I’ve had a lot of catching up to do since coming back to Utah, but here at last are the pictures from my trip. I’m splitting up the pictures in two parts. Today, I post the pictures taken with my iPhone and my real camera.

Stay tuned for Part 2, coming tomorrow. They’ll be Holga shots, so you know they’ll be interesting!

Day 1: Spent most of the day in planes or the airport. When I landed, my phone started shutting down randomly, often and mostly wouldn’t come back on. My sense of direction was in there (Google Maps), but even worse, so was my hotel’s address… Then when I finally got to the hotel, it was a lot more dodgy than Travelocity had made it appear online. I switched hotels and got myself a long overdue dinner for a measly four bucks.

Delicious food is everywhere and at every price.

Day 2: My first actual day in NYC was spent wandering in a jetlagged haze and trying to get Apple to tell me what was wrong with my phone. Long story short, I now have a new one.

MAN I love New York’s fall colors…

Day 3: I saw a couple of cops waiting for the same train I was about to get on in the subway. I had my giant pro camera with me, so like a crazy person I decided to try shooting some video in a public place and see what happens.

Cop: “Sir, what are you doing?”
Me: “I’m shooting some video…”
Cop: “You can’t do that here, sir.”
Me: “Why?”

She really didn’t like that question. Fortunately, I was able to defuse the situation and she left me alone.

The law doesn’t actually prevent you from shooting photography or video in any public place. I actually looked this up long before the incident, though I also knew that photographers have been getting increasingly harassed by authorities and stupidly painted in a very negative light.

I did end up shooting video in the subway, just when no authorities were around to give me trouble for it.

Still, I was bummed about the incident, wandered into Central Park again but within a few minutes got some calls from real estate agents wanting to show me apartments.

Day 4: After a long and busy day, my good friend Brittany requested some pictures of the Brooklyn Bridge. I was more than happy to oblige. It was already on my to-do list anyway :) Along the way of course, I took pictures and footage of what I could.

Day 5: Attended the PDN Photo Expo. Like a bridal fair, but for photographers shopping for stuff.

Later that night, wandered some more. It would be my last night there… :(

Day 6: Waited to push off from the gate for a little longer than expected, then finally climbed to the skies.

Day 6.5: The same night I got home, despite having already done a LOT while in NYC, some friends invited me to a Halloween party, so I went.

The dancefloor:

My Diana F+ finally broke…

I brought it along for a recent wedding and when I pulled it out to take some random shots I realized it was missing the front element of the lens… I have no clue where it went to. I had already loaded a roll in there so I wasn’t about to let it go to waste.

Here are some out-of-focus shots that will make you think I’m weird for bothering to post these at all.

Now I also have an excuse to buy a new Holga.

Enjoy!

I recently recovered a batch of old pictures that had gone missing. It was really very exciting! And it didn’t hit me until I started writing this blog post that all four pictures were snapped using the same camera; my late father’s Pentax ME Super:

“Super”…

There’s a word you don’t see in the description of any new electronics huh? And ME right in front of it too! “ME Super! ME good photographer! ME hungry!”

Anyway, but it’s strange to think of that Pentax as having been there to take pictures of everything from when I was so young until the end of its life (with me at least) in March of 2009 when someone broke into my house and stole it.

Man I miss that camera…

Here’s a few of the shots it was responsible for. Everybody say “awwwwwwwwwww”!!

And here’s my oldest, Gabriel:

Ok, remember my last post? No? Short memory you’ve got… :P

Scroll down. I’ll give you a minute…

Done?

Ok great!

Well here’s my first attempt at shooting the appearance of video using my photo camera!!

Alisha from Raji Barbir on Vimeo.

Not exactly great, but it’s very, VERY exciting for me.

Alisha is a close friend of mine with whom I’ve worked many times. She rules. She needed me to do some photography of her working out, but before we got started, I asked her if it’d be ok to do this so I could see if the concept would actually work.

AND IT WORKED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I’m guessing almost everyone reading this is completely unimpressed. But this is HUGE for me.

I’m going to start actively seeking out one female model or actress for an idea I’ve had buzzing around in my head for a music video.

Late-night story time!!

Ok, check this out.

I saw this really cool idea by a director on a fellow photographer’s blog to use the camera I have (the Canon 1D MkIII – a photo camera), with its truly staggering 10 frames per second, to produce an entire music video in a stop-motion style. Part of the difficulty in producing the video the way the director intended, was that he wanted to have off-camera, artificial lighting, firing together with the camera.

Now for those of you who are starting to get lost in my story, all cameras do this. All cameras that have a flash are capable of firing simultaneously with the camera.

ONCE.

Try it at 10 frames per second and what happens is that the flash can no longer keep up. The problem lies with the batteries, usually AAs, that run out of continuous juice after just a few shots. After that, you start noticing the flash skipping a frame, then two, then more, until you completely annihilate the batteries.

So the director’s solution was to just get a slew of really expensive battery packs called Profotos – every single one of which is more expensive than the camera itself – and had a giant crew milling around the camera operator, one to wirelessly pull focus, one to hold the light over the band/actors, another to wrangle cables, etc etc.

Giant production.

But it got me thinking… Ever since my house was broken into, I’ve missed having my video camera around. I haven’t replaced it, patiently waiting for Canon to please please, oh please announce a successor to my own camera model because it will, without a doubt, have HD video on it, like all other professional photo cameras coming from Canon and Nikon of late.

No luck on a successor to my model yet, but it’ll get there eventually.

In the meantime though…

Forget making a giant production like what that director did, forget off-camera lighting, forget big crews. I can direct again!

There is however one big problem with photo cameras shooting that fast.

Buffer.

The memory card that I slide into the camera has a limit in keeping up with how fast the camera is trying to capture data. Eventually, the memory card will simply say “busy” and a significant drop in the frame rate will occur.

So to figure out how long I could shoot before my memory card cut me off, I used my iPhone’s stopwatch to time how much “footage” I could capture before the memory card would quit on me.

Roughly 670 images within 46 seconds!

That’s awesome!! The 670 images is impressive, but the 46 seconds of “footage” is very useful. If I’m careful how I shoot, I could easily put together a music video, using natural light (ie. just the camera and nothing else). With a little more planning, I could possibly pull off a kind of “home movie” feel or footage that looks like stuff that was shot in the early days of film.

I don’t know if this is sinking in for any of my readers out there, but it’s blown me away. I was tired at 11pm and it’s now 1:30am and I’m bursting with ideas.

And speaking of how late it is, I didn’t pay attention to what I said until just now.

If my camera shoots 10 frames per second, and I shot for 46 seconds, why wouldn’t I have ended up with 460 pictures? Why 670? Probably user error, but it’s late and I do need sleep.

Day 41/365

I almost forgot to shoot today. Well, not quite. I shot some awesome new stuff with my film camera, the Pentax, but I almost forgot to shoot something I could actually post.

Once I develop the roll of film, I’ll share. In the meantime…

“It’s a bird! It’s a plane!”

No Bob… It’s a keyboard… Get your eyes checked, will ya?

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Day 19/365

I’m obviously a big Canon person. Here’s a shot of my Canon XL2.

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Day 15/365

I was thinking about doing a product-type shoot yesterday, so I did that today.

This is the first camera I remember messing with. It was my dad’s camera. And yes, it’s a film camera.

After using homemade pinhole cameras to take pictures that we developped ourselves in the school’s development lab for art class, we were assigned to shoot pictures with a “real” camera.

Below was the camera I used. The Pentax ME Super.

Now, let’s get the obvious out of the way: it’s a goofy name. No way around that. Super? Yeah. Goofy. But it’s not just Super. It’s ME Super! Sure, it was probably meant as “M.E. Super”, but to my ears it sounds like “Me so Super, Me take pictures all night long!”

Then, the not-so-obvious: it was released in the same year I was born; 1979. No great reason I mention this other than the fact that it adds to the sentimental value of the camera for me.

Finally, the (hopefully) really-not-obvious: I sucked at taking pictures with it. I really just didn’t get how to operate the camera (ASA? Shutter Speed? Aperture? Exposure Compensation? Huh?) and worst of all, I didn’t understand why I couldn’t get crisp shots in low-light without a tripod. I remember going out with this thing after dark to a local school located right by the woods. The few street lights I had to illuminate my shots weren’t nearly enough light. All of my shots were blurry.

Fortunately, since then I’ve gotten a lot better. And although I can’t say that I shoot with it with as much frequency as I’d like, I do still pick it up from time to time and take a few shots. Funny though, after shooting digital for so long, when I do shoot with the Pentax, I often find myself taking a shot, looking at the back of the camera and going “Hey! Where’s my picture?!”

Digital cameras have spoiled us all.

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Day 10 of 365

Saying goodbye to shiny new(-ish), picture-taking gear is as difficult for me to do as it is for women to get rid of Christmas cards after the time has passed… All your friends know it’s time to let go, but you’re not ready yet, are ya.

And neither am I. But it’s time… So long, Canon GL2. I hope your next owner never takes you apart.

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