over 40cm deep!

It was wonderful :3 …

All in all, a great hike. Most of it in the white…

Mountains! At last!

I must admit that since my Irish adventure started I have been somewhat in withdrawal… I need the mountains to function properly and Irish mountains, while very nice, are not enough…

So yesterday I joined a group to go on Monte Cimone on our mountains in Italy (God bless holidays!). It should have been a walk on snowshoes due to the altitude and, you know… winter…

But, it turns out there is almost no snow on our mountains these days, so we decided to go without snowshoes. That was a good call.

Once I got out of the fog bank on the plains (horrible…), there wasn’t a siongle cloud in the sky. On the mountains there was almost no snow, and it was incredibly warm for December…

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View from Monte Cimone to the south

One of the first thoughts that came to mind was a solemn curse because I forgot my polarizer… No, none of these photo has been taken with a polarizer… And no, I haven’t bumped up the saturation in any of them…

This is what the sky really looked like 😯 …

So anyway, we climbed from Fiumalbo up above the tree line, where we had a pleasant hike in the sun.

We even enjoyed a meal in the sun and a few minutes rest before making our way down.

I really needed this!

And tomorrow we go up again!

Dublin nights

Taking pictures at night (after 4pm in Ireland) is hard: there’s not much light and don’t even get me started on that white balance thingy*…

And yet, if you can get it right, it yields great results!

Here in Dublin, we are also lucky enough to have many interesting subjects when it comes to lighting, such as… the bridges!  (How original… 😀 )

Anyway… autumn night in Dublin means wind. Lots of wind. Strong wind (stronger than what I’m used to, anyway…). Strong wind means heavy tripod for long exposures.

Oh, yeah: it also means almost freezing…

By the time I got home I was like the human popsicle… Worth it, though…

I even had the energy to play a little with lights and bokeh!

Pearls

Pearl necklaces

Colours

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A little tacky maybe. But, by that time I was basically trying to divert my attention from my body temperature…

 

*I know how white balance works, I’m just trying to convey the difficulties behind night photography  😉 .

A day in a natural park

Today I was going through some old pictures…

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Spoonbill walking in the water

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Gerey heron landing

It was a day I spent in a natural park back in Italy, shooting animals and birds (with a camera, of course…); after seeing them, I decided to write a post on shooting animals (again, with a camera… stop looking at me like that!). All the pictures in this post were shot at Oasi di Sant’Alessio, PV, Italy.

Many people think that bird photography is extremely expensive in terms of gear and time invested (and it can be). However, that’s not always the case…

Depending on what you want to shoot you might only need a camera (DUH!) and a long-ish lens (the longest focal length I used was a 200mm on a crop sensor camera, 320mm equivalent). While this two items are not exactly cheap, they won’t make you break the bank either…

So, my gear for the day was:

  • crop sensor camera;
  • 70-200 f/4 L;
  • 100mm f/2.8 macro.

And, to be completely honest, you might need even less than that.

 

So, anyway, the first thing you need to do is getting to know your gear, and I mean INTIMATELY know your gear. If you are at the point where you don’t even need to look at you camera to:

  1. change drive/focusing mode;
  2. change your main focus point (yes, turn off automatic focus on all points… I mean it!);

and you can eaily guesstimate aperture/ISO settings for your desired shutter speed (of course you’ll be shooting manual. What did you expect?!), then you might be at a good starting point…

If you’re not at that point, maybe you can be lucky enough to find a park/zoo/thingy that holds animal shows (like I did :)).

Birds of prey!

 

Great practice!

But the hardest part is to shoot birds in the wild (well, almost…). Before anything else (even photographic knowledge) you’ll need patience… Patience to stand still and wait for the reight moment, patience not to curse (too much) when that moment comes and you’re not ready, patience to realize that half the times you were actually ready, your focus is off (or you ISO is too high/low, your shutter speed too slow, your hand is shaking…). I have no idea how many shots I deleted… but that’s how it works…

Yet, there’s nothing like trying to shoot unaware animals in the wild (well, almost…)…

If you are ever around stilts, be extra careful: they’re very small and not that afraid of people. I almost stepped on one: that would have been very sad, not to mention difficult to explain to the park guards…

In the park there’s also a section dedicated to small animals and butterlies: MACRO TIME!

In the end, the trick is to master patience and know what you’re shooting. If you know the animals’ habits you’re already halfway there. The other half is knowing your gear as well as you know the animal ;).

If you have that, you don’t really need super expensive gear…

Bridges and sunsets

A sunny Sunday is a rare thing in Dublin: it only happens once every few years, but when it happens… WOW…

During last week’s photowalk we had the wonderful chance to photograph the sunset on the Liffey.

We also found out (much to our surprise) that it’s very difficult to visit an exhibition if you show up a few weeks before it starts… What a shock! 😀

Anyway, a sunny afternoon in late November means wonderful light, and the chance to go look for nice tiny details around the city…

Nice walk!

 

Also: did I mention sunset?

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Sunset (almost) in Dublin

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Jeanie Johnston at sunset

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I can’t wait for the next sunny Sunday (probably in 2019)…

Christmas lights (yes, I know it’s mid-November…)

New week, new photowalk…

Very, very small group this time: few but good. We planned (not really) to see the lighting of the Cristmas lights in Grafton street, but we met much earlier to walk around the city centre first.

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Street music

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Guitar

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Blur and colbac

We had plenty of time left, so we went for a walk through Stephen’s Green.

While waiting for the lighting, we also had a quick stop at the Natural History Museum. Nice stuff, horrible light…

And then, after a quick pint in the world’s smallest pub (which, incidentally, is not that small), we were back on the streets!

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Must… get… closer…

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Dawson’s street

And after a few more minutes, we finally got to see the Christmas lights (I know it’s freaking November!!)…

Modena through 50mm

There aren’t many focal lengths that can claim to be as versatile as 50mm (except, of course, for 35mm, but that’s a story for another time).

On a nice November afternoon (last day at home before heading back to Ireland) I went for a 50mm walk (the lens, not the walk). Lucky for me, they had just finished working on the square in front of the Military Academy and I had the perfect chance to go check it out.

Military Academy (photo admittedly taken the evening before :) )

Military Academy (photo admittedly taken the evening before and not with a 50mm 🙂 )

There used to be a car park in the square before, and now they completely opened it and forbidden the access to cars.

Cadets returning to the Academy

Cadets returning to the Academy

Women chatting

Women chatting

Fountain

Fountain

After spending a good hour and a half just shooting the square, I moved to other parts of the city centre. My 50mm remained solidly mounted on my camera. Even though my lens is old, and battered, and noisy, and the autofocus doesn’t work that well, and the focus ring seems to be held together by glue (seriously, you should try using it) I still love it. After a while you can frame your shots without even looking through the viewfinder. You set your aperture and you know exactly what is going to be in focus and what is going to be completely unrecognizable. Set the aperture wide open and you can shoot in almost complete darkness (and get a wonderful bokeh, while you’re at that).

In the past 6-8 months my fifty has been my main lens, and it was rarely changed on my camera. It was some kind of love: I shoot with other lenses, but I always come back to it…

Smile!

Smile!

Flea market in Piazza Mazzini

Flea market in Piazza Mazzini

Just before evening, I ended up in the main square, by the cathedral. I just spent the rest of my afternoon there.

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Good day! I also managed to get a few lights and colours:

In conclusion, yeah, 50mm is a great focal length to photograph the streets and people. It allows you to be close, but not too close. It’s great if you, like me, are too shy to get very close to people you don’t know.

All things considered, it was a great day, and I found myself wondering whether my town would miss me when I’m gone…

That’s when I found this:

:(

😦

Lesson learned:

You shouldn’t forget, that even if a 50mm allows you to stand a little farther from your subject, you still have to be careful not to stand out too much…

BUSTED!

BUSTED! 😳