The Eyes Have It

Josh 85mm +4

Every now and again we set out for several weeks, driving all the way, and stopping at various places to visit family, friends, and see the sights.  This year is a tour of scenic places, and places with character.  Because I want to take some good pictures, I have been going through my lenses and checking them for accuracy in focus.  Of course, some lenses are better than others, and some systems work better than others.

Josh 85mm +3

The Nikon D7000 has the ability to adjust the autofocus in different lenses, and store those manual adjustments in the menu, for up to twelve different lenses.  I have been going through all my autofocus lenses, rather painstakingly, to sort them out.  Only one is really out of kilter, and it could be that I just need to send it in to be refurbished by the manufacturer to factory specifications.  Needless to say, it will not be traveling with me!

Josh 85mm +2

There are a lot of ways to check the focus of a lens, so I won’t get into it here. The final test, though, is on the eyes of my victim.  His left eye is the one I use – don’t ask why, I don’t know!  Once I like what I see in the lens, I record it by naming the picture with the adjustment in the camera, the f/stop, and file it in a calibrations directory.  I’ve heard that lenses should be checked every 6 months or so, and certainly be checked out with any new camera.

50mm 2

Tomato Flower

Tomato Flower

Getting ready for a trip with – I hope – plenty of photographic opportunities. Because I want to make sure everything is working right, I am calibrating my lenses. This one is using the Tokina 100mm macro lens – it was spot on! Sadly, other lenses were not, and one is so soft that I think I either need to get it refurbished by the manufacturer, or just sell it.

Lies

Wish You Were Here 2

There is the purist in me that says a photograph should never be changed from what the camera took. To change it means I cannot take a picture in the first place.

Another part of me that realizes there is such creative potential in photography – especially digital photography. And, in some situations, it is the only thing that makes a dismal photo worth looking at. For me, color and contrast are always attractive. Together, both change mood, season, emotion, focal points.

Wish You Were Here

Today, I went out to the local botanical garden around noon. There was not the least bit of interesting light, only shadows. I wanted to see what a new lens could do, and was too lazy to get out when the light is particularly nice (meaning get dressed and out the door before 7 a.m.!). The intention was to see how well the V1 does creating panoramic pictures on manual focus – important to learn as the camera is highly automated. A couple came out okay, but they were truly boring to the eye. So, color manipulation and such – the art of post processing.

Creativity or lying?