Monday, October 26, 2009

photostory: MURDER


Here's the final product of my latest photo story, titled MURDER. It's a simple story about a deadly fight between 2 friends.

The story idea came about during an MSN conversation among the 3 of us. You can have lots of ideas but at the end of the day, you need people willing to do the story (Currently, I have 3 big-story ideas waiting for interested parties to be part of them).

There are some scenes that I feel are quite realistically acted out, while there are some that aren't so convincing. Well, blame it on the 2 friends who did not dare to go all out to deliver the necessary "kill".

And, yah, it's so hard to get them to be serious. For every scene we took, it always end up with either laughter ("wahahha") or apologies ("sorry did I hurt you").

The full set can be viewed from Flickr. http://www.flickr.com/photos/chestertan/sets/72157622667244818/

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

ISO 102400 with Nikon D3s and Canon EOS-1D Mark IV

I didn't even have time to blog about Nikon's D3S announcement, and Canon throws out the EOS-1D Mark IV. And I'm not going to compare both cameras and advise which one is better. Seriously, if you have to wonder which camera is better for you, you are probably just starting out on your professional photography journey of which you have a lot more things to worry about than a DSLR body.

What I want to share here is that the image sensor's sensitivity is advancing so much that it is possible to shoot in the darkest situations. With such a remarkable development, journalistic photography takes another leap. And not forgetting the ability to do high-definition video recording. Remember the days when we scorn at ISO 1600? Now we have another benchmark to mock at. ISO 102,400? Sounds sinful, but in no time, we'd be embracing it like a god-send wonder tool.

The rest of the DSLR make-up remains pretty much the same. AF-sensors, frames per second, better LCD monitor, faster image processing capability. Obviously Canon has a better offering given they are in the professional DSLR market for so many years. Nikon's just barely started, but it's doing very well in delivering what users want. And it has the competitor to look up to.

If you are only interested in the numbers, head over the DPReview to get your fix. To me, you are never wrong with either cameras.

Nikon D3s
Canon EOS-1D Mark IV

Friday, October 9, 2009

Emelind C: Portfolio


I finally did a formal portfolio shoot with Emelind. Remember the previous shoot with her at Orchard Central was meant as a test shoot. This time, Emelind got her Japanese makeup artist friend, Emiri, and you can see from the photos that she certainly did a magical job in transforming Emelind into a gorgeous looker.





More photos at my facebook page or Flickr Set

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Canon's Social Media Exclusive @ 1 Caramel


I was invited by Canon to get a hands-on to their latest imaging products. Held at 1Caramel at The Luxe (next to The Cathay), the set-up is so much more casual and relaxing than the previous one I attended. This time, no formal presentation from the executives, which is good. I mean, hey, we're bloggers, not press.

I was very pleased with the line-up this time round. Here's a brief of my impression on the models I've had some time playing with:

PowerShot S90 - this is gotta be my favourite camera for the evening. The 10mp 3.8x zoom aluminum-body S-series got a large aperture of f/2.0, a gimmicky lens control ring that allows me to change settings quickly, performs very impressively with high ISO 3200, allows full manual exposure controls. Under the "AUTO" mode, the S90 is constantly looking for face subjects and quickly selects the best scene mode to capture the image. What I dislike is the control dial that I find is too sensitive. Unlike most Canon models, the navi-dial doesn't have the usual clicks when you turn. This is a camera that delivers great images under natural light conditions.

PowerShot G11 - this latest G-series has become more masculine as compared to the previous models. It has loads of hardware buttons and dials to make this a compact companion to the professional photographer. The decision to drop the megapixel count from 15mp on the G10 to the 10mp on G11 means Canon understands that a lower pixel count will reap better noise control. Personally, I feel that the G11 and S90 has comparable image performance. The G11's advantages are its better-spec manual controls, plus the hotshoe that professionals would truly appreciate.

IXUS 200 IS (SD980) - this is Canon's first touchscreen digicam, and with every first, there will always be design oddities. Not every button on the screen can be touched for selection, but this model still comes with the usual hardware buttons and control dial for those who aren't comfortable with the touchscreen to continually navigate outside the screen. There are gesture-based controls, touch AF, to name a few. It has a wide-angle 24mm lens, 5x optical zoom, supports 1280x720 HD movie recording. For once, I actually find a IXUS model that meets my photographic demand.

IXUS 120 IS - this is the younger sister to the IXUS 200, without the touchscreen, starts at 28mm to 4x zoom, and a smaller size. The image quality is similar to the IXUS 200, which is to me quite usable. The camera, like the IXUS 200, also seems to perform generally faster than the previous IXUS models I've tried.

EOS 7D - the latest DSLR is available for my hands-on. It certainly has a much better build quality, and the buttons next to the LCD monitor is moved from the bottom to the left. There is a dedicated movie dial and button to allow you to toggle between movie and still photography with ease. The new kit lens, 15-85mm, is the widest kit lens ever produced (the Nikon equivalent is 16-85mm). The build is also quite good. Also included for hands-on is the 100mm f/2.8L macro lens and the 18-135mm. All lenses have Image Stabilizers.

The other models that I didn't have hands-on are the PowerShot SX20 IS, PowerShot SX120 IS; video camcorders LEGRIA HF S11, LEGRIA HF21; photo printers SELPHY ES40, SELPHY CP790.

Thanks to Canon and Ogilvy for organising the lovely event, and 1Caramel for the lovely food and oh-so-delicious cakes. Now, photos from the actual cameras!

PowerShot IXUS 120 IS

This image is shot at ISO 1600. Impressive!

Shots of the lovely cakes. ISO 160.

General shot, ISO 800.

PowerShot S90


Yummy + Macro

ISO 3200 + Macro!