Last weekend, my good friend, and regular star of this blog Annie and I did a costume photoshoot together, with a friend of hers visiting from the United States, Lilly. Both are big fans of the Japanese manga and anime Kuroshitsuji or Black Butler, an 1800’s era supernatural gothic horror story. As so many girls seem to, Annie and Lilly revelled in the bloody theme of the shoot, which gave me the perfect excuse to shoot with bold and dramatic lighting and vibrant colours.
I also had the opportunity to play with a little bit of light painting with some sparklers. A suggestion for lighting sparklers in the wind: use a lighter and find a very sheltered corner. Siera, another regular on these pages, assisted in the shoot, and bravely battled dizziness to run around with sparklers.
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2008 was a hell of a year. It was dominated by Naomi’s string of terrible medical issues, one after another (she’s doing alright at the moment), which had a big impact on the time and motivation I had for photography. But that didn’t stop me from enjoying photography, and by the end of the year I had decided to pursue photography as my full-time career.
Last year, around this time, I wrote a post looking back over the year that had been and sharing my favourite photos. It has become one of the most popular posts on my blog. So here is my collection of the Top 10 Photos of 2008, in chronological order. I hope you enjoy them!
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Manifriends Chelsea Beach 080114
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Ever in love with strobist techniques, I had a bit of fun down at the beach with some of my Manifest friends. At first they were confused why I was asking them to “jump” in the dark, but once they saw some of the results on the back of the camera, they really got into it!
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Film Noir Matt
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Sometimes cliche, overly dramatic, Hollywood lighting effects can actually look pretty damned cool :) Matt visited one day and we had a lot of fun taking all kinds of over the top photos. This was my favourite by far, and reminds me of some 1930s detective movie.
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Washing Day
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Early in the year I had a lot of fun with a series of POV fisheye photographs, putting the camera in unusual places. One of my favourites, and most popular, was this one inside the washing machine. This image also made it into Strobist’s favourites on Flickr.
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Handsome in White
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Our beloved cat Chibi has always been handsome in our eyes, but this particular photo of him showed the rest of the world what a good looking fellow he really is. Naomi has a print of this framed on her desk at work.
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The Bridal Party in Cafe
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2008 really was a year of weddings, and I was the official photographer for three weddings of family and friends. This photo was taken at my sister-in-law’s wedding. After the ceremony we went outside for a few photos, and quickly took an outdoor table at a cafe. I had just enough time to drop my flash on a stand behind the party, squeeze off half a dozen shots, and make a run for it before we annoyed the cafe proprietor.
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Night Sky Over Country House
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I love fisheye photos of the night sky, for example, my most popular photo on Flickr, and Galaxy Rising in 2007’s top 10. I’m particularly fond of this photo because of the charming country house in the foreground, the fact that the galaxy is nice and high in the sky, and the strobist techniques I successfully used to illuminate the house.
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Siera and Annay as Freya and Kuja
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I’ve always loved photographing my friends in wonderful costumes as they attend anime conventions, but this year I went the extra mile and actually set up a studio on site. I took lots of photos I am proud of, but I chose this one for these reasons: the two shown here are two of my favourite and most skilled costumers, they’re also great friends, they look absolutely gorgeous, and Annie on the right provided the photo with some nice fan-service ;)
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Aspiring Angel
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I participated in the Canon Photo5 competition in 2008, and although I didn’t make the finalists, I was very happy with the photos I submitted, especially this one. Annie, who appears in the previous image, and also in last year’s Top10 list, was the wonderful model for this photo. I feel that this image was a big success for me – a staged and produced photo (the first I have really attempted) that went from vision to result without undergoing any significant change.
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Chandran Wedding
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This wedding, between two friends, was a lot of fun and I had a wonderful setting and great overcast light. I like this photo in particular, because the couple had forgotten about me entirely, and were lost in each others eyes. A print of this photo sits on the couple’s desk at home.
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Hibberd Tickler Wedding
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Finally, another wedding. This one was the most challenging one yet, due to the poor and unpredictable weather. In the end, the wild weather gave me this glorious sky, which I took advantage of as soon as I saw it. Once again I used strobist techniques to balance the exposure on the bridal party with the bright sky behind them. The dramatic photo really jumped out at me on the back of the camera, and I knew instantly that this was a special photo.
I shot a wedding on the weekend, and boy was it the most challenging wedding shoot yet, but I’m not going to talk about that. I’m gonna share a few of my favourite photos and wax lyrical about how awesome it was to shoot with a full-frame sensor camera.
I take this wedding photography business seriously, and I’m really enjoying it these days, despite the elevated stress levels. Something I did this time to lower the stress was to borrow a friend’s 5D so that I had two cameras to shoot with, in case one died. I can tell you now, it was love at first click.
By the way, if you like these photos, live near Melbourne, Australia, and have a wedding coming up, I’m available for wedding bookings! You can read more on my site here: http://neil.creek.name/weddings (Excuse the plug ;) )
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I love shooting with my 50mm f1.8 lens. If you don’t have one of these, you’ve got to get one. It’s tack-sharp, great in low light, and perfect for portraits with silky smooth bokeh. On my 350D, which has a 1.6x crop factor, however, it can be a problem with field of view. To fit a subject in nicely, I have to take a few steps back, which isn’t always an option. On the full frame sensor of the 5D however, the 50mm feels just right. The image above was taken in the bride’s back yard before heading off to the ceremony. I stood on a garden chair for the flattering high angle, and the composition just worked, without having to move the chair back too far.
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I love the photo above, and I feel I’ve succeeded in taking a type of photo I’ve not mastered yet: photo journalistic. Still shooting with the 50mm in the very dull, naturally lit living room, I was able to capture some natural candid moments before we left. A full-frame sensor enhances the effect and appearance of a shallow depth of field. I was shooting here at f1.8, resulting in a narrow depth of field, which allowed me to minimise the background clutter, and include the element of the girl in the background without drawing attention away from the bride.
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I don’t know if it’s a feature of full frame cameras in general, or the 5D in particular, but the light sensitivity seemed to me to be one to two stops greater than my 350D. Seen above, the bride is standing well back from a tree-shaded window on an overcast day. It was positively dim in the room, yet I was still able to capture a perfectly acceptable image at 1/100sec, f5.6 ISO400! The image was somewhat noisy in processing, but not offensively so, and which was handily dealt with by Lightroom.
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Due to the poor weather, the ceremony was held indoors, and our post-ceremony images were drastically limited, but despite these problems, I was able to salvage some decent images.
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The extra-wide field of view afforded by a full-frame sensor was an absolute joy. I’m a lover of wide angle photography, and never have I been able to get as wide as this with my Tamron 24-135 on my 350D. After the rains had eased, we were treated to some spectacular skies. As soon as I saw it I knew I had to get out the flash and add some strobist juice. The groom’s sister was my cheerful and helpful assistant, holding the flash.
Lighting info:
Canon 5D
1/100sec @ f/20, ISO100
Tamron 24-135mm @ 24mm
Canon 580EX @ 1/4 power
This photo ended up being my favourite for the day, and I knew it was so as soon as I saw it on the back of the camera.
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I mentioned it earlier, but the low-light performance of the 5D, coupled with the 50mm f1.8 allowed me to capture images that just wouldn’t have been possible with the 350D. Not only was the chip giving me greater sensitivity, the expanded ISO to 3200 increased my shooting range, and the trade-off was sensor noise, which in my opinion was less offensive in quality than that on the 350D.
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Even my favourite lens, the Sigma 8mm f4 fisheye was supercharged by the 5D. No longer was I shooting a cropped circle, but a full 360 by 180 degree hemisphere of the world. The spherical image may not be to everyone’s taste, but with the higher resolution sensor on the 5D, you still have plenty of room to crop. If you do crop down, you’ll probably end up with a similar resolution to what I get on the 350D. However, if you want to get the full 360 degree circle with an 8mm lens, only a full-frame sensor will do.
With my appetite whet to the luxury of full frame DSLRs, I cannot wait to get my hands on a 5D MkII. I suspect everything I loved about the 5D will be there, but better :) I’m giggling like a schoolgirl at the thought of it!
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a tutorial on how to see cross-eye 3D stereo photos on your computer screen. Today I’m going to tell you how to take your own 3D photos.
The process is really very simple, and the basics can be explained in less than a minute, but to become good at taking and presenting 3D photos take a bit more time, and it’s something that really develops with practice. I hope you’ll take what you learn here and get out and get lots of practice taking 3D photos.
The typical and easiest single-camera 3D photography technique is commonly called the “cha-cha” technique, for reasons which will soon become obvious. Here’s the technique in a nutshell:
Taking the Photos
- Always take photos in portrait orientation
- Set the camera to full manual and choose the correct exposure and focus
- Put your feet square on to the subject of your 3d photo
- Put your weight onto your right foot, without lifting your left
- Take the first photo
- Put your weight onto your left foot without raising your right
- Unless your subject is very close, you don’t need to turn your camera to keep it in the centre
- Take the second photo
And you’re done! As simple as that. Simply by shifting your weight from one foot to the other, you move your viewpoint by several centimetres, sufficient to get a 3D effect. The “cha-cha” name refers to the side to side sway you do when taking the photo.
Processing

StereoPhoto Maker screenshot
Now you’ve got two photos, but you need to make one. I use a fantastic piece of free software called StereoPhoto Maker. It’s not the prettiest software, but it does a fantastic job. It can be used in conjunction with a plugin called AutoPano, that can analise the two images and automatically correct for many of the problems that can come from shooting two separate images. This includes tilting and twisting, moving forward or back between shots, and the “keystone distortion” that occurs when you turn the camera to centre the subject for close 3D photos.
Step by step
- Drag both photos onto the StereoPhoto Maker shortcut icon
- Zoom out a bit with your mouse’s scroll wheel if you need to to make it easier to fuse the pair into 3D with the cross-eye technique
- If the 3D effect seems reversed, click the swap button to swap the images correctly for a crossed eye view
- Click on the auto align button to use autopano to correct for any distortions
- Click on the Easy Adjustment button to fix the 3D images position relative to the 3D window (see below for more information)
- I find adding a border helps, so if you like, in the menu go to View – Border Options
- Check “Show Border” and adjust the border settings to your liking
- Save the image by clicking in the menu File – Save Stereo Image
- Enjoy your new 3d photo!
The 3D “Window”
The edge of the image is more than just the boundaries of the 3D photograph. In a 3D photo, it is also a “hole” into which you look and through which 3D subjects can appear. A good way to think of the edge of the image is as a literal window in your computer screen. This is one of the reasons why I find a border around both parts of the 3D image helps me, it more clearly defines the edge of the 3D window.
Just like a real window, you expect to look through it, and rarely do you expect things seen beyond it to come back through it at you. One nasty optical illusion that can happen with 3D photos is when part of the 3D subject “touches” the window, or worse, appears to overlap it. Have a look at the two examples below:
The subject is placed too far forward in the 3D window, and appears to overlap the window’s edge, creating an uncomfortable optical illusion. This is most obvious on the left of this stereo photo.
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Here the photo has been corrected, pushing the 3D subject back in 3D space beyond the window frame.
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StereoPhoto Maker easy adjustment
This problem is easily corrected in SteroPhoto Maker with the “Easy Adjustment” button. Clicking on this will show both images overlapped and tinted red and blue (if you have an pair of red/blue 3d glasses, you can do this process in 3D!). Using the slider above the image, you can adjust the separation of the two images, thus moving them backward and forward in 3D space.
It can be tricky to get the hang of how changing this slider will affect the final image, but as a tip, look at the bottom edge. Move the slider so that the red and blue images exactly overlap where they touch the bottom edge, that means that part of the image will appear at the same distance as the frame. This tip will only work, obviously, if part of the subject touches the bottom of the photo. With some practice you’ll get the hang of it.
A rule of thumb is that it’s ok for part of the image to protrude through the frame, as long as no part is “touching” it.
How to View
Now that you’ve got a whole bunch of awesome 3D photos, it’s time to share them around. Hopefully you’ve already read my tutorial on how to view cross-eye 3D photos on your computer screen, but if not, you can read it here.
If you’d like to share your new 3D masterpieces, and I encourage you to do so, there’s a Stereophotography Flickr group, and one on Yahoo too. I’d love you to put links to your 3D photos in the comments to this post, so I can see how you’ve done! I’m relatively new to 3D photography, so I’m sure there’s much you can teach me too!
This is a quick and easy method for 3D photography and has a number of advantages and disadvantages:
Advantages
- You don’t need expensive specialist 3D equipment
- Each eye’s image is captured on a full frame, so the resulting 3D image can be very high resolution
- There is no blurring or ghosting at the edge of the frame, which can be seen in many “beam splitter” attachments where the two views join
- You can take a 3D photo with any lens in your SLR kit, including macro, for extremely close 3D photos
- Many 3D attachments have very limited control over focus and aperture, with the cha-cha technique you have complete control over the settings
- You can do this with any camera, if you forget to take your 3D attachment or camera, you can still take 3D photos this way
Disadvantages
- The most obvious and critical shortcoming is that this method only works with still object that don’t move between shots
- Any movement between the two shots will cause a distracting 3D error, so people, animals and even trees in a light breeze will be difficult or impossible to shoot
- You need to take two photos for every 3D image, which takes twice as long, and uses twice as much space
- It is easy to introduce errors such as twisting or tilting the camera between shots which can cause distracting artifacts
- You need to shoot with manual settings so that there’s no accidental variation in exposure or focus
I had a play around with some 3D photography for the first time in quite a while. This time I also experimented with macro 3D photography. It takes all the challenge of 3D photography, adds it to the even harder challenge of macro photography, for a super difficult challenge! But I think the results are pretty darn cool :)
The first photo is a regular 3D photo of one of Naomi’s beautiful wirework glass bead bracelets. I thought this would make an interesting 3D subject due to the detailed structure of all the beads, plus the interesting reflections and refractions from the glass. The second photo is a macro close up of the same bracelet.
Finally the third photo is a bit of fun with one of my Star Wars Micro Machine toys, shot with macro extension.
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