Predator (_DSC0089)
erhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D40 digital camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
Labels: Animal, Landscape, Nikon D40, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
erhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D40 digital camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
Labels: Animal, Landscape, Nikon D40, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Read some TravelBlogs if you dont believe me!
Perhentian Island, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Pentax K100D and Tamron AF 70-300mm F/4-5.6 Di LD Macro lens
Labels: Pentax K100D, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Tamron AF 70-300mm F/4-5.6 Di LD Macro
Kamel, my close friend since high school. He runs a holiday resort in the beautiful Perhentian Island, Malaysia called The Reef Chalets.
The Reef Chalets provide scenic and peaceful seaside accommodation and personalized services in 12 spacious seaside chalets set in a semicircle around an indigenous island garden. The Reef is strategically located on the big island a few minutes walk to the best snorkeling area and the most beautiful swimming beach with resident turtles.
Virtual Tourist - Pulau Perhentian Besar Travel Guide
Plan a Pulau Perhentian Besar vacation with reviews, tips and photos posted by real travelers and Pulau Perhentian Besar locals. link
My notes:
I notice that there seems to be a predominant opinion among most photographers/viewers that a portrait photo is BETTER when it is processed in a certain way. Especially with portraits of (younger) women I feel that most viewers automatically expect a face to be retouched in a way that it appears FLAWLESS.
This flawless look - in my opinion - is something extremely artificial and inhumane. In fact I often see portraits that remind me of a doll, or of the characters in my daughter's SIMS computer game, more than of live human beings.
I know how to produce this effect of slick perfection in my portraits. But - I simply don't WANT it. I don't WANT to remove the skin from my model's faces and replace it by a piece of plastic foil.
I think this "glamour look" is ok for a certain kind of "beauty photograph" style. I don't want this kind of cold and unpersonal perfection in MY pics though because I am interested in authenticity - true emotions, true beauty - whatever...
If I want to take a picture of my beautiful girlfriend I think it's the atmosphere of beauty more than anything else that does it. If she FEELS beautiful when I take her picture (because I let her know that for me she IS beautiful), then the picture will radiate this atmosphere of beauty...
I find it a little tedious to read remarks like "the lady will be happy too" if I would do some more "corrections". I believe actually "the lady" would have more reason to be INSULTED than to be HAPPY.
Labels: Nikon D40, People, Perhentian 2007, Philosophy of Photography, Photography, Portrait, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Cameras can only photograph the material aspect of a scene. A photograph's beauty or its truthfulness are immaterial and are not happening within the photograph, but within the subject who sees it.
If you make a portrait of a lady without wrinkles, is it "true"? If you photograph more wrinkles, is it "more true"? If you have the ultimate camera that can photograph to infinite detail and infinite sharpness the totality of her face to the smallest wrinkle, is it the "absolute truth" as opposed to the one without wrinkles, which would be a "lie"? If yes, then we have a scale of truth which starts at a lie and finishes at the perfect truth, which depends on image resolution. I do not think things work like that. The portrait with or without wrinkles can be true or not depending on who sees it.
The cameras photograph only the material. All immaterial is outside the scope of a camera or of its by-product the photograph.
Labels: AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G, Landscape, Nikon D50, Perhentian 2007, Philosophy of Photography, Photography
Ayu and Helen listening to Prof. Dr. Wan Kadir telling us his version of the Perhentian Island Legend
Location: The Reef Chalets,
Perhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D40 digital camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
My notes:Labels: Nikon D40, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Wild mushroomm, found in the virgin rainforest of Perhentian Island. Kamel told me taht they are poisonous. Does any of you guys know if this is true?
Perhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D50 and AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G lens
Labels: AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G, Nikon D50, Perhentian 2007, Photography
I told her to get some dinner from the restaurant next door but she insisted on waiting up for us.
Perhentian Island, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with D40 and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
Labels: Nikon D40, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Portrait, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Monitor Calibration Part 1
If you can not trust the colors displayed on your monitor, all other color management is a waste of time. Calibrating and profiling your monitor should, therefore, be your first priority. Luckily, it is the easiest part of the image capture, editing, and printing system to profile. The cost to do this ranges from free to expensive. If color accuracy and the ability to match your prints to your monitor are important to you, a decent hardware calibration system is essential. With a little work you can get good color from your monitor. If digital photography is your business, or you simply want the best colors you can get, the expense of a high quality calibration system is more than justified. (Continued...)
Labels: Pentax K100D, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Tamron AF 70-300mm F/4-5.6 Di LD Macro
Monitor Calibration Part 2
The most basic calibration tool, other than ignoring calibration altogether, is Adobe Gamma. This is certainly better than nothing, but leaves much to be desired. The sole advantage is that it is free (once you purchase Photoshop). The primary problem is that your basic eyeball calibration is highly influenced by ambient lighting, how much sleep you've had, and how much coffee is coursing through your veins. Obtaining a consistent viewing environment is difficult under these conditions. If you are stuck with eyeball calibration, Norman Koren put together a set of charts that work better than those bundled with Adobe Gamma. (Continued...)
Labels: Pentax K100D, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Tamron AF 70-300mm F/4-5.6 Di LD Macro
Location: Perhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D50 and Nikon AF-S Zoom-Nikkor ED 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G DX (kit-lens)
Hardware based monitor calibrators provide far more accurate and repeatable results. The results of our ongoing tests and reviews of monitor calibrators is found here. To get the best results from your monitor, it is important to understand the steps involved. The first is calibration; i.e. setting your monitor to a well defined, standard state. You need to select a color temperature to work with.
PC video cards and monitors are usually shipped with a white point set to 9300°K. This gives a bluish tint to everything. It is often used for CAD work stations or in video games where maximum color contrast is desired.
For photography, however, color accuracy is more important. The next standard color temperature is 5000°K (or its close cousin D50). This is the color of lighting in art galleries, and approximates sunlight. On many PC monitors it produces white colors with a dingy, yellowish cast. For some Macs, it is a viable choice. A better choice is often 6500°K (or D65).
Most monitors reach useful brightness levels much more easily at 6500°K/D65 than at 5000°K/D50. Also, some monitors display reddish highlights at D50. Play with your monitor settings and decide which looks best. (Continued...)
Labels: AF-S Zoom-Nikkor ED 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G DX, Nikon D50, Perhentian 2007, Photography
Location: Perhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D50 and AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G lens
If you have a LCD screen and your calibration system allows using the native white point, do so. This preserves the maximum possible color range on LCD monitors.
Next, select the gamma to use. The traditional value for older black and white Macintosh monitors was a gamma of 1.8. This also worked for video systems capable of only showing 16 colors. Almost all modern CRT monitors, however, have a native gamma of close to 2.2, which is determined by the design of the electron guns.
The farther you drag the video system from this optimal level, the more calibration artifacts such as shadow banding and posterization appear. Therefore, a gamma of 2.2 allows for the maximum range of colors your system can display. Ideally, amonitor calibration system allows calibrating to the native gamma. (Continued...)
Labels: AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G, Nikon D50, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography
Location: Perhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D40 digital camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
After selecting a color temperature and gamma, the next calibration step involves setting the black (brightness) and white (contrast) levels to their optimum values.
Start by setting the black to zero and the contrast to 100%. On CRT monitors, contrast at 100% usually gives the most possible colors, but is sometimes uncomfortably bright. LCD monitors usually need the contrast reduced slightly to avoid blowing out all fine details. Your calibration software will guide you to getting the optimum level.
The brightness should be set so almost black is just barely distinguishable from pure black. Set brightness too low, and all your shadow details go dark. Set too high, the shadows get washed out. Again, follow the instructions in your calibration software. Most calibration software and/or hardware works best, however, if you start the adjustment process with the brightness and contrast controls set to their extremes. (Continued...)
Labels: Night, Nikon D40, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Location: Perhentian Island, Besut, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D40 digital camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
Once you have the screen levels set, the Red, Green, and Blue guns need to be balanced so neutral colors do not show a color cast. Do as many of these adjustments by using your monitor's display controls as possible (don't worry, your calibration software will give details on how to do this). Adobe Gamma or any of the hardware calibration packages can do everything by adjusting your video card alone, but the result is a reduced color gamut for your display. This is not good, as you will clip the purest, most saturated colors. (Continued...)
Labels: Landscape, Nikon D40, Perhentian 2007, Philosophy of Photography, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Location: Perhentian Island, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D40 digital camera and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
After the monitor is calibrated, a profile is made. If you used Adobe Gamma, the program merely writes out a profile table describing the adjustments you made made. If you used a hardware calibrator, the sensor measures a set of color patches to determine the limits of the monitors color display capability.
You can see which monitor profile Photoshop (version 6 and above) is actually using by opening Edit->Color Settings. Expand the RGB working space list, and scroll up. You'll see a line with "Monitor RGB - xyz." The file listed instead of xyz is the monitor profile Photoshop displays all images in. This is important to check, as some profiling software packages can write invalid profiles. If this occurs, Photoshop ignores the profile and displays in a default space that is guaranteed not to match your monitor. (Continued...)
Labels: Nikon D40, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Me and Ayu get to stay at this bungalow during our visit to Perhentian Island.
Perhentian Island, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with D40 and Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM lens
Monitor Calibration Part 8
We have a pair of test images to help evaluate your monitor calibration. The first is a test of the black point and shadow performance. The second diagnoses incorrect gamma settings and provides an overall check of screen neutrality.
Notes:
Labels: Nikon D40, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
Location: Perhentian Island, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D50 and AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G lens
Labels: AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G, Nikon D50, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography
Perhentian is the malay word for "Stop over"
Location: Perhentian Island, Terengganu, Malaysia
Taken with a Nikon D50 and AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G lens
Labels: AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G, Landscape, Nikon D50, People, Perhentian 2007, Photography
Our photos; we believe in it, and we think it has great value and that is what we want to show up in our work. Everyone who is looking at our photographs is also very subjective and they react to it through who they are and they get something from it and you never know if they're getting what we (want them to get.)
It's unreasonable to think that they are gonna get exactly what we want and what we got from the situation but we hope we can bring them close so they can feel and think more or less the way we do about that situation. Very often it's an important issue to us. It’s not just trying to make something look beautiful; we're usually photographing issues for a lot of reasons, most of them subjective, and with intent.
Labels: AF Zoom-Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G, Landscape, Nikon D50, People, Perhentian 2007, Philosophy of Photography, Photography
Labels: Landscape, Nikon D40, Perhentian 2007, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM
They may love your stuff; they may love the story. That doesn't mean they are going to interpret it the same way you want them to. ‘This is what it means to me. This is the way I want you to get it; I want you to go from A to Z in my order of things not in your order of things.’
Labels: Landscape, Nikon D40, People, Perhentian 2007, Philosophy of Photography, Photography, Sigma 30mm f/1.4 EX DC HSM