Wednesday, May 22, 2013

iPhonography

In case you haven’t seen the latest Apple commercial—and Apple is pretty renown for commercials—the computer and phone giant claims, “everyday, more photos are taken with an iPhone than with any other camera.” That’s not hard to believe. Counting all six generations, there are somewhere near 200 million iPhones on the street worldwide. Unlike DSLRs and point-and-shoot cameras, we always seem to have our phones with us. That convenience has equated to billions of photos.
Search for “photography” in the iTunes app store and you will get over 8,500 results. “Cameras” will find 4,700 hits and there are over 1,200 “photo editing” apps. But amongst the Apple hype and the iPhones held aloft at every event and landmark, how many compelling artistic images are taken on phones?

Recently, I attended a conference at the Jekyll Island Club Hotel. Jekyll Island and the club and mansions now making up the hotel were once an enclave for the richest families in America—Vanderbilts, Rockefellers, Morgans, and Pulitzers among them—once made this their private retreat. In fact, the members of the club accounted for one sixth of the U.S.’s total wealth by World War II.
But despite the beauty and history here, I was without a camera. Except for my iPhone 5. Sometimes, you just get tired lugging around a thirty pound camera bag. So for three days, I set out to determine if I could take great photos, images becoming of a professional photographer, with an 8 MP iPhone camera. I’ve included a few samples.
I’m convinced that iPhones, and phone cameras in general, have reached a point where snapshots can transcend to art. Obviously, many photogs agree. Adhering to the same rules of composition, exposure, and light are really no different. Controlling shutter speed seems impossible until you realize—well, there’s an app for that.

I must admit that a couple of my images were tweaked a bit using East Coast Pixel’s Photo Toaster.  I’m a big fan of this app. From subtle sharpening or exposure adjustments to radical photo manipulations, this app has a lot to offer.




Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Flowers

So here are some gratuitus, gaudy flower photos. I'm not sure why. As I've shared so many times before, I don't really even like flower photos. And I'm not even a huge fan of hydrangeas. They are strange, almost prehistoric looking plants with big mop-like flowers. In the winter, they are brown, shriveled skeletons, as bleak as the gutter in a Dicken's novel. But come spring, they seem to bust out in poisonous green folaige and hundreds of buds. Apparently some varieties contain cyanide, making them slightly toxic if eaten. So naturally, they are smoked as an intoxicant in some cultures. I havent' tried smoking them or eating them as a fresh salad, but since I now have a yard with several varieties, I've subjected them to the Nikon. Enjoy.