It’s FINALLY Mine! 5D MkII Arrives.
- At February 19, 2009
- By Neil Creek
- In Equipment
13
I have incredibly supportive and loving parents. As I have discussed much lately, I have decided to pursue photography seriously as a profession. If I am to do this, I really need to do it with professional equipment. The 350D I have been using for the last three years just isn’t up to scratch, in terms of resolution, sensitivity, speed and feature set.
Even when I bought the 350D I knew that one day I’d upgrade to a full-frame camera, and waited for Canon to eventually release a follow up to the 5D, the first “achievable” full-frame digicam for a new businessperson like myself.
I knew the camera was going to be expensive, so I have been looking into bank loans, which was a frustrating and depressing experience. Fortunately, my loving parents have helped me out, by loaning the money I need. They have confidence in my ability to make a success of my photography, and they want to encourage and help me get there. I love you guys, and once again, as always, your support means so much to me.

Beautiful isn’t it? And now it’s mine!
Photo: Steve Keys – CC.
5D2 photo examples
I will talk about the 5D2 and what I love about it more in future posts, and I don’t want to clog this one up too much, so keep an eye out for more as I learn how to get the most from this new toy… err, tool! Below are some of the very first photos I have taken with the camera:
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I knew the first photo I would take with the 5D2 would be of our beloved pet Chibi. I didn’t know that he would be so cooperative, and give me such a cute expression the very first time I pressed the shutter release!
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Being a full frame sensor, as opposed to a 1.6x crop that I had on the 350D, I expected to lose some of the reach of my telephoto lenses. What surprised me was how much the 2.6x more pixels would make up for that, and exceed the detail previously captured. This photo of a blood red moon was taken on a night when smoke from the recent horrific bushfires cast a pall over the whole city. The detail visible in this 400mm photo significantly exceeds that which I was previously able to capture. Click here to see the full sized version, a 100% crop of the original photo.
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The above photo is of the “public vote” winner of the Bead Society of Victoria’s “Bead Challenge”, which was displayed late last year at the Bead Expo. I photographed this piece, along with several others for Naomi to use in the BSV’s magazine, Connect. This was the first product photo shoot I did with the 5D2, and I just loved being able to guarantee that I had perfect focus by being able to zoom to 100% on the large screen using Live View. This is going to help a lot in future with product-type photography.
The image below is a 100% crop of the above image, showing the incredible detail captured by the 21Mp sensor.
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Finally, one of the main headline features of the 5D2, is the ability to record full HD video. I’m not sure how I’ll make the most of this feature, but I’m looking forward to experimenting with it. Below is a video I took of our adorable cat Chibi, engaging in his nightly ritual of snuggling in bed with Naomi, something he has done, for about an hour each night, since he was a kitten, eight years ago.
This video was shot in very low light, and the camera performed marvelously, but would be better when mounted on a tripod for stability. The embedded video below is hosted on Facebook, as I couldn’t get any other hosting service to display the high resolution video. Please let me know if you have any problems seeing it.
A couple of days ago I asked my Twitter friends if they had any questions about the 5D2. Rather than make this post any longer, I’ll answer them soon in a separate post. So if anyone reading this wants to ask me about my early experiences with the camera, please leave a comment, and I’ll answer them as best as I can in that post.
Beaded Art Deco Headpiece – by Naomi
- At November 13, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In Jewelery
2
Last night, after many months of on-and-off work, Naomi completed what I think is one of her most beautiful beaded artworks yet, a green, silver and black beaded feather headpiece.
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This piece will be on display in the members showcase at the Bead Society of Victoria Bead Expo, on this weekend in the Kingston City Hall, Moorabbin. If you go, make sure you say hi to Naomi, who will be running a class on loomed beading, and volunteering at the BSV stand.
To take this photo, I simply laid the headpiece on a sheet of white card, and bounced a single flash off our white ceiling. The flash was placed at camera top right. I turned the flash power up to full, so that I could stop down the aperture a bit to get as big a depth of field as possible. I believe I was shooting at f16 or so.
Naomi’s Life With Arthritis – A Long Term Project
Home alone last night, I was watching the exceptional BBC series “The Genius of Photography“, when I was struck by inspiration. I have felt that I have been lacking a direction in my photography. Suddenly it occurred to me, that I have been ignoring a very important subject, my wife.
Naomi is an exceptional and inspirational person, who has suffered most of her life with the debilitating disease, Juvenile Onset Rheumatoid Arthritis, never more than now. She is currently in hospital, fighting an infection of her prosthetic knee, a complication of the treatment of her disease. With this recent issue, the interest and concern from family and friends has been great, and it has reminded me to varying degrees how little most people understand the disease, and more importantly, what it is like to live with it.
Our family and friends, in particular, generally have a good understanding of what Naomi is going through, but that only goes so far. The general public understands even less. I feel that many people have a poor appreciation of what it is like to experience life with a debilitating chronic disease.
A New Project
I intend to photograph Naomi, and expose what her life is like, living with arthritis. I want to take a journalistic and documentary style, something which I have never really done before. I want to show Naomi’s life as it is, conveying the reality and emotion as clearly as possible. It won’t be art, and it probably won’t be pretty, and I apologise to Naomi in advance if the photos show her in a less than flattering light. However I firmly believe that an unfettered, unfiltered view of this disease is essential. She has given me her consent to undertake this project.
This will be a learning experience for me, and to an extent, I will be exposing myself and my life’s experiences through these photos as well. I will never be able to be truly objective and removed from the subject in the true journalistic sense, as I am very much a part of Naomi’s life, and her disease affects me as well in many ways. I expect this to be a difficult and emotional experience for us both.
I hope that you will find this project interesting and informative, and hopefully I will be able to convey what I think is the most important thing about Naomi’s life with arthritis: the hope and determination this inspirational girl shows every single day of her life.
24th Day in Hospital
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Naomi has surrounded herself with various bits and pieces to make life in hospital more comfortable, and to pass the time creatively and productively.
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A PICC line enters Naomi through her arm and via a vein leads directly inside her heart, allowing for the delivery of antibiotics to fight the infection in her knee.
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Naomi passes the time creatively, by working on a beaded bracelet of her own design.
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Despite the damage to her finger joints, and the swelling and pain that results, Naomi has been able to stay relatively nimble and doesn’t find her beading hobby very restricted by the damage to her hands.
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A nurse administers a dose of intravenous antibiotics, which take from three to five hours to be fed via the PICC line into Naomi’s body. During this time she is tethered to the pump, and must take it with her if she needs to leave bed for any reason.
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Bandages cover an approximately 20cm long wound where Naomi’s knee was opened in surgery to “flush” the joint of infection. The bacteria are able to attach themselves to the prosthetic joint and potentially avoid the antibiotics, leaving a lingering question of how effective the treatment will eventually prove.
For those who are following the saga, the latest news is somewhat mixed. Naomi was expected to be discharged on Monday, to be treated for the next six weeks via “Hospital in the Home” with daily home visits by nursing staff. Unfortunately a test of a key marker for infection (CRP for the medically inclined) just hours before she was planning to leave showed the marker level to have jumped from 15 to 158! This concerned but did not alarm the doctors, but then could not let her go home.
This morning, a follow up test of the same marker showed a minimal decrease to 157, not any better, but no worse either. Naomi suggested that the marker – which indicates inflammation, a typical by-product of infection – may have gone up due to the worsening of her arthritis as a result of needing to come off the drug trial, which she has been on for three years. Her specialist, however, does not believe this is the cause, unfortunately pointing the finger of suspicion back to the infection.
Again the doctors are concerned but not alarmed. This is mostly because Naomi appears otherwise to be in good health, not showing other symptoms one might expect from a bad infection, such as fevers or nausea. For the time being they want to keep her in hospital for observation to see what happens to the CRP levels. They have also given her a moderate increase in her dose of antibiotics.
So for now it’s a waiting game.
Beaded letter pano – P365 Mar01
- At March 11, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In Jewelery, Panorama
0
You may recall the beaded sign that the members of the Bead Society of Victoria made. When I made that post I promised that I would be taking super-high resolution photos of the beads for other uses. Well I finally got the time to do this today.
I plan to stitch all the letters (each one took about 10 photos to capture and is about 50 megapixels in total) into a single gigantic 500 megapixel panorama. However that will have to wait till I have a bit more time to do all that. For the time being, please enjoy this super high resolution panorama of the letter “O”. Make sure you zoom right in to see the incredible detail.
This piece was made by Noelle Walker.
Click and drag on the image to look around. Click the “+” to zoom in, the “-” to zoom out or use the slider.
The viewport for the panorama must necessarily be small in order to fit it into my blog. I have a version with a larger view window on my web site. Please visit this version for a proper look at this incredible piece of art. I will upload the full panorama when I’ve finished it.
Completed beaded bracelet – P365 Feb21
- At March 01, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In Jewelery
3
You may recall this entry from Feb01 when I helped Nomi get a cover shot fro the BSV newsletter. It showed a beaded bracelet being made on a beading loom.
Well below is the finished product!
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